Jacobs standing by Democratic Party mailer

Opponent accuses senator of hypocrisy

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“We did tough and responsible cuts,” Jacobs said. “We preserved quality care.”

In an earlier interview, Jacobs wouldn’t acknowledge he had voted for increases in co-pays. But he did later. He noted that poor children were exempted.

Jacobs said he wouldn’t want the poorest people to have a co-pay. Albracht, he said, wants all Medicaid recipients to have co-pays.

“That’s the difference between us,” the senator said. “He [Albracht] represents an extremist agenda. He hurts working families, and there are a lot of those in Sterling and Rock Falls.”

Jacobs said most Medicaid recipients are children and seniors.

“When you say to people who are in wheelchairs that you want them to pay co-pays on everything they do, that’s crazy,” Jacobs said. “They don’t have any money.”

Albracht, a Moline resident, didn’t respond to phone messages for comment this week. But in a statement, Albracht’s campaign called Jacobs’ recent criticism the “height of hypocrisy,” noting the co-pays and the end of Illinois Cares under the Medicaid reforms.

“Clearly, Jacobs is desperate to distract voters from his own record of taxing, borrowing and spending more than we can afford,” Albracht said in the statement.

Anything ‘received at no cost has no value’

On his website, Albracht said he wants all Medicaid recipients to make co-pays.

“Anything that is received at no cost has no value,” he said. “Anyone who is receiving Medicaid benefits from the state pays for nothing and receives everything.”

In fact, recipients are paying something, contrary to Albracht’s statement.

He suggests that co-pays be based on income. Now, except for children, they are not.

The amount of the co-pay, Albracht said, is not as important as the message it sends.

“In today’s health insurance world, everyone pays a co-pay,” he wrote. “It cuts down on frivolous claims and establishes a buy-in and understanding between the insured and the provider. A co-pay will reduce the overall cost of Medicaid while increasing its overall legitimacy. Being in need does not preclude being responsible.”

Steve Brown, a spokesman for the Illinois Democratic Party, said the mailers speak for themselves.

“I’m not going to re-explain something that has already been stated,” he said.

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