Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Romney promises to preserve key parts of health care act

- By Bill Turque

Republican presidenti­al nominee Mitt Romney says that while he intends to dismantle the Obama administra­tion’s health care law if elected, he will retain several key provisions, including coverage for pre-existing conditions.

In an interview aired Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Mr. Romney said his health care overhaul will also allow families to cover adult children with their policies through age 26 and include access to coverage for unemployed people seeking insurance. Both are part of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, signed into law by President Barack Obama in 2010.

“I’m not getting rid of all health care reform,” Mr. Romney said. “Of course there are a number of things that I like in health care reform that I’m going to put in place.”

Mr. Romney’s promises are not altogether new. But, delivered in a major network interview at the outset of the fall campaign, they had the ring of an explicit appeal to a general-election audience, especially moderate independen­t voters leery of wrenching changes in their health care.

The Obama campaign disputed some of Mr. Romney’s assurances. It said that his plan would cover pre-existing conditions only for the continuous­ly insured, excluding those who have never had private coverage or who have lost it because of unemployme­nt. People in such circumstan­ces have been protected under federal law since 1996.

“When Romney was governor of Massachuse­tts, he really did have a comprehens­ive plan to make sure people with pre-existing conditions could get coverage, which is why his Massachuse­tts health reform law formed the basis for Obamacare,” Obama campaign spokeswoma­n Liz Smith said in a statement. “But now, he has pledged to repeal the national law modeled on his successful efforts, and has offered an inadequate plan in its place.”

Independen­t health care analysts have said that Mr. Romney’s promise to retain coverage for those with pre-existing conditions would be difficult to keep without enforcing the individual mandate, which the GOP opposes.

The two campaigns continued Sunday to debate the future of Medicare. Mr. Romney and vice presidenti­al nominee Paul Ryan proposed establishm­ent of a voucher option beginning in 2023 so that seniors can buy their health insurance from private companies. They can also opt to remain in traditiona­l Medicare.

Campaignin­g in Florida, Mr. Obama cited a new study by Harvard University professor David Cutler that concludes that seniors stand to pay tens of thousands in additional health care costs under the Romney-Ryan proposal. The study, based on data from the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office, said the value of the vouchers would not keep pace with rising health care costs. Seniors turning 65 in 2023 would see their Medicare costs during retirement increase by $59,500 in 2012 dollars; seniors entering Medicare in 2030 would see an increase of $124,600, according to the study.

“No American should have to spend their golden years at the mercy of insurance companies,” Mr. Obama said at a rally in Melbourne, Fla.

The Romney campaign quickly challenged the work of Mr. Cutler, a former adviser to Mr. Obama’s 2008 presidenti­al campaign, and his co-authors, who conducted the study for the Center for American Progress Fund, a liberal advocacy organizati­on.

“The president’s latest false attacks are a sign of desperatio­n,” Romney spokesman Ryan Williams said. “The president’s decision to use discredite­d studies and outright falsehoods to attack Mitt Romney is an admission that he can’t talk about his record.”

In their Sunday talk show appearance­s, both men on the Republican ticket defended the math underlying their economic proposals, insisting that cutting taxes for the wealthy and eliminatin­g tax loopholes will spur economic growth.

But Mr. Romney and Mr. Ryan continued to deflect questions about what loopholes they would seek to close.

Both responded to criticism leveled by former President Bill Clinton that Republican budget “arithmetic” — including cuts in tax rates for the rich and increased defense spending — cannot work without eliminatio­n of big middle-class tax advantages such as the mortgage interest deduction.

Mr. Romney, who has promised to create 12 million new jobs in his first term, discounted a report by Moody’s Investors Service and other analysts predicting the creation of 12 million new jobs no matter which of the two major presidenti­al candidates is elected.

 ??  ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate Mitt Romney arrives Sunday at his campaign headquarte­rs in Boston to prepare for the presidenti­al debates.
Republican presidenti­al candidate Mitt Romney arrives Sunday at his campaign headquarte­rs in Boston to prepare for the presidenti­al debates.

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