Dear Friend:

I hoped President Bush would during last night’s State of the Union announce the end of the Iraq War. Instead, he again pledged to escalate the war and proposed policies that would further raise health care costs for working families.

I thought you might be interested in my response to the State of the Union.

 
Pete


President Bush missed a historic opportunity. Rather than accept the will of the American people and announce the phased withdrawal of American troops from Iraq, President Bush again pledged to escalate the war. But endangering the lives of 20,000 more soldiers won’t make us more secure. Instead, the ‘surge’ will make an already terrible situation worse, and cost America more lives and more money.

Much like his plan for Iraq, the President’s domestic policy proposals are based on incorrect assumptions and dangerous logic. There is no crisis in either Social Security or Medicare that a Congress dedicated to preserving these vital entitlements couldn’t easily solve. Our health care system is broken, but not because we provide too much health care to our people. Our system is broken because we provide too little.

Bush’s new tax proposal would shift health care costs to working families. It would eliminate employer-provided coverage, through which 160 million Americans are covered today and force people into an individual insurance market that regularly denies coverage because of family history, existing illnesses, or genetic makeup. And like the trillion-dollar tax breaks that turned Clinton’s budget surpluses into Bush’s budget deficits, it would benefit the wealthiest among us significantly more than low- and middle-income Americans.

Every individual should have quality health care. States that attempt to cover the uninsured should receive financial incentives to do so, but not at the expense of existing programs that provide coverage to poor children and senior citizens.

Not all of the President’s suggestions are without merit. But those that have value may not have teeth. Increasing fuel economy standards and the use of renewable and alternative fuels, for example, would protect our environment for future generations. A guest worker program would similarly improve our immigration policy. But this President has time and time again spoken about energy independence and comprehensive immigration reform. I’ll believe his commitment when I see him persuading Republican Members of Congress to go along.

For the most part, President Bush delivered tonight’s State of the Union in a state of denial. I’m glad it’s his second-to-last.


If you have trouble viewing this HTML email, please view it on my website:

http://www.house.gov/stark/news/110th/
enewsletters/20070124/email.html


Pete's Town Meetings

Saturday
February 17,2007

UNION CITY
9:00 a.m.- 10:00 a.m.
Ruggieri Senior Center
33997 Alverado Niles Road

HAYWARD
10:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m.
Hayward City Hall
Council Chambers
777 B Street

ALAMEDA
1
2:00 Noon - 1:00 p.m.
Alameda City Hall
Council Chambers
2263 Santa Clara Avenue


Not yet subscribed to my
email newsletter?

Interested in receiving more frequent updates?

Visit my website and
sign up!


Please contact my Fremont office, send me an email
or visit my website
for assistance with federal agencies, updates on important legislation,
and information on visits
to Washington, D.C.

Fremont Office
(510) 494-1388

Email
www.house.gov/stark/contact

Website
www.house.gov/stark







If you no longer wish to receive these and other e-mail updates,
please let me know:
http://www.house.gov/stark/contact/