WORLD> America
    The myths of US campaign that wouldn't go away
    (Agencies)
    Updated: 2008-11-04 13:52

    Health Care Horrors:

    It only takes McCain and Palin a few words to bend Obama's health care plan out of recognition.

    US Democratic presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) and Senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY) arrive at a campaign rally in Orlando, Florida, October 20, 2008. [Agencies]

    McCain tells supporters he "won't fine small businesses and families with children, as Sen. Obama proposes, to force them into a new, huge, government-run health care program, while I keep the cost of the fine a secret until I hit you with it."

    Palin talks about Obama's "universal government-run program" and adds: "I don't think it's going to be real pleasing for Americans to consider health care being taken over by the Feds."

    Obama's plan doesn't fine small businesses. It doesn't force families with children, or anyone, into government-run health care. And the Feds wouldn't be taking over the system.

    Between them, McCain and Palin got one part of it half right: Obama has not said how much he would fine larger companies if they do not meet his requirement to offer health insurance or pay into a kitty.

    McCain's health plan is distorted, in turn, by Obama.

    "Your health care benefits will get taxed for the first time in history," Obama warns voters in attacking it. He often leads voters to think that's the full story. Hardly.

    McCain, in exchange for proposing to tax the value of health benefits provided by employers, would offer a tax credit to help people buy insurance. That tax benefit, $5,000 for a family, gives people much more than the new taxation takes away.

    Over time, the tax credit could lose value as premiums rise faster.

    But that's not an argument the Democratic ticket has chosen to make, in speeches, debates and relentless advertising. Running mate Joe Biden mischaracterized the new taxation as the largest middle-class tax increase in history, ignoring the credits in a rhetorical exercise that would flunk Accounting 101.

    That Darned Bridge:

    When Palin ran for governor, she indicated her support for a proposal to build a nearly $400 million bridge from Ketchikan, Alaska, to an island with 50 residents and an airport. She was, at times, wishy-washy about it.

    But that doesn't make for a compelling line against government waste on the stump.

    So her stance became: "I told the Congress 'thanks but no thanks' for that Bridge to Nowhere." And a campaign ad declared she "stopped the Bridge to Nowhere."

    Actually, during her governor's campaign, she vowed to defend Southeast Alaska "when proposals are on the table like the bridge, and not allow the spinmeisters to turn this project or any other into something that's so negative." At the time, the chief "spinmeister" against the project was McCain.

    As governor, she abandoned the bridge after Washington pulled the money from it, letting the federal dollars be used for other projects in the state.

    In September, her transportation department completed a $25 million gravel road to nowhere. Officials went ahead with the road, which would have led to the bridge, even though it has no purpose other than for foot races, hunting vehicles and possible future development.

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