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Thursday, February 21, 2013
Perry sticks to his guns on rejecting Obama’s Medicaid expansion
Seven Republican governors have recently caved, but Perry's not one.
Photo by Bob Daemmrich
Texas Governor Rick Perry listens as the Texas Department of Public Safety graduates a class of 74 new state troopers Wednesday at the Texas Capitol on December 19, 2012.
AUSTIN Just six months ago, Texas Gov. Rick Perry and Florida Gov. Rick Scott were fishing together on Fox News, pitching then-presidential contender Mitt Romney’s Medicare plan and arguing that decisions about health care should be made by states, not the federal government.
On Wednesday, Scott reversed course, joining a growing number of Republican governors who are reluctantly embracing the key tenet of President Obama’s federal health reform — a sweeping Medicaid expansion.
“While the federal government is committed to paying 100 percent of the cost,” Scott said at a press conference, “I cannot in good conscience deny Floridians that needed access to health care.”
If the pressure is getting to Perry — in addition to Scott, six other Republican governors, from Ohio’s John Kasich to Arizona’s Jan Brewer, now support accepting federal dollars to expand Medicaid to cover poor adults — he’s not letting on.
“The governor’s position has not changed,” his spokeswoman Lucy Nashed said on Wednesday night. “It would be irresponsible to add more Texans and dump more taxpayer dollars into an unsustainable system that is broken and already consumes a quarter of our budget.”
Florida is a big coup for the Obama administration; the state led the lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act — which resulted in a Supreme Court ruling upholding the measure but making the Medicaid expansion optional — and 1 million residents there would gain health coverage under it.
But Texas would be a bigger one. Bipartisan analyses indicate Texas could draw down $100 billion in federal funds over 10 years if the state put up $15 billion, expanding health care coverage to an additional 2 million people. In Texas, roughly a quarter of the population is uninsured.
"When people ask me why I am so optimistic about [a] Medicaid expansion in Texas, it's because I know that the arguments for expansion transcend politics," state Rep. Garnet Coleman, D-Houston, said in a statement following Scott's announcement. "... The people of Florida should be proud of their governor today for making the right choice."

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null2540, now! I just updated the story with the Top 8. Start voting now!
Photos: Eating was no challenge at Taste Addison 2013
I would remove picture # 8.. It isn't flattering of the people or the food.
ajain31, anonymous:
Hello Friends,
Governor Rick Perry millions of under-privileged poor Texans who do not have any Health Coverage will be covered under The Affordable Care ACT (ACA) expansion of MEDICAID!
My Physician wife's practice is partly dependent on MEDICAID and its viability. Please allow the expansion of MEDICAID to occur in Texas under The Affordable Care ACT.
FACT: If states choose to expand Medicaid, the federal government will cover 100 percent of the costs from 2014 to 2016. The feds' contribution will begin to decrease in 2017, but will never be less than 90 percent, under the ACA.
That's why I created a petition to Governor Rick Perry, Texas Governor, The Texas State House, The Texas State Senate, and Governor Rick Perry, which says:
"Please ACCEPT the FREE EXPANSION of MEDICAID under The Affordable Care ACT."
Will you sign this petition? Click here: http://signon.org/sign/accept-free-ex...
Thanks!
Ajay Jain ajain31@gmail.com Twitter Handle ajain31 Mobile: 214-207-9781
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