Sunday, April 26, 2015

More about Christie



If ever there was a dark horse in the GOP primary race for the presidency, it’s our very own governor Chris Christie.  Although he does not fit within the strict meaning of that term, Christie is not generally considered to have much of a chance of garnering the nomination and, should he do so, even less of a chance of becoming president.

That is why I consider him a dark horse should he decide to run.  However, those probabilities don’t concern me much, because I think that the country could use someone with his style in the upcoming debates.

There’s been too much phoniness in the last two presidential debates.  Yet at least one person in those verbal exchanges was genuine and providential: 

Monday, April 20, 2015

Why Not Christie?



Governor Chris Christie’s favorability numbers in New Jersey have plummeted from their post second-election highs to their current lows.  Yet, he continues to act like a contender in a crowded field struggling for position in the race for the GOP 2016 presidential nomination. 
 
Whether he decides to run or not, he is unlikely to garner the Garden State’s vote in the 2016 general election against whomever the Democrats choose as their candidate for U.S. president. 
 
New Jersey is a true-blue state, covered from nearly one end to the other with Democratic Party influence.  Moreover, Christie’s entanglements with opponents to public sector pension reform have not endeared him to those committed to the status quo on this third-rail-of-politics issue – none of this comes as a surprise to Christie.

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Medicare on the ropes.



When I read this morning’s article by Mike Deak that emphasized the funding threat that faces home health care services such as those provided by the VNA of Somerset County (Visiting Nurses Association), I was appalled.
 
But it was no surprise.

When the Affordable Care Act was signed into law by President Barack Obama, Medicare became one of its first victims.

The Congressional Budget Office issued a report estimating that passage of the ACA would result in from $500 billion to $716 billion that would be drained from Medicare in the years between 2013 and 2022 to help fund the Affordable Care Act.