Saturday - Kerry first spoke briefly shortly after 12:30, he took a recent McCain quote and contrasted it to McCain's 2008 position. In 2008, McCain spoke of savings available in Medicare of over $1 billion. When Kerry finished, Burr said that Factcheck.org refuted this. Kerry said he hadn't seen the article, but the campaign never denied that they could make these cuts.
At shortly after 13:45, Kerry returned. He had the factcheck article which did NOT refute Kerry's point - just Obama's ad's implication that Medicare benefits would be cut. Kerry pointed out that that was exactly what the Finance committee and the bill did. Kerry then spoke more on home health care. When he finished, a seething angry McCain with his face throbbing red, started to speak. He seethed "I never said I would cut benefits" and he demanded the factcheck article be added to the record.
link to Saturday's video (and transcripts)
http://www.c-spanvideo.org/congress/?q=node/69850&date=2009-12-5Monday - Here is the Kerry reference. (I see nothing wrong with what he says here, other than it is silly. It is silly as the 2003 amendment is not related to what is happening now. It is easy to blow away the argument that if you ask for an increase at any time, you need to ALWAYS vote to add more. The fact is you can take McCain's own record and see he is not all yes or no. I had not seen it before. ) (It also seems that this might be McCain fighting for Arizona - if he is right, it is wrong that FL was protected and AZ wasn't.
http://www.c-spanvideo.org/congress/?q=node/77531&id=9073154The Saturday attacks are bad, but Monday really is not a problem.