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Democrat Kathy Hochul on right may be poised to upset GOP candidate Jane Corwin in a
district that normally votes Republican. Hochul's weapon: voter concern about
the GOP plan to overhaul Medicare and Medicaid. |
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Republican Plan to cut Medicare and Medicaid Targets
Poor
BATAVIA, NY & SANTA FE, NM
(By
Kathleen Hennessey, LAT, Washington Bureau)
May 22, 2011 — Kathy Hochul, the Democrat within reach of a stunner in the special U.S. House
election here Tuesday, is not yet two minutes into her pitch at a candidates'
forum when she brings up her opposition to Wisconsin Republican Rep. Paul Ryan's
plan to overhaul Medicare and Medicaid.
Hochul, the Erie County clerk, mentions Ryan again a minute later and then two
minutes later. At nine minutes, a reporter asks about Medicare, and the
52-year-old attorney offers a broad smile.
"I'm glad you asked that question," she said.
Indeed, if it were up to Hochul and the national Democrats pouring resources
into her candidacy, she would talk about Medicare all day. Her opposition to
Ryan's plan to radically change the program has become the cornerstone of her
campaign, which in another year might have been considered a suicide mission in
this solidly Republican district.
But thanks also to an independent candidate, the race in western New York is up
for grabs. Democrats have seized the opportunity to turn the Rochester and
Buffalo suburbs, and the farmland in between, into a battleground in a proxy war
over Ryan's proposal.
Ryan's plan, approved by the Republican-led House, would make enormous changes
in the government health programs — Medicare and Medicaid — that provide care to
100 million Americans. Ryan and his allies say the changes are needed if the
federal government is ever to balance its books. Opponents say the plan would
unravel the social safety net for the poorest Americans, while keeping taxes low
for the wealthy.
Beyond the policy argument, a political debate rages: Can Ryan's plan be cast as
the sort of principled stand that will win over Americans to the conservative
cause? Or will it go down as an act of political hubris that hands dozens of
races to Democrats next year?
Tuesday's results will be eagerly watched for answers.
Interest groups and political advocates from across the country are trying to
tip the outcome. In an onslaught of broadcast and mail ads, Hochul, national
Democrats and unions have characterized the Ryan plan as an attempt to
"essentially end" Medicare.
GOP nominee Jane Corwin — with help from strategist Karl Rove's American
Crossroads, the Chamber of Commerce and others — has spent weeks arguing that
Democrats plan to save a program on a path to insolvency.
Days before the weekend's final push, the Center for Responsive Politics counted
nearly $2 million from outside groups in a district where a GOP incumbent, Rep.
Christopher Lee, won with 74% of the vote less than seven months ago. That was
before Lee, who is married, sent a photo of himself shirtless to a potential
date on Craigslist, and resigned after the picture surfaced.
But even as the campaign money flows, the race is not a clear-cut referendum on
the Ryan plan.
Hochul is within reach of a victory in large part because of the candidacy of
Jack Davis, an industrialist with "tea party" support running as an independent
who in early polls appeared to be splitting the Republican vote.
Though he also opposes the Ryan plan, Davis has spent much of his time and more
than $2.5 million of his own money hammering both major party opponents on jobs
and trade.
"I think it's far more complicated than just a referendum on Ryan," said Douglas
Muzzio, a political science professor at City University of New York. "But if
Democrats win that seat, it will certainly be a sign to them that Medicare can
be a winning issue."
Democrats argue that they don't need to win the race to prove that lesson.
They've already committed to their strategy for recapturing dozens of districts
lost to the GOP in the midterm rout in November.
"The three top issues in elections now and going forward are Medicare, Medicare
and Medicare," Rep. Steve Israel (D-N.Y.), chairman of the Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee, said in an interview.
Hochul has been on message. The Ryan plan preserves tax breaks for big oil and
top earners while it "breaks the contract that we've had with our seniors since
1965," she told the handful of voters gathered at the YWCA for the candidates'
forum.
That's what worries swing voters like Elisa DiPietro, a retired teacher who came
to the forum looking for candidates to "get down to the facts."
"I've only heard the negatives, the negatives of cutting back on the old people.
I've taken care of my health and I'm in good health. I haven't had to use the
services much. But when the time comes, am I going to get them?" she said.
Corwin has stressed that the GOP's proposed Medicare changes wouldn't take
effect for 10 years, leaving many current recipients untouched. She paints the
argument in stark terms — noting that the program has only 13 years before
running out of money.
"I think a lot of politicians, and Kathy Hochul is one of them, rather than take
a position on this would rather kick the can down the road and do nothing," she
said
Corwin's challenge has been how to explain why the Ryan plan is the right path
to follow. She at times only half-heartedly endorsed the plan, saying she would
consider other ideas. And though she vigorously disputes that the proposal is a
"voucher" system, her alternative description can be misleading.
"You pick the plan you like and the government will pay for that directly. So
you don't have a voucher. You don't have a set limit you're allowed to spend on
it. There's nothing voucher about it," Corwin told an audience of tea party
activists and gun-rights supporters.
"So you're not supporting Paul Ryan's plan? Because his plan does include
vouchers," a woman in the audience responded.
The Ryan plan would offer seniors a set amount of money to be used to buy
private insurance. That money would go to the insurance company, not the
individual, and would vary somewhat depending on a person's income and health.
But the government's contribution would not necessarily cover the total cost of
the insurance premium or be automatically adjusted based on the cost of
healthcare. The Congressional Budget Office has said seniors would end up paying
more for care.
"I just don't know that they've given this a lot of in-depth thought," said
Patty Messina, 66, a retired county worker. "Sure, everybody thinks they have a
solution, but no one is telling us why this is the one that's going to work."
Messina, a Republican, said she was undecided but leaning toward voting for
Hochul.
The Medicare attacks appeared to be working. A Siena College poll released
Saturday showed Hochul with a narrow lead over Corwin after trailing the
Republican a month ago. Davis' support had slipped. Medicare topped voters' list
of concerns.
Davis has refused to debate his opponents. "He won't take the stage with liars,"
said his campaign manager, Curtis Ellis.
Corwin, meanwhile, spent much of the final week answering questions about a
video taken by her legislative chief of staff. The video appears to show Davis
shoving the aide, who released a 17-second clip and then reportedly left town
without releasing more.
These diversions — and the Davis wild card — have Republicans hoping that the
26th District race in New York will be remembered as an off-year blip rather
than a beginning of a Democratic comeback.
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