Health Insurance For Small Business Arkansas

Health Insurance For Small Business Arkansas
Red State Voter Exit Interview–Mary on small business health

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Arkansas oppose health care legislation

Arkansas against health care reform legislation in Congress and thus are not pleased that the stateâ € ™ s two U.S. senators voted in favor, show results of a new survey.

Fifty-eight percent of respondents said they are against the proposals of the Congress, while 26 percent supported the measure and 16 percent said they were asked in the survey of the Arkansas News Bureau / Stephens Media undecided.

More than half of respondents said they U.S. Sens. Blanche Lincoln and Mark Pryor rejected the support of the measure. Fifty-five percent said they opposed Pryorâ € ™ s support of the legislation and 27 percent said they support it, while 59 percent said they opposed Lincolnâ € ™ s voice and 28 percent said they approved.

â € œIt is unfortunate that our two U.S. senators voted for their party to voters hear the State of Arkansas, said, â € Porto Bob, the chairman of the Tea Party chapter in Pulaski County. â € Ghita € ™ s clear where the citizens the â € | Arkansas, want to send a message, but our senators, both senators are not listening.â €

Washington, DC-based Mason-Dixon Polling & Research Inc. surveyed 625 registered voters nationwide by telephone from Monday to Wednesday. The polla € ™ s margin of error is plus or minus 4 percentage points.

The survey also found that 60 percent increase against the taxes to finance health care reform, 54 percent against a â € â œpublic option € or state-run health insurance program, and nearly 50 percent of respondents disagree that all Americans have health insurance.

A piece of health care reform that 63 percent of the respondents did was to require insurance coverage to uninsured people with pre-existing support.

The survey also asked whether voters thought the health care reform proposal would lead to rationing of health care and a reduction in Medicare programs.

Forty-five percent said they believed health care would ultimately rationed to 33 percent, she said no, while 51 percent said they believed that Medicare programs would be reduced and 23 percent said they would not.

Asked their position on health care reform, said 42 percent Some changes are needed to expand to better control of insurance availability and cost, and 24 percent said health care needs a major overhaul and all Americans should have health insurance guaranteed.

Fifteen percent said the current system is basically sound and some changes needed are, while 13 percent said the government should let the system alone.

Chad Klein, Director of Communications for Change that Works, a grassroots organization in Arkansas and 12 other states that support for health care form, said despite the survey results, the health care needed.

â € œWe talk to Arkansas every day, every day hundreds, whether small businesses, faith leaders, farmers, or just ordinary hard-working Arkansas, and not only they want health care but they need it, â € said Klein.

â € œOur goal and our mission is that â € | This Bill has got to happen, â € he said. to â € œWeâ € ™ re only have to maintain order on the big picture, focused, is that health care reform is to reduce the burden on families and small Arkansas businesses.â €

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