The Wyoming House decided it will debate two resolutions asserting states rights Wednesday when it approved introduction of both HJ 2 and HJ 5.
A Senate resolution asserting the state's right to ignore any national health insurance reform failed to win introduction.
Sixteen reps and eight senators co-sponsored HJ 2 Assertion of states rights.
HJ2 is sponsored by Representative(s) Illoway, Anderson, R., Brechtel, Childers, Edmonds, Harvey, Lubnau, Madden, McOmie, Miller, Moniz, Quarberg, Shepperson, Simpson, Wallis and Zwonitzer, Dn. and Senator(s) Anderson, J., Bebout, Case, Cooper, Dockstader, Martin, Meier and Ross.
Ayes: Representative(s) Anderson, R., Bagby, Barbuto, Berger, Blake, Blikre, Bonner, Brechtel, Brown, Buchanan, Cannady, Childers, Cohee, Craft, Davison, Diercks, Edmonds, Esquibel, K., Gingery, Goggles, Harshman, Harvey, Illoway, Jaggi, Kimble, Landon, Lockhart, Lubnau, Madden, McKim, McOmie, Miller, Millin, Moniz, Patton, Peasley, Pedersen, Petersen, Quarberg, Roscoe, Semlek, Shepperson, Simpson, Steward, Stubson, Teeters, Throne, Wallis, Zwonitzer, Dn. and Zwonitzer, Dv..
Nays: Representative(s) Byrd, Carson, Connolly, Gilmore, Hales, Hammons, Jorgensen and Thompson.
Excused: Representative(s) Hallinan and Philp.
Ayes 50 Nays 8 Excused 2 Absent 0 Conflicts 0
One wonders what the nation's great Civil War president, Abraham Lincoln, would think of this resolution.
HJ 5 is sponsored by: Representative(s) Childers, Cohee, Davison, Hallinan, Jaggi, McOmie, Shepperson and Wallis and Senator(s) Case, Coe and Townsend
2/9/2010 H Introduced and Referred to H01
Excused: Representative(s) Hallinan and Philp.
In the Senate, SJ 1 Health Freedom of Choice bill failed to win introduction Wednesday. It proposed an amendment to the state Constitution that asseerted the state's right to ignore any national health care system. It apparently did not stop the elderly from signing up for Medicare.
Here's the bill title: A JOINT RESOLUTION proposing to amend the Wyoming Constitution by creating a new section specifying that the federal government shall not interfere with an individual's health care decisions and prohibiting any penalty, fine or tax imposed because of a decision to participate in or decline health insurance, or to pay directly or receive payment directly for health care services.
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