Articles Tagged ‘Reserve Louisiana’

Blue Dog Landrieu Says She “Would Tend Not to” Support Public Option

Monday, August 31st, 2009

Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-LA) is in a tough spot. This Blue Dog Democrat hails from a state that is so “Red” that she and Congressman Charlie Melancon (D-LA) are the only two Democrats out of a total of nine federal elected officials representing Louisiana. In a state that voted for Bush in 2000 and 2004 and for McCain in 2008, it is clear that Sen. Landrieu did not earn her seat in the Senate by acting as a progressive.

Sen. Landrieu was re-elected for a third term in November 2008 and will not face another race until 2014. There is some buzz around the Bayou State that suggests this will be her final term, with many concluding that Sen. Landrieu will take the route of other veteran Louisiana politicians, like Congressman Richard Baker (R-LA), Congressman Bob Livingston (R-LA) and Sen. John Breaux (D-LA), and exploit her political clout in the lobbying industry instead.

Why, then, is Sen. Landrieu’s vote so scrutinized in the health care reform debate? Certainly, she could reasonably vote with her liberal allies in the Democratic Party. She could support the public option with very few consequences. A five-and-a-half year buffer before a potential re-election, if she even chooses to run again, would offer plenty of time for her to rebound from public criticism stemming from her support. The incumbency risk might very well be worth casting a vote against the will of her constituents, especially if she will be forced to work with the liberal leadership in the Senate to promote her own legislation for the rest of her term. 

Still, Sen. Landrieu appears to be willing to take “the road less traveled.” In two separate occasions, the New Orleans-born politician has expressed that she does not intend to support the Affordable Health Choices Act, a Senate measure that would create a government-sponsored insurance program that would overhaul the health care industry by offering a public option to compete with the private sector.

On Thursday, August 27, 2009, Sen. Landrieu held her only town hall of the August recess in Reserve, La., a town made famous for strong local opposition vocalized at a program featuring four Obama Administration cabinet secretaries, including Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius. Here, Sen. Landrieu responded to questions from the crowd, comprised largely of liberal activists who were instructed to arrive at noon for the 2 p.m. event, so as to ensure they would take up the majority of the seats. Many opponents were forced to wait outside in the heat, as the building was closed at 1:35 p.m. due to the number of attendees exceeding capacity limits.

According to Bill Barrow of the Times-Picayune, Sen. Landrieu used the town hall as an opportunity to repeat “her opposition to a ‘public option insurance plan to compete with private insurers.”

Despite her disapproval for the proposals of her progressive colleagues, Sen. Landrieu believes there is still a need for Congress act now to assure the passage of significant health care reform. She argued that another bill, Wyden-Bennett, would achieve this goal. Affirming her support for co-operatives, Sen. Landrieu co-sponsored the Wyden-Bennett bill, legislation that would establish co-operatives as a means of extending coverage for the under- and uninsured. This measure would “impose a mandate that individuals obtain coverage” and give “individual income tax incentives to cover premiums.”

Sen. Landrieu repeated why she wants to see some kind of significant bill. “Right now employers are trying to cover their employees. They have one program. It’s too expensive. … In Louisiana, 68 percent of our small businesses covered people. Now it’s down to 38 percent. Those people who don’t have insurance then show up to the emergency room and we end up paying for them at the most expensive point of service. … I know some of you are anxious, but we’re trying our best (to find) the best way … to treat people at the front end, not the back end.”

Sen. Landrieu reiterated her feelings about the public option in a CNN interview on Sunday, August 30, 2009.

“I would tend not to,” Sen. Mary Landrieu of Louisiana said Sunday on CNN’s State of the Union when asked whether she would support a public health insurance option included in health care reform bills passed by committees in the House of Representatives. “But, we’ve got to keep working to find solutions,” Landrieu added.

Sen. Landrieu maintained that the Wyden-Bennett bill would ultimately contain costs, without the including a public health insurance option. These sentiments have been rebuked by conservatives, who argue that a system of co-operatives would lead to more government interference, and eventually, an overhaul that would create a single-payer system, a major concern for those against the public option.

While Republicans might rejoice in Sen. Landrieu’s statements, some conservatives warn that Sen. Landrieu is notorious for caving to liberal leadership, even after pledging to vote with the GOP on certain issues. One such example occurred in 2006, where Sen. Landrieu buckled under pressure from Sen. Harry Reid (D-NV) to “flip-flop” on her promise to vote against the death tax

Sen. Landrieu’s vote remains one of utmost importance for both sides. Democrats need her support to pass health care reform before budget reconciliation, an unappealing procedure that requires only 50 votes instead of the traditional 60 to pass legislation. Republicans hope that Sen. Landrieu keeps her word, making it more difficult for liberals to pass a sweeping health care reform bill. 

With special interests and politicians from both parties pounding at her door, it is not surprising that Sen. Landrieu is so inundated with information and commentary that the event in Reserve, La. was the only town hall she could handle. Unfortunately, meetings with her constituents in her home state probably would have been the most beneficial of them all.

Obama Administration Booed at Health Care Town Hall in Reserve, La.

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Secretaries from Obama Administration

Somewhere around Interstate 10’s Exit 206 in Louisiana is a tiny town called Reserve. Situated just in between Baton Rouge and New Orleans, the community is located in St. John Parish, a heavily agricultural and economically modest town known especially for its Army National Guard base.

The biggest thing ever to happen in the history of Reserve, La. occurred Monday at 11:30 a.m. Four cabinet secretaries from the Obama Administration visited the small town on their Rural Tour, speaking in 10 different communities across the U.S. The event featured a panel discussion and townhall-style question-and-answer session with Secretary Hilda Solis of the Department of Labor, Secretary Kathleen Sebelius of the Department of Health and Human Services, Secretary Tom Vilsack of the Department of Agriculture and Secretary Eric Shineski of the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Cars lined the block with some people walking 15 or more minutes to park and enter the building. The overflow from the crowd led into the halls of the Army National Guard building, with some trying to get a peek into the packed room. One estimate indicated at least 800 people were in attendance. National and local media outlets lined the back of the room with cameras shoved next to each other, allowing barely enough room for all the reporters.

The Obama Administration probably didn’t expect that kind of crowd. After all, it was not until blogger Jeff Blanco, the publisher of louisianaconservative.com, broke the story that anyone knew about it all. Surely, the Administration hoped to fill the room with more supporters, likely from ACORN, which is based out of nearby New Orleans.

ACORN and a few other left-leaning groups were present, but the majority of attendees were not at all sympathetic to President Obama’s health care reform proposals, including the Tea Party organizations from around the entire state of Louisiana, the Louisiana Right to Life and activists from Americans for Prosperity. Additionally, folks who heard about it that day in the mainstream media showed up, many of whom were veterans.

Most found it an incredibly frustrating experience. Several people got up and left, explaining that they could not stomach the “spin” offered by President Obama’s Cabinet.

“I just cannot follow the rhetoric,” one veteran said as he exited the room only a few minutes into the townhall.

Lines wrapped around the room, as attendees waited their turn to ask questions of the Cabinet secretaries. One woman, Tracy Chevalier, talked about her Cuban heritage and explained that the health care in America, from her experiences, was far more accessible than what she experienced in her home country.

Then Chevalier asked if the panelists could answer her question simply with a “yes” or “no.” She requested that the American public be allowed five to seven days to review the bill before it is voted upon in Congress. The crowd broke into thunderous applause and cheering.

Secretary Kathleen Sebelius responded, “I would hope you would allow me more than a yes or no answer on this one.” The crowd then began to boo.

That was the overall tone for the entire townhall. Booing. Protesting. General hostility towards the Cabinet. All of these were further powerful after Secretary Sebelius admitted that the federal employees’ benefits would remain the same, even after a public option was added, with screaming and booing even louder from the crowd. The hour and a half-long meeting closed with dozens of people still in line to ask questions.

Glenn Ellerbe, president of Acadiana Tea Party in Lafayette, La., explained that he needed Secretary Hilda Solis to carefully review the cap-and-trade legislation, as it would greatly damage Louisiana’s energy-based economy.

“It will be a cold day in hell before he (Obama) socializes my country,” he said. This statement has been used since by the Associated Press and has been played on the Rush Limbaugh radio show and Hannity on Fox News.

The crowd went wild, with everyone standing up and cheering. Some people began chanting “U-S-A.”

It is likely that the national media outlets present were not anticipating such an anti-Obamacare display. However, there was no denying that the nearly all of the hundreds of folks gathered in that tiny room in Reserve, La., were not there to join the ranks of ACORN but instead, to show their disapproval of the health care legislation presented by the Obama Administration.

And there’s no leftist PR spin doctor who can remedy the public opinion ill that is plaguing them more and more as the debate continues.