State Representative candidates fight for position in 115th District
Amber Ellis
Daily Egyptian
While Southern Illinois residents face controversial issues such as
medical malpractice suits, student-related issues and same-sex benefits,
the candidates for the 115th District will spend the next four days
pushing their respective agendas.
Voters have three candidates to choose from: an incumbent Republican, a
self-described youthful Democrat and a trend-setting Green Party
candidate. Their strategies for change are as different as the parties
they represent.
For example, medical malpractice suits have left some Illinois doctors
crossing state lines in search of cheaper insurance rates. As a result,
these same doctors will leave their patients behind, forcing them to
seek care from other physicians.
Each of the candidates agreed malpractice insurance rates are a serious
problem in the Illinois.
Rep. Mike Bost, co-sponsored a 1995 tort reform law that puts caps on
malpractice suits, but the Illinois Supreme Court later ruled the
legislation was unconstitutional. Part of the problem, said the
Murphysboro Republican, stems from the state's Democrat-controlled court
system.
"Not only are we losing our doctors, but we're losing business and all
the economic growth is going out the window with them," Bost said.
For Democratic candidate Mic Middleton, insurance reform - not tort
reform - is an answer to the malpractice dilemma. A few cases, he added,
are potentially changing the medical industry for the worse.
"If we really study the nuts and bolts of this issue, the industry is
price gauging all doctors - even the good ones - for the mistakes of bad
doctors," Middleton said.
The skyrocketing insurance rates are a part of a larger problem - the
number of uninsured Illinoisans - said Green Party Candidate Rich
Whitney. Universal health care and a single provider, he added, would
eliminate many of the problems facing the state and nation.
"This is also an attack on the jury system, which is one of the
hallmarks of American democracy," Whitney said. "The United States is
the only country in the world that puts such faith in citizen juries."
Rising tuition costs are major concerns for many college students and
their parents. Undergraduate students at SIUC are facing a 7.9 percent
tuition increase next year.
Lower tuition costs are contingent upon the state's business growth and
a revenue neutral shift from property taxes to another form of taxation,
Bost said.
As an SIUC alumnus, Middleton said he would like to increase the
University's student body by attracting an additional 10,000 students to
the campus. He said this change could improve the University's status,
as well as bring revenue to the area.
The question of whether to allow same-sex marriages has crept onto the
ballots in some states. Illinoisans, however, will not have to worry
about voting on the issue on Election Day. Earlier this year, Gov. Rod
Blagojevich said the state should keep the current law barring same-sex
marriages, while prohibiting landlords and employers from discriminating
against homosexuals. The University was up in arms this semester as
well, after Chancellor Walter Wendler said homosexual relationships were
sinful. Wendler later retracted his statements.
Both Bost and Middleton said the institution of marriage should remain
between a man and a woman, while Whitney said the state should make
civil unions available to everyone while the religious institution of
marriage should be left up to the church.
"If done that way, every religion would be free to determine what
marriage means to its own religion," Whitney said. "Let's get the
government out of churches, and let's get the churches out of
government."
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