Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Obama camp hits rival's health care plan

After knocking John McCain as a deregulator of the banking system during the recent financial crisis, Barack Obama's campaign hit the Arizona senator Sunday for wanting to do the same to the health insurance industry.

"Nothing would be more precarious to Americans than losing their healthcare," Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius said on a conference call with reporters.

Sebelius linked healthcare to the recent financial crisis throughout the call, and suggested that McCain's healthcare plan would lead to a similar crisis.

"As terrified as people are about the economic crisis that now faces this country, I don't think any situation is as personal as health care," Sebelius said. "John McCain would apply to the insurance industry what he did to the banking industry."

Sebelius said McCain would "dismantle state based regulation and tie the hands of those involved in consumer protection."

McCain senior policy adviser Doug Holtz-Eakin defended the Arizona senator's healthcare plan in a memo responding to Obama's attacks.

"John McCain believes that American families should be given more choices by allowing them to purchase policies across state lines," Holtz-Eakin wrote. "In a move derided by fact checking organizations including Fact Check, the Obama campaign used this as an opportunity to falsely accuse John McCain of deregulating health care markets akin to Wall Street."

Obama has stepped up his attacks on the issue in recent days, calling McCain's plan a "bait-and-switch" during a campaign stop yesterday in Virginia. Obama's running mate, Sen. Joe Biden, called the plan "the ultimate bridge to nowhere" during Thursday's vice presidential debate.

source

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