Not yet a member?Join now!|Lost password
06/28/2012 | Press release
distributed by noodls on 06/28/2012 21:00
|
June 28, 2012 TRANSCRIPT: NANCY PELOSI ON MSNBC |
||
PELOSI/SCHULTZ INTERVIEW TRANSCRIPT
June 28, 2012
SCHULTZ: On this historical day that it is I'm here with
Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi. Congresswoman,
congratulations is in order and I say that because after
Scott Brown got into the Senate, there were a lot of people
that were saying healthcare was dead. You revived it. You
must feel vindicated.PELOSI: I don't know if vindicated is
the word. I'm really very, very happy. I always knew, I
always thought, this would be upheld by the court. I said
six to three. I was wrong - it was five-four. I gave too
much credit to, well let me free myself of my negative
thoughts here to one of the justices. This is about, people
said... Oh people suffered…. politically because of this
vote. I think that's what the election of 2010 was about
nine and half percent unemployment. $200 million was spent
misrepresenting the healthcare bill. Nine and half percent
unemployment is hard to get through that shield to explain
anything. Our members feel proud of what they did. We stand
there in the ranks of those who passed social security,
Medicare and now health care for all Americans as a right,
not a privilege. We came to do a job and now we're glad the
court upholds it.
SCHULTZ: There's a lot of Americans out there that stood
with you on healthcare. They are not in the congress today.
The Tea Party ran against them, the tea party went after
them on this health care bill. What do you say to them? Was
that a courageous move?
PELOSI: They stood very strong and I heard from most of
them today after the election, when we met, they said I
would never reverse my vote on healthcare for any reason.
That's what I came here to do. They knew their reason to be
here today, to get a job done for the American people and
today we've heard from many of them, very elated about
this.
SCHULTZ: What are the next four months going to be like
running into the election? Boehner just said in another
press conference that the American people are going to have
to decide whether they want this or not.
PELOSI: I think the decision has been made. More people are
taking advantage of the health care reform. Some of the
provisions that are already in affect know how important to
them whether it's pre-existing conditions, staying on your
parent's plan, whether it's lower costs of prescription
drugs for seniors. Those kinds of issues and the more
people know what it means to them, the more popular the
bill will be, no matter what the other side says.
SCHULTZ: Listening to Mitt Romney today, he is clearly
going to run against this. Is this a political winner?
PELOSI: Listening to Mitt Romney today, I was confused
because it was as if he was for it before he was against it
and now he's both. He supports the decision of the court,
to overturn the entire bill and yet he said but if they do
that, you still cannot be discriminated against on the
basis of pre-existing medical conditions. How does that
happen? Is he going to pay for it? Maybe he's volunteering.
The fact is you cannot have it both ways.
SCHULTZ: President Obama said today that this is going to
reduce costs, President Obama said today that this going to
save the country money. In the other room, the Republicans
are saying no, this is going to blow up the deficit. The
CBO scores it as a financial winner over the long haul. Who
is telling the truth?
PELOSI: Well first of all, when we did the bill, one of the
main purposes of the bill in addition to the right of
people to have access to healthcare. The cost of healthcare
in our country was totally unsustainable for individuals,
for families, for businesses large and small. For
government - state, local and federal budgets and for our
economy because the healthcare costs are a competitiveness
issue. Lowering costs was an essential part of what went
down this path and it would be an ever-escalating lowering
of cost if you can say it that way. That is to say the CBO
scored it in a way to lower cost that it does. But it also
has built into it studies from the institute of medicine,
etc., to say we have to make choices that are not about
volume, but about value. Value, not volume. Quality, not
quantity. Procedures addressing regional disparities, all
of that technical but nonetheless substantial in terms of
cost. And in addition to that, not part of this bill, but
what we did leading up to this bill with the recovery act
was electronic medical records, health IT which was they
tell us, the outside groups, they tell us we can reduce
costs by hundreds of billions of dollars.
SCHULTZ: But they say, it's not cost efficient and they're
going to run on that.
PELOSI: Well you know what, we'll just have to have that
debate because what they want is insurance companies to
have their way. It's just what it is. You have a good
combination of the health insurance industry and the
anti-government ideologues who go out there and fight
against this bill. What they want is the insurance
companies had a good gig. They can charge anything, ever
increase the cost, you get sick, you lose your policy and
you can even have your policy rescinded on the way to the
operating room.
SCHULTZ: They spent a lot of money telling people that this
is not good, that the next four months is going to be
important - messaging to the American people that this is
good.
PELOSI: Yes, but I think these elections are always about
jobs. That's really what the debate will be.
SCHULTZ: Well they call it a job killer
PELOSI: It creates 4 million jobs. Health insurance -
healthcare is the fastest growing entity in our
economy.
SCHULTZ: So it's not a job killer?
PELOSI: it's not. It creates 4 million jobs, it reduces the
deficit, it lowers the cost of individuals, it improves the
quality and it expands coverage. And it does so in a
market-oriented way. If I had my way I'd have single payer
and public option, but nonetheless this bill does the
job.
SCHULTZ: Your thoughts on Chief Justice Roberts decision,
him being the one.
PELOSI: Chief Justice Roberts's decision I believe is
consistent with his writings and his pronouncements in the
past about the extent of the court, the Supreme Court's
role in the passing of the constitutionality. That's why I
always said 6 - 3, I anticipated we could possibly get
Kennedy, but I was wrong. But we did win and I was right on
that.
SCHULTZ: You had a very emotional phone call this morning
with Vicky Kennedy…
PELOSI: I did. I called Vicky, as soon as we knew because I
didn't know whether she had the TV on or not, and I called
Vicky and I said, thank you, congratulations and she goes
saying the same thing back to me. And I said to her, you
know, we all know this would not have happened without
Teddy. It was his life's work; it was called the great
unfinished business of our country. And I said when he left
us we know he was having an influence from on high when we
passed the bill and now up until today with the
announcement I said now, finally Teddy, as far as health
care is concerned can rest in peace.
SCHULTZ: But how do you feel that you're going to be
remembered as the Speaker than went back in and saved it? I
remember a conversation I had with Robert Gibbs, he says
we're not going to get health care. A few days later you
went in, revived it.
PELOSI: I never, it was never a thought in my mind we
wouldn't have it, I don't care what anyone else had to say
about it.
SCHULTZ: You were going to do it…
PELOSI: We're going to do it. We had the urgency, we had
the value, we had the votes and we were going to make it
happen. One of these days we can talk about the people that
wanted to get 60 votes, I was saying no, no I'm going to
get 51. It's not my business that's the senate, but that's
what we ended up doing.
SCHULTZ: Finally, is this Kennedy like? You got a great
start. You got some great things, and - that was kind of
his philosophy. Take what you can get and move it
forward.
PELOSI: Oh, well, we got much more than that. We got much
more than that. As you can see by the actions of the others
- no, we got much more. Yes, Teddy was the person who said
you have to - you have to see a victory and recognize it
when it is in sight and not let a victory be snatched -
what is the term? A victory snatched from the jaws or jaw
-- whatever the term, whatever the expression is. In any
event, I would not - I wanted to have a bill that
accomplished the same things as a single-payer or a public
option would do. Even if we couldn't get the votes in the
Senate to do the public option. And I believe we did that.
I think we would have saved more money if we had the public
option and I think that - but I think that our purposes are
served by this. And if it enabled us to go forward, then so
be it. One of these days, I still believe that we can - the
decision, the judgment will be made, maybe by states -
about their doing single-payer on their own and the rest.
But in the meantime, as far as meeting the needs of
individuals and families there, and as I keep saying, as
far as our families are concerned, the best is yet to come
as more of this bill - of this act unfolds and as it is
fully implemented in 2014.
SCHULTZ: How would you characterize the contempt vote
that's going to take place?
PELOSI: I think the actions by the Republicans are
contemptible. It is not based on fact. It is rushed to the
floor. It flies in the face of the congressional admonition
that branches of government should work together. In less
than two weeks, they are bringing a contempt motion to the
floor against a cabinet officer. The first time in the
history of our country. When we brought contempt charges
against staff in the White House as keepers of the
president's record, for over 200 days we tried to get them
to cooperate. Over 200 days. In less than two weeks,
they're coming to the floor. Based on a false premise -
they're premise is false. I contend that it has more to do
with tying the hands of the attorney general whose
responsibility it is to stop the voter suppression that is
out there. They are not happy that he did not pursue
protecting (INAUDIBLE) in terms of the constitutionality of
--
SCHULTZ: Purely political?
PELOSI: Totally political.
SCHULTZ: Infuriate you?
PELOSI: Well, it doesn't surprise me. Definitely you think
you've seen it all, they come up with something else. And I
also don't think it's a coincidence that it's happening on
the same day as the court decision. I think they thought
that it was going to go their way and they'd have like, a
one-two punch. They might have a one-two punch, but it
might be coming their way.
SCHULTZ: And you think the American people will figure this
out? That it is political?
PELOSI: Well I think we, again - we have to make sure that
we understand what this is. But you know what? It's what it
isn't, too. It isn't jobs. Jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs. That's
what the American people want. Any diversionary tactic will
do for the Republicans because they do not believe in a
public role in creating jobs or providing health care or
anything else. And that's what people should know about
them. They do not believe in the public space. That's why
every day, we vote to undo clean air, clean water, food
safety, public safety, public education, housing, public
transportation, public health, Medicare, Medicaid, Social
Security. They do not believe in the public role. And bless
their hearts, they act upon their beliefs. They sincerely,
ideologically believe in this orthodoxy. And that's why
it's hard to find common ground with them as we used to.
Democrats and Republicans going back and forth on the
spectrum. They break that spectrum, two different
paths.
SCHULTZ: Great to have you with us. Thank you.
PELOSI: My pleasure. Thank you.
###