Or is it the case that the folks who think they're so smart here and now to talk like "Don't hold your breath for a complete rundown on all the Republican proposals!" weren't paying much attention at the time?
I was. All I heard were variations on a theme. Just "tax cuts" and.....um, "more tax cuts."
If there were any other proposals, I'd sure like to hear about them!
I well remember several complete proposals made by different Republican Senators, and while I don't think anyone is going to remember every line in a document hundreds of pages long, I do remember --in answer to the specific issue mentioned here--that it was proposed by several that to take care of the poor and uninsured we'd do better just to enlarge Medicaid to cover them. Yes, there were a bunch of counterproposals. Of course, Obama and Reid weren't interested in either transparency or reaching across any aisles because they figured that they didn't have to.
Ah. So what you're saying is there were alternate proposals, but....you can't seem to remember anything about them, or who proposed them.
Not a good way to convince someone that these things ever existed, I have to say. We're living in the Age of Google, surely you could find something if you tried!
And now...back to the topic.
See, this kinda
is the topic.
One of the biggest problems facing the GOP today is they've become the Party of No. Their basic platform has come down to, simply, "If Obama's for it, we're against it!" They've become the Quincy Adams Wagstaff of politics.
Their opposition to the ACA, aka "Obamacare" is probably the most blatant example, as the plan was theirs to begin with, the GOP championed it in the 90s, and the instant Obama and the democrats agreed to it, they're against it. Vehemently. No matter that it's a conservative, market-driven plan, both things that are well within their wheelhouse. Mitt Romney, the last person the GOP supported for President, knew this, he even implemented the plan here in Massachusetts before the GOP decided it wasn't good enough anymore....for some reason.
As I said, the only alternative I ever heard from the GOP was to cut taxes so that the poor can afford to pay for private health insurance...which really is the same as Obamacare, without a mandate (the thing that the Heritage Foundation said was essential to drive down health insurance costs) and without group exchanges to also create cheaper health insurance for those who can't afford it or can't get it through an employer.
If, as you claim, there were alternative suggestions, I'd surely love to hear about them. So far, you haven't done anything to convince me such things exist.
-- A2SG, because if the GOP hopes to survive, they need ideas, not just a platform of opposition and obstruction...and that seems to be all they got....