- 185, Rockefeller, "Strike state exchanges, multiple competing exchanges, and regional exchanges, and create one national exchange"
- 191, Rockefeller, "Strike health care cooperatives"
- 196, Rockefeller, "Increase Medicaid eligibility to 150% of poverty"
- 201, Rockefeller/Hatch, "Remove the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) from the exchange"
- 206, Rockefeller, "Allow early retirees between ages 55 and 64 to buy into Medicare"
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Rockefeller on Healthcare Reform
Friday, September 18, 2009
TGIF
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Jim Gerlach Against Medicare?
Here is an excerpt of an email from my Congressman, Jim Gerlach (R-PA) regarding an email about health care reform that I had sent to him:
The Democratic Leadership in the House of Representatives has put forth a health care reform proposal in the form of a 1,107-page bill, H.R. 3200. I do not support this bill as it is currently written. We cannot afford its massive tax and spending increases in this time of recession. This bill also contains a "public option plan," in other words, a health care plan that is controlled and run by the government. I do not believe that bureaucrats should be making health care decisions for our citizens, or controlling the medical decision-making process in a way that will delay or deny services for you or your family. It is not the proper role for the government to be telling Americans what doctors they can see, how many x-rays they can get in a year, or what prescriptions they can take. I believe it's imperative to preserve the sacred doctor-patient relationship and prevent the government from interfering in those decisions.
Besides the flat out lies that the government would tell you "how many x-rays [you] can get in a year", does he not think that government has any place in the medical insurance business? Maybe he is opposed to a little program called Medicare. Since he is running for governor of the state with the second oldest population in the nation, maybe he shouldn't position himself against the wildly popular government run insurance program.
And since when have Republicans been such staunch defenders of medicare? Well, since the current health care debate started!
Restructure the Senate
- Every state is allocated at least three votes.
- States with more than 2 million inhabitants have 4 votes.
- States with more than 6 million inhabitants have 5 votes.
- States with more than 7 million inhabitants have 6 votes.
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Santorum 2012
Max Baucus as Committee Chair: Coincidence?
There's a good article at The Daily Beast which demonstrates the frustration of the left with the current health care bill, Max Baucus, and small state senatos. However, Michelle Goldberg wonders "Somehow, the most important progressive legislation in a generation has ended up in the hands of a conservative, unimaginative man whose coffers are stuffed with health care industry dollars, and who represents a state with less than half the population of Brooklyn," the following portion of her article demonstrates that it was no coincidence that it did. It is not "somehow" that it came to be.
Indeed, Baucus exemplifies much of what’s wrong with the Senate—both its fealty to corporate donors and the inordinate amount of power it accords to people from small, conservative-leaning states.
The combined populations of Montana, Wyoming, Nevada, North and South Dakota, Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Arizona and Alaska are about equal to those of New York and Massachusetts. The former states have 22 senators; the latter, at the moment, have three. That creates a tremendously high bar for progressive legislation, even if that legislation is supported by a majority of Americans. Worse, campaign funding compounds the rightward tendencies of small-state senators. As Nate Silver pointed out last month, senators from small states, having a smaller fundraising base among their constituents, are more reliant on donations from corporate political action committees. “Senators from the ten smallest states have received, on average, 28.4 percent of their campaign funds from corporate PACs, versus 13.7 for those in the ten largest,” wrote Silver, who concluded that small state senators have even more incentive than their colleagues to “placate special interests.”
The nature of the Senate is that any bill costing money must go through the finance committee, in addition to any other committees which have oversight. It will cost money to insure people, so it is under the jurisdicion of the Senate Finance committee, and public health bills are also under the jurisdiction of the Senate HELP committee (Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions). Healthcare has been a Democratic priority since 1992. Democrats use a system of seniority and interest when choosing committee chairs, and small state senators are more reliant on corporate PAC money than large state Senators.
So is it really a random occurance that a conservative, small state senator would end up being the committee chair of one of the two committees through which health care legislation must pass? Or is it more likely that a small state senator knew that this would be a priority in the future, knew he would have to raise corporate money to be elected, so he showed an interest and therefore would be chairman of one of the two committees when the time came for creating a bill?
I don't think it was "somehow" at all - Baucus has raised more than $1,000,000 in the past five years from the health care industry.