Matheson gets no thanks from GOP for health vote

Published: Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2009 1:13 a.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 

Instead of thanking Rep. Jim Matheson, D-Utah, for voting with them against his party's health-care reform bill, Republicans are lambasting him for also voting against their alternative health bill.

"Jim Matheson proved that he is satisfied with being part of the status quo that includes runaway deficits and rising costs," said a press release by the National Republican Congressional Committee.

That is no thanks at all for Matheson being one of 39 moderate Democrats who opposed their party's bill, along with all House Republicans but one. The Democratic bill passed anyway in a tight 220-215 vote on Saturday.

Matheson told the Deseret News that he opposed the Democratic bill because "it costs too much and reforms too little," and said he hopes the Senate will develop a bill closer to his liking.

But Republicans are upset that Matheson also voted against a Republican alternate on Saturday. Matheson said that alternative "does nothing to cover the uninsured. It doesn't even remove the practice we have right now … of the denial of coverage for a pre-existing condition. So I don't think that's the reform people are looking for."

So the NRCC blasted him, despite his vote to side with Republicans against the Democratic bill.

Story continues below

"Jim Matheson had the opportunity to give Utah families a real, fiscally responsible health-care solution, but it looks like he'd rather sit by idly as his party pushes their reckless government health-care takeover," NRCC communications director Ken Spain said in a press release.

"Jim Matheson had an opportunity to show Utah families that he was an independent leader by reaching across the aisle for a common sense health-care alternative. Instead, Matheson chose the easy way out, leaving Utah with the status quo," he said.

Spain added, "Matheson left Utah families to fend for themselves."

Meanwhile, Matheson said he has been treated well by his own party even after he announced he would oppose its bill, and had little arm-twisting from them.

"If you're talking about pressure from within Congress and my party leadership, the answer is no (about whether there was arm-twisting or threats) because I've been real straightforward about what I think we ought to do to make this work," he said.

e-mail: lee@desnews.com

Recent comments

The affirmative vote on the restructuring of US health care was a...

TankerFrank | Nov. 12, 2009 at 1:14 p.m.

For Families in America or against?

The outrageous healthcare...

Anonymous | Nov. 10, 2009 at 7:29 p.m.

Matheson doesn't approve of the Democrats' health care reform bill....

Matheson solves nothing | Nov. 10, 2009 at 9:40 a.m.

Related content
previousnext

Latest comments

Yaay, first step to fixing our broken-down health care system and providing...

Hall breaks BYU record with win

Answer: The same reason there are BYU fans who predict Utah will lose each...

Hey all you Boise haters from Salt Lake and Provo, let's compare notes on...

Strip club tax constitutional

Is this really about one inconsequential judge? Or is this about how far we...

Glenn Beck to enter politics?

I definitely can see Beck and Palin for the 2012 election.

Utes crush Aztecs 38-7

I'm not sure which is the worst QB. Man, we have some struggles at QB.

Utes crush Aztecs 38-7

Man, when will these guys put it together. Talk about the ball rolling the...

I am so sad for the Anderson family. Kayla was so young when she died. My...

Glenn Beck to enter politics?

Beck President, Palin Vice President, O'Reilly Secretary of State. Dennis...

Hall breaks BYU record with win

Wishful thinking. That's all. We hoped you'd lose while deep down we know...

Advertisements