Ads continue to hit television screens in the close race for Western Colorados congressional seat.
Anti-tax lobbyist Grover Norquist plunged his group, Americans for Tax Reform, into the race last week with a $1.3 million ad buy for Rep. Scott Tipton, R-Cortez.
The ad makes a now-familiar attack against Tiptons main challenger, Democrat Sal Pace, on the subject of Medicare.
Calling Pace the wrong prescription for Colorado, the ad says Pace supports Obamacare, which cuts Medicare by $716 billion, hits middle class families with a tax and allows 15 unelected bureaucrats to threaten seniors access to health care.
Pace is on the record as supporting much of President Barack Obamas health care law, but he says he opposes the mandate that everyone buy insurance or pay a penalty. The Supreme Court upheld the laws constitutionality based on the theory that the penalty for not buying insurance is a tax, although supporters dispute the tax label.
Many critics, including Tipton, have made the claim about $716 billion in cuts before. Obamas law does not literally cut the Medicare budget, according to Politifact, a nonpartisan fact-checker. Instead, it seeks future savings by limiting the growth in payments to hospitals and insurance companies. Tipton twice voted for the same savings in the House Republican budget.
The claim about the 15 unelected bureaucrats refers to the Independent Payment Advisory Board. The board does not review individual patients. Instead, it recommends ways for the Medicare program to save money if Medicare spending grows too quickly. The board could not ration care, change benefits or raise taxes, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.
The $1.3 million ad is easily the biggest ad purchase of the year. It more than triples all the money Paces campaign raised from July through September.
joeh@cortezjournal.com