Lawmakers defensive over health care reform
New York Times: Lawmakers on the defensive over health care reform debates
Lawmakers are returning home for their August recess and many are facing angry crowds. In Georgia, Rep. Hank Johnson told his constituents not to be deterred by reports of ''town halls gone wild,'' but the Democrat wasn't taking any chances at his first health care forum as three times the normal security detail was in position to thwart any problems. Conflicting reports from a Clarkston forum -- one said the meeting featured angry voters and booing, while another report on the same forum said the nearly 2,000 attendees stayed calm. And Tom Baxter, of Southern Political Report, says there was a little pot-stirring, but not a big rumble as expected.
In North Carolina, Rep. Brad Miller, D-N.C., said he will not host any town halls this month because he received a phone call threatening his life. Instead, he said he will hold one-on-one meetings with constituents.
Also in the South:
ALABAMA: Time ticking on governors in water wars -- all three leave office in 2010
ARKANSAS: Groundbreaking set for wood pellet plant on August 13
FLORIDA: Gov. Crist feeling the pressure over slow movement of stimulus funds
KENTUCKY: State to consider shifting prison funds to other areas
LOUISIANA: Medicaid cuts to cost Central Louisiana $5.3 million
MISSISSIPPI: U.S. Sen. Wicker to talk health care reform with medical students
NORTH CAROLINA: Gov. Perdue to sign significant death penalty law
SOUTH CAROLINA: Democrats seek probe into Sanford's use of state planes
TENNESSEE: TVA to use dry storage for coal ash
VIRGINIA: Congressmen to hold town hall meetings on health care reform
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Labels: coal ash, Crist, death penalty, health care, Medicaid, Perdue, prison, reform, Sanford, Wicker


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