One Look at Biden's Top Advisor Explains His Support for Hamas
A New York Giants Legend Just Hopped on the Trump Train
CNN Host Admits Something We've All Known About the Trump-Stormy Daniels Trial
Jerry Seinfeld's Duke Commencement Wasn't Derailed by Pro-Hamas Antics
How to Neutralize the Campus Communists
The UN Got Busted for Parroting Hamas Casualty Propaganda
Biden Gets More Bad News From Polling in Battleground States
Hamas Launches Rocket at Children's Playground in Israel
Is the Trucker Who Once Ousted NJ's Senate President Making a Political Comeback?
National Insecurity, Courtesy of Joe Biden
Trump Rips Biden Over Israel at Massive New Jersey Rally
A 'Never Again Trump' Guide to Voting Trump
Eurovision: The Silent Majority and the Vocal Minority
Biden’s Middle Eastern Foreign Policy Blunders
Unbridled Corruption of the Iranian Regime
Tipsheet

Steve Scalise on Gov. Whitmer's 'Sickening' Veto

Michigan Office of the Governor via AP, Pool

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo is not the only governor with a nursing home problem. In Michigan, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer has proven to be just as eager to enact policies that put seniors at risk of contracting the coronavirus. Way back when Michigan reported its first COVID cases, the Health Care Association of Michigan made a reasonable suggestion for the governor. They asked her to move infected nursing home residents to vacant facilities, which could be used as quarantine centers. But Whitmer insisted that the best approach would be to keep COVID patients in "isolated" areas still inside the nursing homes.

Advertisement

Nursing home deaths climbed. A total of 38,000 residents were living in nursing homes, with 1,947 deaths reported. Put in a more startling perspective, about 33 percent of the state's COVID-related deaths have been nursing home residents or employees. Sen. Peter Lucid (R-Shelby Township) had seen enough and introduced a measure, Senate Bill 956, to finally move COVID patients to separate facilities. Whitmer vetoed it on Friday.

In a letter defending her veto, Gov. Whitmer said that the bill was based on "the false premise that isolation units created within existing facilities are somehow insufficient to protect seniors."

"Instead of protecting seniors, this bill would require the state to create COVID-19-only facilities, forcing hospitals and many nursing homes to send COVID-19-positive patients to such facilities without any requirement for consent, doctor approval or notification to the patient or their family," she added. "The legislation fails to explain how such facilities would be staffed or paid for, or how frail residents would be protected during the potentially traumatic transfer from one facility to another."

Rep. Steve Scalise (R-LA) didn't accept her reasoning and said that her veto was "sickening."

Advertisement

Rep. Scalise has been one of the leading lawmakers to demand an independent investigation into Gov. Cuomo's nursing home mandate, which forced long-term care facilities to accept COVID patients who had been discharged from the hospital, likely leading to thousands of untimely deaths. The investigation conducted by the New York State Department of Health, which concluded that the policy had no significant impact on the number of nursing home deaths and blamed nursing home staffers instead, was roundly dismissed as a joke.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement