FACT CHECK: It’s ‘Mediscare’ time in Kentucky

ADAM BEAM
Associated Press

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Shaky claims about Medicare were common in the 2012 campaign, from President Barack Obama on down. Now they’ve surfaced in this year’s midterm elections, in one of the hottest Senate races in the country.

Alison Lundergan Grimes, Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell’s Democratic opponent, released her first attack ad Tuesday, accusing McConnell of voting to raise a retired coal miner’s Medicare costs by $6,000. He didn’t.

McConnell responded Wednesday with an ad giving a dire spin to Medicare cuts set in motion by Obama’s health care law, a familiar claim from the 2012 GOP playbook.

If coal is king in the Kentucky race, Medicare is a potentially powerful issue, too, and Grimes touches both bases in the 30-second statewide TV ad, staged in front of a fire truck for good measure.

In it, Grimes sits with a man identified as retired coal miner, Don Disney of Cloverlick, Kentucky, who looks straight into the camera and poses this question as if speaking to McConnell: “I want to know how you could’ve voted to raise my Medicare costs by $6,000. How are my wife and I supposed to afford that?” Then Disney and Grimes pretend to wait for an answer.

McConnell cast no such vote.

The bill he supported in 2011, on which the ad’s claim is based, proposed moving ahead on a plan in the House by GOP Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin to privatize Medicare over time. Some analysts said that could eventually raise costs for beneficiaries. But elderly people such as Disney — already retired or approaching retirement — would see no changes. “Current Medicare benefits are preserved for those in and near retirement,” stated the bill, which failed in the Senate.

Moreover, Ryan’s plan at the time would have kept traditional Medicare as an option for people aging into the system over the next decade. Had the bill become law, Disney and beneficiaries like him could have stay parked in the usual plan, not forced into private plans as future retirees might have been.

Overblown rhetoric on Ryan’s plan became a cottage industry for Democrats in 2012 when he was GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney’s running mate, despite being repeatedly called on the deception.

Republicans misrepresented Medicare facts, too, with variations of a claim that have surfaced anew in the 2014 campaign. McConnell spokeswoman Allison Moore said in a statement: “The simple reality is that Sen. McConnell has fought to protect Medicare, while Alison Lundergan Grimes and her political benefactors have raided it by $700 billion to pay for Obamacare.”

The reality wasn’t that simple, never mind that Grimes, a private attorney who became Kentucky secretary of state in 2012, wasn’t in a position to raid any federal program.

It’s true that the health care overhaul provided for cuts of more than $700 billion over 10 years in the Medicare program. But the cuts are from payments to Medicare service providers, such as hospitals, not from benefits directly. And some of the savings are going to improved preventive care and other benefits under Medicare, while the bulk is for expanding health care coverage for the general population.

Those nuances were not reflected in McConnell’s new ad, either, which states the health care law “cuts $700 billion from seniors’ Medicare” and “Obama and Grimes will pay for Obamacare on the backs of Kentucky seniors.”

___

Woodward reported from Washington. Associated Press writer Charles Babington in Washington contributed to this report.

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Federal News Network Logo
Log in to your WTOP account for notifications and alerts customized for you.

Sign up