Clinton’s Ohio ads falsely portray reason for CHIP:
A major focus of the Clinton ads is the Children’s Health Insurance Program, which shares the cost with states for insuring low-income children and where she claims to have as a champion of CHIP.
Hillary Clinton’s first television campaign ads in Ohio
portray her as an advocate for children. However, she is not telling the truth. Two of the
ads show a softer side of the presumptive Democratic nominee, emphasizing
lesser known parts of her biography that include championing a children’s
health care program that passed while she was first lady.
In
Cincinnati, the Clinton campaign has purchased airtime on WCPO and WLWT,
according to filings with the Federal Communications Commission compiled by the
Sunlight Foundation.
A major focus
of the Clinton ads is the Children’s Health Insurance Program, which shares the
cost with states for insuring low-income children. In the
1990s, Clinton had failed in her effort to overhaul the health care system with
an effort nicknamed “Hillarycare,” but Congress did pass the smaller CHIP
program in 1997. In Ohio, 136,000 children received coverage through CHIP in
2013-14, the most recent year with data available through the Kaiser Family
Foundation.
But Clinton had little to do with the creation of
CHIP, the Republican National Committee said in a statement.
Sen. Orrin
Hatch, R-Utah, who helped lead negotiations on the program, in 2008, told The
Washington Post Hillary was not involvement in writing or
debating the bill.
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