Democrats Campaign Against Obamacare Businesses Look to Drop Expensive Government Mandated Insurance
Texas Insider Report: WASHINGTON D.C. Democrats in Washington were convinced that by now Americans would embrace Obamacare. As businesses look at dropping expensive new coverages and families face higher health care premiums from the new mandates Americans are increasingly skeptical the 2801 page reform will make health care affordable. The sweeping new government health care plan was forced through Congress over strong public opposition.
This massive bill crafted behind closed doors doesnt look so good in the bright light of public scrutiny. The promises that health care costs would go down federal spending would be reduced and small businesses would be more able to afford health care simply havent materialized" said U.S. Congressman Kevin Brady (R-Texas) whose chart unveiled the new laws staggering bureaucracy.
These new government mandates arent free. American families are just starting to learn that they will pay more for health care -- not less -- under the Democrats bill because nothing was done to control costs eliminate

frivolous medical lawsuits or give workers more choices in their health care."
Over the next few years senior citizens and local health care providers will start to feel the impact of over $500 billion in cuts to Medicare. In Texas more than 300 physicians have already announced they are no longer seeing new Medicare patients due to reimbursement cuts from Washington.
When Congress eventually runs out of money to fund the $2.6 trillion measure experts predict the government will have no choice but to ration treatments and further restrict access to local health care providers.
Democrats are pushing the goodies up front before the November election and hoping Americans wont notice the pain from this bill that will follow it added Brady.
Voters will not forget an arrogant Congress that ignored the will of the people rewarded a few special interests and interjected Washington bureaucrats into our most intimate health care decisions."