Town meetings are not bean
bag. I've had hundreds of them, and sometimes folks get upset. And
that's part of America, part of our process.
"But this is
clearly being orchestrated, and these folks have instructions. They
come down from a Texas lobbyist in Washington."
Durbin
said that when "there's a group of people honestly sitting in the
middle trying to ask the important questions and get the right answers,
and instead someone takes the microphone and screams and shouts to the
point where the meeting comes to an end, that isn't dialogue, that
isn't the democratic process.
"We need to respect free speech,
but we need to respect one another's rights to free speech, too. When
these people come in just to disrupt the meetings, no, that isn't
right," Durbin said.
On "Fox News Sunday," Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, said such complaints were "absurd."
"I think attacking citizens in our country for expressing their
opinions about an issue of this magnitude may indicate some weakness in
their position on the merits," McConnell
said. "And I also think it's particularly absurd for the Democrats, who
have over an $8 million e-mail list over at the DNC (Democratic
National Committee) called Organize America, to be criticizing citizens
for being organized.
"Frankly, the truth of the matter is we don't know who's organized
and who isn't. The point is the issue, the substance. They need to deal
with it. Americans are concerned about it. "
On CNN, Durbin defended the White House's new effort to track and rebut rumors about the president's health care plan, following Republican criticism that the move was intended to intimidate opponents.
"What I can tell you is that the White House is not trying to collect
names of any Americans. What they're trying to do is post on some of
these Web sites a rebuttal to some bad information," he said, pointing
to rumors that provisions in the proposal might be used to fund
abortions, cover undocumented immigrants or raid Medicare funds.
"There's so much bad information out there, you can understand the
effort to at least let people hear both sides of the story."
Both Durbin and Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, signaled the precarious
status of any "public option" -- a possible government-run insurance
plan -- in the final version of any health care legislation. Cornyn
called the idea a deal-breaker. Durbin repeated a reluctant willingness
to sacrifice the idea to assure passage of a bill.
The idea is not considered likely to be included in the final
Senate version of the bill, although a modified public option remains
in the House version of the legislation.
Cornyn said one possible administration proposal might have GOP support: an extension of unemployment benefits.
"I think we need to take a close look at that. We don't want to
provide a disincentive to work, but where people are out of work and
they need some help, sure. We're open to that," he said.
President Obama calls reforming health care the centerpiece of his current domestic platform.