Chris Christie Vetoes Bill To Set Up Health Care Insurance Exchange
Posted: 12/06/2012 7:13 pm EST
By Peter Rudegeair
Dec 6 (Reuters) - New Jersey Governor Chris
Christie said on Thursday he vetoed a bill that would have created a health
insurance exchange for his state under President Barack Obama's signature
healthcare program.
Christie, whose announcement came on a day when he
was visiting the White House to discuss tens of billions in federal recovery
aid after Superstorm Sandy, joined 18 other states in rejecting a measure to
create state-based health insurance markets where consumers could purchase
private, federally subsidized coverage.
Christie, a Republican who has
nurtured a reputation as a cost cutter, cited uncertainty over what such an
exchange would cost the state and over what kind of flexibility New Jersey will
have in managing it.
"I will not ask New Jerseyans to commit today to a
state-based exchange when the federal government cannot tell us what it will
cost, how that cost compares to other options, and how much control they will
give the states over this option that comes at the cost of our state's
taxpayers," Christie said in a statement.
The U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services has set a Dec. 14 deadline for states to decide whether
they will participate in state-based, federal or partnership exchange. Some 18
states have said they will create their own state-based exchanges and another
18 plan to default to a federal exchange, according to the Kaiser Family
Foundation.
This marks the second time this year that Christie vetoed an
attempt to create a state healthcare exchange. He rejected a similar bill in
May on the grounds that the healthcare law, called the Affordable Care Act,
might be unconstitutional, a view the Supreme Court rebuffed when it ruled in
favor of the law in June.
The veto also comes as Christie pressed his
case in closed door meetings with Obama and House Speaker John Boehner for
funds to finance clean-up and rebuilding efforts following the
storm.
New Jersey and New York officials are seeking $80 billion,
despite a media report that the White House will request only $50
billion.