Pageant winner Kara McCullough (Miss DC) sent heads shaking Sunday night when she said "affordable health care in America is a “privilege” instead of a “right.”
McCullough, 25, who started the day as Miss District of Columbia,
linked health care access to job creation, leaving the impression that
people without a job are not entitled to coverage.
“I’m definitely going to say it’s a privilege,” McCullough said during
the question-and-answer segment of the 2017 pageant at the Mandalay Bay
Convention Center on the Las Vegas Strip.
“As a government employee, I’m granted health care. And I see firsthand
that for one, to have health care, you need to have jobs, so therefore
we need to continue to cultivate this environment so that we’re given
the opportunities to have health care as well as jobs for all Americans
worldwide.”
McCullough’s remarks set off an instant Twitter debate over the
polarizing issue with Republican attempts to repeal and replace
Obamacare serving as a backdrop.
“Miss DC was my fav but ... not after that answer,” wrote Twitter user Charlsley Carey. “Everyone has a right to health care.”
“Well I guess poor people don’t deserve health care because the new Miss USA said it was a privilege,” tweeted Kathy Lovett.
But McCullough did win some fans.
“Miss USA is beautiful inside and out,” tweeted Politixgal. “Healthcare
IS NOT a right. It costs money & someone has to pay. You shd be
paying for your own.”
McCullough’s comments come more than a week after the
Republican-controlled House of Representatives passed a bill to repeal
former President Barack Obama’s signature health care legislation. The bill is now in the Senate.
The runner-up Sunday was Miss New Jersey Chhavi Verg, a Rutgers
University student studying marketing and Spanish. Second runner-up was
Miss Minnesota Meridith Gould, who is studying apparel retail
merchandising at the University of Minnesota.
McCullough’s win was the second in a row for a contestant representing the nation’s capital.
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