In the News
Health care and Afghanistan
Sep 11 2009
Senator Warner appeared again today on ABCNews.com's "TopLine" program to discuss health care reform and other congressional issues.
Town hall meeting in Fredericksburg
Sep 04 2009
Before a crowd of more than 1,800, Senator Warner outlined his three principles for health care reform during a town hall meeting last night in Fredericksburg.
A civil conversation on end-of-life
Aug 28 2009
Senator Warner hosted a thoughtful discussion yesterday with close to 100 religious leaders, caregivers, and hospice workers to discuss his on-going efforts to improve end-of-life care and advance care planning.
Warner Holds Out Hope for End-of-Life Proposals
Aug 27 2009
The New York Times reports on Senator Warner's forum with faith leaders on end-of-life health issues.
Sen. Warner calls for lower health costs
Aug 26 2009
Charlottesville Daily Progress: U.S. Sen. Mark R. Warner believes that the price of not undertaking health care reform is far too high.
Warner discusses health care reform
Aug 25 2009
Roanoke Times: Employees and medical staff at Lewis-Gale Medical Center in Salem spent a little over an hour Monday sharing insights and questions about health care reform with U.S. Sen. Mark Warner.
Listening to Virginians
Aug 25 2009
Senator Warner was out on the road this week, discussing health reform with thousands of Virginians in a variety of forums and formats.
Talking health care, live at noon
Aug 24 2009
Senator Warner was in Roanoke today, and dropped by the studio at WDBJ Ch. 7 to talk about health care during the noon broadcast.
Advocating spending controls
Aug 17 2009
Senator Warner was mentioned in the Washington Post last week as one of the "key lawmakers" who is pushing for health reform legislation that addresses the federal deficit.
Deficit Plays Into Health Reform
Bill Needs to Rein In Federal Spending, Key Lawmakers Say
Aug 14 2009
Washington Post: "It's not good enough that it's just paid for; it actually has to start driving long-term costs down," said Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), one of nine freshman Democrats who last month urged Senate leaders to pay more attention to controlling federal health spending in this era of "exploding debt and deficits."