September 19, 2007 6:45 pm ET
SUMMARY: A New York Times article on Sen. Hillary Clinton's proposed health care plan noted that "the Republican National Committee [RNC] sent an e-mail message challenging Mrs. Clinton's promise that her plan would not be government-run or produce new bureaucracy, quoting eight commentators and analysts who assert that government would inevitably expand." But the article didn't identify the RNC's "commentators and analysts" -- a group that included Tucker Carlson, the Orange County Register editorial page, right-wing think tank analysts, and former Republican officials.
In a September 19 article on Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's (D-NY) proposed health care plan, New York Times reporters Patrick Healy and Robin Toner wrote that on September 18 "the Republican National Committee [RNC] sent an e-mail message challenging Mrs. Clinton's promise that her plan would not be government-run or produce new bureaucracy, quoting eight commentators and analysts who assert that government would inevitably expand." However, Healy and Toner did not identify who was on the RNC's list of "commentators and analysts," which, in fact, consists of conservative pundits, right-wing think tank analysts, and former Republican officials.
The September 18 RNC press release -- "Hillary's Bureaucratic Hike: Just Like 1993, Hillary's Health Care Proposal Creates More Government And More Entitlements" -- cited eight "commentators and analysts:"
Four of the eight comments the RNC cited came from a September 18 symposium published at the conservative National Review Online.
Clinton said in a September 17 speech on her health care plan: "Now I know my Republican opponents will try to equate health care for all Americans with government run health care. Well don't let them fool us again. This is not government run. There will be no new bureaucracy. You can keep the doctors you know and trust. You keep the insurance you have if you like it. But this plan expands personal choice and increases competition to keep costs down."
Washington Post reporter Dan Balz noted in a September 18 post for the Post's political blog The Trail: "Clinton proposed no new government entities to administer the plan, although her aides acknowledge that some additional people would have to be hired within the existing bureaucratic structure to handle some aspects of it."
&mdash S.P.
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