児童保健プログラムはブッシュによって発破を掛けた
によって Catherineのごまかし
9月. 29 (Bloomberg) -ジョージW.大統領。 ブッシュは児童保健の保険プログラムを拡大するCongressによる計画がであるのための「責任のなく」、非難された立法者資金の政府に出費の法律を可決しないことをことを言った。
「議会のリーダー彼の週間ラジオ演説で劇的に元の意思を越えるこのプログラムを拡大する責任のない計画を」、はブッシュ言った提言した。 「彼らは私がそれを」。拒否することを知っている
Bush also signed today a stopgap spending measure that continues funding federal agencies, wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and other programs at current levels until Nov. 16, buying time for lawmakers to act on regular spending bills.
Congress this week sent Bush legislation supported by Democrats and many of his fellow Republicans that would more than double the funds for the State Children’s Health Insurance Program, known as Schip. The measure would add $35 billion over five years to the $25 billion program. To pay for the expansion, the federal tobacco tax would be raised to $1 a pack of cigarettes from the current 39 cents.
Democrats enlisted a 12-year-old boy who received life- saving care through U.S.-subsidized health insurance to deliver their response to Bush’s radio address today. Supporters of the measure say it is needed to add about 3.8 million needy children to the 6 million now covered.
Political Advantage
Bush has said he would veto the legislation because it would provide subsidized health care to middle-class children whose families can afford private insurance. Democrats see political advantage in Bush’s veto vow.
The president criticized the Democratic-controlled Congress for failing to pass any of 12 spending bills to fund government operations in fiscal 2008, which begins Oct. 1.
“Congress failed in its most basic responsibility,” Bush said.
The Republican-controlled Congress last year also had to send Bush a stopgap measure after failing to complete work on spending legislation.
Since 1977, Congress has only three times approved all its spending measures by the Sept. 30 deadline, according to the Concord Coalition, a Washington-based research group.
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