After Trump’s OK, Cline votes to release Epstein files

After getting grudging permission from Donald Trump, Congressman Cline joined every member of Congress but one in voting for the Epstein Files Transparency Act.

After months of delay, a petition that Cline and almost all other House Republicans refused to sign got enough signatures to force a vote to direct the Justice Department to release all files on its investigation into convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Cline insisted he backed a House committee’s investigation into Epstein’s crimes. But the investigation produced very little new information.

Would Cline have been brave enough to defy Trump if the president had urged Republicans to vote NO? Not based on his continued cringing support for the man.

And of course Trump could order the DoJ to release the files any time he wants. Will Cline urge him to do so? What do you think?

UPDATE: Cline is actually proud of his vote.

Cline’s health insurance “alternatives” don’t work

Whenever Congressman Cline talks about health insurance, he advocates offering cheaper polices as a way of driving down costs and make insurance more affordable.

“I want – and what most of us here on Capitol Hill want – is to find solutions that long-term lower the cost of insurance, by providing competition in the marketplace and alternatives to these high-dollar policies,” Cline said.

What he never mentions is how utterly inadequate those “alternatives” are.

As The Washington Post reports:

Robert Hays, an industrial electronics salesman in Arkansas, thought he’d purchased conventional medical insurance. So did Essie Nath, 67, a retired cafeteria worker in Wyoming. So did Martin Liz, 47, a Key West chef.

Each enrolled in the kind of private health insurance that Trump administration officials have promoted as an alternative to plans sold under Obamacare.

The difference between the two options became all too clear after Hays, Nath and Liz required surgery: Their cheaper policies left them facing bills of tens of thousands of dollars. Hays is facing bills of $116,000 for neck surgery required after tweaking his neck while lifting weights; Nath had heart failure and got bills of $82,000; Liz is stuck with bills of more than $100,000 for a knee replacement.

Unlike most insurance, these plans are not required to cover preexisting conditions or even basic needs such as maternity care and mental health. Their coverage is so full of holes that five states have banned their sale, according to KFF, a nonpartisan health policy research group. Even some major insurers have questioned whether relying on the short-term plans is a good idea, warning that many consumers could mistake them for comprehensive coverage. The Biden administration referred to them as “junk” plans.

Cline bitterly opposed the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) which sets minimum standards for the plans it offers. He thinks the solution to rising health care costs is to offer cheap policies that can leave people with staggering out-of-pocket costs.

We need to deal with out-of-control medical costs. But not this way.