President Obama is pushing back against the
Republican lies about Medicare while celebrating the fiftieth
anniversary of Medicare and Medicaid.
The President said:
This week, there was a big birthday you might
have missed. Medicare and Medicaid turned 50 years old. And that’s
something worth celebrating.
If one of the best measures of a country is how it
treats its more vulnerable citizens – seniors, the poor, the sick – then
America has a lot to be proud of. Think about it. Before Social
Security, too many seniors lived in poverty. Before Medicare, only half
had some form of health insurance. Before Medicaid, parents often had
no help covering the cost of care for a child with a disability.
But as Americans, we declared that our citizens
deserve a basic measure of security and dignity. And today, the poverty
rate for seniors is less than half of what it was fifty years ago.
Every American over 65 has access to affordable health care. And today,
we’re finally finishing the job – since I signed the Affordable Care
Act into law, the uninsured rate for all Americans has fallen by about
one-third.
These promises we made as a nation have saved
millions of our own people from poverty and hardship, allowing us new
freedom, new independence, and the chance to live longer, better lives.
That’s something to be proud of. It’s heroic. These endeavors – these
American endeavors – they didn’t just make us a better country. They
reaffirmed that we are a great country.
And a great country keeps the promises it makes.
Today, we’re often told that Medicare and Medicaid are in crisis. But
that’s usually a political excuse to cut their funding, privatize them,
or phase them out entirely – all of which would undermine their core
guarantee. The truth is, these programs aren’t in crisis. Nor have
they kept us from cutting our deficits by two-thirds since I took
office. What is true is that every month, another 250,000 Americans
turn 65 years old, and become eligible for Medicare. And we all deserve
a health care system that delivers efficient, high-quality care. So to
keep these programs strong, we’ll have to make smart changes over time,
just like we always have.
Today, we’re actually proving that’s possible. The
Affordable Care Act has already helped secure Medicare’s funding for
another 13 years. The Affordable Care Act has saved more than nine
million folks on Medicare 15 billion dollars on their prescription
medicine. It has expanded Medicaid to help cover 12.8 million more
Americans, and to help more seniors live independently. And we’re
moving our health care system toward models that reward the quality of
the care you receive, not the quantity of care you receive. That means
healthier Americans and a healthier federal budget.
Today, these programs are so fundamental to our way
of life that it’s easy to forget how hard people fought against them at
the time. When FDR created Social Security, critics called it
socialism. When JFK and LBJ worked to create Medicare, the cynics said
it would take away our freedom. But ultimately, we came to see these
programs for what they truly are – a promise that if we work hard, and
play by the rules, we’ll be rewarded with a basic measure of dignity,
security, and the freedom to live our lives as we want.
It’s a promise that previous generations made to us, and a promise that our generation has to keep.
As usual, the President didn’t mention anyone by
name but it was clear who he was talking about. Jeb Bush has made
phasing out the beloved program that help the poor, seniors, and the
disabled a key piece of his campaign. Republicans routinely misinform in
an attempt to provide justification for their ideological goal of
destroying Medicare/Medicaid.
Republicans are still claiming that Obamacare is
destroying Medicare when the reality is that the ACA has added to
Medicare funding. As we move into campaign season, the Republican lies
about the stability and future of Medicare will return to the surface.
The truth is that the Republican goal has been, is, and will continue to
be to get rid of Medicare.
Obama
nailed it. Republicans are wrong about the ACA, Medicare, and Social
Security. The President is standing tall and not letting the right’s
ideological fallacies go unchallenged.
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