In a Vice Presidential debate of personalities, expect comedy, blue collar politicking, maybe a bloody nose and perhaps a rehashing of the Affordable Care Act debate, all amid the backdrop of Romney's bounce in the polls.
Defining big data, why the four Congressmen who want to suspend MU payments are crazy, the emerging business case for HIE, and the most important Q&A I've come across in a while.
President Obama and GOP nominee Mitt Romney fired back with previously fact-checked half-truths and healthcare visions short on specifics, during the first presidential debate.
Among polls published this week, the economy keeps its top spot on the list of voters' priorities while healthcare ranks as important in the increasingly tight presidential race.
The last 3.5 years will be a waste of time, GOP frontrunner Romney said, if SCOTUS overturns the ACA. And if they don't, well, then he added that he's the man to do just that.
With five more states under his belt, GOP frontrunner tells supporters that when it comes to President Obama's health reform law, "we've already seen where this path leads."
Syracuse University is set to host a thought-provoking debate on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) at the National Press Club on March 29. A panel of experts will be assembled by SU from the Cato Institute, the National Senior Citizens Law Center and Princeton University along with a moderator who has over three decades of experience on Capitol Hill, to debate the constitutionality of the PPACA and whether it is good public policy.
Last week, Rick Santorum gave a speech billed as his "major speech on healthcare." One young child asked the Pennsylvania senator about the costs of medical care in America. He asked what Santorum would do in order to lower the costs of healthcare in the country.
Gingrich stays on point that the initial step toward dismantling 40 percent of President Obama's government on his first day would be repealing health care. Romney maintains he would enable states to opt out.
Remaining GOP candidates have one less reason to discuss healthcare in depth, now that the former Utah Governor, who signed a law to overhaul the state's health system, has suspended his campaign.
The critic of health reform and other federal regulations is ending her bid to defeat President Obama and, in so doing, garnered praise from formerly-bitter rivals.