Gardner wants everyone to drop the “hyperbole” about GOP health-care bill, but radio host fails to ask him what hyperbole
U.S. Sen. Cory Gardner told a conservative talk-radio host Monday that he wants people to “drop this hyperbole that we continue to hear” about the problems with GOP health care proposal and put in place a health care system that will work.
KNUS 710-AM host Steve Kelley didn’t ask the simple question of what “hyperbole” Gardner is referring to. Kelley played Gardner a series of audio clips of Democrats saying among other things, that the bill would cause Americans to suffer and die, how it would adversely impact the most vulnerable, and how it would give the rich a tax break.
So where’s the hyperbole Gardner is talking about?
The fact that an estimated 24 million people will lose their health insurance by 2026, in the likely event that this bill is comparable to the last one?
The fact that the latest Obamacare repeal doesn’t protect people with pre-existing medical conditions (like diabetes, cancer, even pregnancy)?
The fact that the rich would enjoy a tax cut of over $600 billion?
Where’s the hyperbole that’s bothering Gardner? (listen to him here on May 8, hour 1, at 13 min)
But you wouldn’t expect a conservative talk radio host to put these types of questions to Gardner, and the senator knows it.
That’s probably why, when the New York Times called his office last week to discuss the health care bill, Gardner didn’t return the call.
That’s also probably why Gardner has appeared on over 15 conservative talk radio shows in Colorado this year.
And why he’s appeared at exactly zero town halls.