Nelson Spokesman On Ads Running In Nebraska

Statement

Date: July 31, 2009

Following is a statement released today by Jake Thompson, Senator Ben Nelson's spokesman, in response to an ad running in the Nebraska media concerning Senator Nelson and health care.

"Nebraskans don't need outside special interest groups telling them what to think. Senator Nelson has nothing but praise for Nebraska groups working toward health care reform. Unfortunately, he says, these outside groups undermine the sincere and dedicated efforts of people in our state.

"Recently, similar ads have run in Nebraska. Those ads by other special interests prompted hundreds of Nebraskans to call our offices, with 9 to 1 urging Senator Nelson to do exactly the opposite of what the special interest group wanted. In short, the ads backfired.

"If the impact is the same this time, Howard Dean's Democracy for America will be sorely disappointed. Further, these scare tactics are certain to further divide the public on health care reform, make it less likely Congress will pass real reform and call into question the motives of those who say they want reform, but use the issue to raise money to try to buy influence inside the Beltway.

"Senator Nelson believes that while most Nebraskans want health care reform, they don't want it rushed; they want it done right. He has said he will consider a "public plan" as long as it doesn't undermine the health coverage 200 million Americans have now. He supports Medicare, TRICARE and S-CHIP, and each is a public plan. He also helped establish Kids Connection, Nebraska's public-plan health insurance for children.

"In the Washington debate, various ‘public plans' are still being considered, but no single plan has emerged. So, it's ridiculous to suggest that Senator Nelson is "leading the charge" --as the ad says--against something that doesn't exist.

"Nebraskans know Ben Nelson is an independent thinker. He also has a long record in the governor's office and the U.S. Senate of bringing people together and working constructively so important legislation becomes law. Today, he's looking to support bipartisan legislation that reduces health care costs, boosts the quality of care and expands coverage to people who can't obtain it now.

"If this is an indication of the politics going into August, then health care reform may be dead by the end of August."


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