The Standard Journal

Warnock, Loeffler square off over health care, insurance

The two are vying for one of Georgia’s U.S. Senate seats

- By Beau Evans

U.S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler and her runoff opponent Rev. Raphael Warnock are squaring off over how to bolster health care and insurance coverage amid a bruising stretch of campaign attack ads in Georgia.

Warnock, the Democratic senior pastor of Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church, has fixed health care as the hallmark issue of his campaign to unseat Loeffler, who until recently gave few insights on the campaign trail about her health-care stances beyond opposition to the Affordable Care Act.

Loeffler’s office unveiled a broad plan calling for passage of several bills including incentives for telehealth options, expanding shortterm health plans pushed by the Trump administra­tion and creating a new federal official tasked with lowering prescripti­on drug prices through trade negotiatio­ns with other countries.

The plan by Loeffler, a Republican Atlanta businesswo­man, also pledges to protect insurance coverage for people with preexistin­g conditions, a central part of the Obama-era ACA health-care bill.

On that point, Warnock and several health-care advocates last week said Loeffler’s plan falls flat.

Warnock supporters, including a former acting chief of the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, argued a bill Loeffler sponsored on short-term health insurance contains loopholes potentiall­y allowing insurers to avoid paying treatment costs for patients with preexistin­g conditions.

“These so-called plans that are being laid out by the Republican­s are no plan at all,” Warnock said in one of two virtual news conference­s Monday. “Simply announcing that you’re going to cover preexistin­g conditions does not answer the question.”

Loeffler’s campaign dismissed the criticism from Warnock Tuesday and went on the offensive, calling his plan too extreme for Georgians who favor less government involvemen­t in their health insurance. Loeffler spokesman Stephen Lawson sought to assure the senator’s plan would be less costly and include coverage of preexistin­g conditions.

“Warnock wants a government takeover which would eliminate your private insurance, skyrocket costs and turn your doctor’s office into the DMV,” Lawson said.

Warnock, who was joined in a virtual conference last week by U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., has advocated expanding Medicaid in Georgia and empowering the federal government to negotiate drug prices with pharmaceut­ical companies. He also favors adding a public option to the Affordable Care Act.

Clashes between Loeffler and Warnock look to ramp up in the coming weeks ahead of the Jan. 5 runoff election, as both campaigns pour millions of dollars into television ads and the two contenders meet for a face-to-face debate on Dec. 6.

A pivot by Loeffler to focus more on health care in the race could signal her push to compete with Warnock on an issue he dominated in the months before the Nov. 3 special election, when Loeffler was forced to fend off a fierce challenge from fellow Republican U.S. Rep. Doug Collins of Gainesvill­e.

GOP Sen. David Perdue has also faced broadsides from his Democratic opponent, investigat­ive journalist Jon Ossoff, over health care and insurance coverage in Georgia’s other heated runoff race, which together with the LoefflerWa­rnock contest could decide the balance of power in the Senate.

Perdue, like Loeffler, has said he supports protecting coverage for patients with preexistin­g conditions, while Ossoff, like Warnock, has argued Republican-backed legislatio­n contains loopholes allowing insurers to deny paying for treatment.

Ossoff also slammed Perdue on Tuesday for declining to participat­e in a Dec. 6 debate, saying the senator “shouldn’t run for reelection” if he shirks public debate. Perdue’s campaign accused Ossoff of having “lied repeatedly” in two debates before the Nov. 3 election as the reason for not participat­ing next month.

Wins for both Ossoff and Warnock would likely tip the Senate in Democrats’ favor along with control of the U. S. House and the presidency, clearing the way for President- elect Joe Biden and Democratic lawmakers to enact their priorities with little resistance for at least the next two years.

Top national Republican officials have rushed to Perdue’s and Loeffler’s sides at rallies over the past week in a bid to block Democrats from controllin­g the Senate. Vice President Mike Pence is scheduled to join the Republican duo at two rallies on Friday.

Early voting for the Senate runoff elections starts Dec. 14. The deadline for Georgia voters to register for the runoffs is Dec. 7.

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