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Isakson's office did not respond to a request for comment. Reversing positions is off to a particularly fast start on Rep. Paul Ryan's proposal to turn Medicare into a free-market health care system when it comes time for those currently under age 55 to enroll. A little more than a week ago, Gingrich called it "right-wing social engineering." He backpedaled when conservatives criticized him, blamed the media for its reporting on the controversy
-- and then said he had called Ryan to apologize. More recently, Gingrich said he would modify the Medicare proposal "in a way that people could voluntarily decide." Translation: Despite a switch in his position, he still apparently opposes Ryan's plan, which is mandatory, not optional, for those more than 10 years from Medicare eligibility. Brown, the first Republican to hold a Senate seat from Massachusetts in a generation, has held three positions on Ryan's budget and its prescription for Medicare. On May 13, he said he would vote in its favor. Then came a statement that said he supported the overall direction of Ryan's budget but declined to say he would vote for it. On Monday, he completed the turnaround, unambiguously so. "Our country is on an unsustainable fiscal path. But I do not think it requires us to change Medicare as we know it," he wrote in Politico. Democrats strongly suggested politics was at work, pointing to polls showing strong public opposition to the plan. And forgetting, perhaps, their own turnabout on something equally unpopular with the electorate, if not more so: Obama's pleas for an increase in the debt limit. Failure to raise borrowing authority could lead to a financial default by the government that "would cause a recession even worse than the one we just had, if not a depression," Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said earlier this month as he jabbed at Republicans demanding spending cuts in exchange for their votes. This time it was the Republicans' turn for political mischief. Schumer, they hastened to point out, voted against debt limit increases when Bush was president in 2003, 2004 and 2006. In fact, it's an issue on which the only consistency is change. With Democrats often voting no, Republicans regularly had to provide the support needed to raise the debt limit when Bush was in the White House.
[Associated
Press;
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