Oklahoma
State Senate
Senator Charlie Laster
Democratic Floor Leader
For Immediate Release: January 6, 2009
Sen. Charlie Laster
Senate Republicans Prove Allegiance to
Powerful Insurance Industry
"Coffee Can't" Check Partisanship at the
Door
In ten separate votes pertaining to the newly adopted
Senate Rules, Senate Republicans sent a message loud and clear
to the powerful insurance industry today: "Help is on the
way"
"We are sorely disappointed the Senate Republicans
chose to institutionalize their love for the insurance industry
today by adopting rules that protect the fat cats trying to deny
Oklahomans the care their doctors say they need and the health
coverage they deserve," Democratic Leader Charlie
Laster said. "Sadly this is not what we believe Oklahomans
bargained for nor do they deserve this sort of unprecedented power
grabbing in the name of petty partisan paybacks."
Laster said Coffee spoke about the need for the
State Senate to be a place where ideas are treated like seeds,
rather than bullets, with the ability to grow and not die. He
said he was hopeful Democrats would be successful in eliminating
a new rule that would make it virtually impossible for any law
requiring insurance companies to act responsibly to be heard in
the state senate. That hope was quickly dashed, Laster said, when
Republicans voted in lock step to include in the rules of the
State Senate a provision protecting one single industry—the
insurance industry, from being held accountable for denying coverage
of certain medical procedures such as colorectal screening and
coverage for the treatment and diagnosis of Autism and cancer
patients choosing to participate in clinical trials.
"I do not believe there is any other legislative
chamber in the country that writes into their rules a provision
protecting specific industries, much less an industry as powerful
as insurance companies," Laster said. "We should be
embarrassed that Republicans chose to protect their friends in
the insurance industry over the need for Oklahomans to have access
to affordable health care."
Laster said he finds it ironic that when Republicans
were in the minority they often characterized the Senate as a
place where "good bills go to die."
'Today, Republicans certainly made the statement
the State Senate will now be a place where discussion about the
health care of all Oklahomans will certainly die without debate,"
he concluded.