11th District update: Parties release dueling statements over Ryan, medicare


On Aug. 13, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee released the following statement:

Candidate Mark Meadows Has New Running Mate: Paul Ryan’s Republican Budget That Massively Cuts Medicare

Republican congressional candidate Mark Meadows (NC-11) has a new running mate: Congressman Paul Ryan’s Republican budget that makes massive cuts to seniors’ Medicare while protecting millionaires. Now that Mitt Romney picked Republican Budget Chairman Paul Ryan, Meadows has to defend his indefensible support for Ryan’s plan to give more tax breaks to millionaires, Big Oil and corporations that ship jobs overseas at the expense of Medicare for seniors. The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office found that the Ryan plan supported by Meadows would raise health care costs for seniors by $6,400 while the Tax Policy Center found it would cut taxes for people making over $1 million a year by $394,000.

“With Paul Ryan at the top of the ticket, Republican candidate Mark Meadows can no longer hide his support for a budget that would deeply cut Medicare to give tax breaks to millionaires, Big Oil, and companies shipping jobs overseas,” said Jesse Ferguson of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. “The Republican budget is now Mark Meadows’s running mate as he must defend the indefensible – more tax cuts for millionaires and higher health care bills for seniors on Medicare. The American people have rejected Republicans’ support of the Ryan plan over and over, and will turn against Mark Meadows this November for supporting this extreme plan.”

A recent Democracy Corps poll found 66 percent of all voters and 72 percent of seniors in Republican-held Congressional seats have very serious or somewhat serious doubts about Ryan’s Republican budget that makes drastic cuts to Medicare.

BACKGROUND

Mark Meadows (NC-11) Called Ryan Budget Bold, But Criticized it for Not Making Cuts Now. In March 2012, Meadows said, “Congressman Paul Ryan again boldly sounds the alarm on the debt crisis. A powerful message.” He later criticized the budget for not making cuts now and said, “Not to be negative toward the Ryan budget, but we cannot afford to wait for the next congressmen to make these decisions. We need the current members of Congress to make the decision now.” [Macon County News, 5/24/12; Meadows for Congress Facebook, 3/16/12]

House Republicans Voted to End Medicare, Give Tax Breaks to Millionaires, Protect Tax Breaks for Big Oil. On April 15, 2011, House Republicans voted for a budget which “would essentially end Medicare.” If enacted, this budget would begin affecting millions of seniors almost immediately by increasing the costs on prescription drugs and long-term care. For future beneficiaries, the Congressional Budget Office estimates it will increase health care costs by an extra $6,359 by 2022. The Republican plan would also lower the top tax rate to 25% and will provide people with incomes over $1 million an average tax cut of $125,000 per year. The plan would secure no deficit-reduction contribution at all from closing special interest tax breaks, such as breaks for big oil companies. [H Con. Res. 34, Vote #277, 4/15/11; Wall Street Journal, 4/4/11; National Journal, 6/2/11; CBO, 4/5/11; Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, 4/20/11]

House Republicans Voted to Slash Medicare, Protect Tax Breaks for Big Oil and Millionaires, Encourage Companies to Ship Jobs Overseas. On March 29, 2012, House Republicans supported a budget that would end Medicare’s guaranteed benefit, protects $40 billion in tax breaks for big oil, provides people earning more than $1 million a year with an average tax cut of $394,000, and provides incentives for corporations to shift profits and jobs overseas. [H Con Res 112, Vote #151, 3/29/12; Center for American Progress, 3/20/12; Center for American Progress, 3/20/12; Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, 3/27/12; Tax Policy Center, Table T12-0078 and T10-0132; Citizens for Tax Justice, 3/22/12]


On Aug. 13, the National Republican Campaign Committee released the following statement:

Over the weekend, Obama’s deputy campaign manager touted his party’s $700 billion cuts to Medicare to pay for their big-government healthcare takeover as an achievement. In light of Heath Shuler tagging Hayden Rogers as the candidate that will ‘take over’ where he left off I wanted to pose a question to you as you follow just how eerily similar Rogers is to Shuler:

NRCC COMMENT: “Heath Shuler voted against repealing ObamaCare, slashing over $700 billion to Medicare. As western North Carolinian seniors watched their healthcare benefits slip away under Shuler’s watch, will Hayden Rogers ‘take over’ where he left off and choose ObamaCare as his running mate?” — NRCC spokeswoman Andrea Bozek

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About Jake Frankel
Jake Frankel is an award-winning journalist who enjoys covering a wide range of topics, from politics and government to business, education and entertainment.

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0 thoughts on “11th District update: Parties release dueling statements over Ryan, medicare

  1. Dionysis

    “A recent Democracy Corps poll found 66 percent of all voters and 72 percent of seniors in Republican-held Congressional seats have very serious or somewhat serious doubts about Ryan

  2. Dionysis

    And one more thing…does anyone else find irony in the fact that Romney touts his business ‘acumen’ and has made much of the need for people with ‘business’ experience (reflected in his proposed Constitutional Amendment requiring 3 years business experience to run for prez or vp), when Ryan has been nothing but a virtual ward of the state. Attended a public college and immediately began to work for politicians; that is all he has done…been a partisan political lackey.

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