THE HILL
 

Democrats: Stop kissing elephant trunk and reform health insurance right

By Leo W. Gerard, USW International President - 10/19/09 08:23 AM ET

The meeting got testy. Voices rose last Thursday among Democrats over differences in the Senate Finance and Health committee versions of insurance reform.

Max Baucus defended his committee’s bill, voted out last week with one Republican, but lacking a public option and burdening the middle class. He said, according to reports by Sen. Evan Bayh: “We are doing the best we can.”

Maybe Baucus is doing the best he can, considering the fact that his committee, in search of Republican support, has been kissing elephant trunk so long it doesn’t know which end is up.   


Democrats must stop appeasing elephants whose intent, frankly, is to squash health care reform. Dems have a supermajority in the Senate. They have the support of the American people for health insurance reform – with the latest polls showing more than 60 percent back the public option. And the power of opponents is waning, as last week’s failed attempt by the insurance lobbying organization America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) to scuttle the Senate Finance Committee bill showed.

On Tuesday, as the Senate Finance Committee moved toward a vote, Baucus admonished: “Colleagues, this is our opportunity to make history. Our actions here will determine whether we extend coverage to more Americans . . . Now is the time to get this done.”
     
That’s all true. Except there’s one more thing: it must be done right. There’s no “best we can” when Democrats have a supermajority in the Senate and massive popular support for reform.

Right includes a public option. This is crucial to lower costs. Don’t take my word for it. Take that of Nobel Prize winning economist Paul Krugman. He noted in his Oct. 16 column in the New York Times that AHIP objected to the public option because public plan officials would negotiate for better prices. “Isn’t that an argument for, not against, such a plan?” Krugman asked. The public option, which is offered in the Senate Health Committee bill and House versions of reform, would create competition where there is none. Competition would drive down costs, which have risen exponentially, inexorably and annually – prompting too many companies to drop coverage for workers or increase fees and co-pays to the point where coverage is unaffordable.

The right way means passing reform without burdening the middle class. The Baucus bill smacks a 40 percent tax beginning in 2013 on plans valued at $8,000 for individuals or $21,000 for families, with some adjustments. The Congressional Joint Committee on Taxation estimated that this would quickly affect 40 percent of all plans. Officially, this tax would be levied on insurers, but there’s no question that they would pass that cost forward to the insured– further hiking up the price of insurance. The House legislation offers a much better approach – a surcharge on millionaires. They’ve gotten eight years of huge tax breaks under the Bush administration. It’s time for them to give a little back.
 
The right way also means that all employers must pay their share of costs. More than 160 million Americans receive health insurance as a benefit at work, but more than $1,000 of the cost of those family plan premiums goes to cover the cost of the uninsured. And those uninsured are mostly people whose employers fail to provide health insurance. The only way to apportion these costs fairly is to require employers to provide health insurance or, alternatively, contribute a meaningful sum toward the cost of workers’ coverage.
 
The right way to reform does not penalize individuals who cannot afford to obtain coverage more than employers. Health care reform must ease the burden on workers and families, not worsen it.

Baucus is correct about one thing. This is an historic moment. But the “best we can” must include the public option. It must mandate that employers pay their fair share of costs. And it must not further burden workers. Forget the elephants and serve the Americans desperate for real health insurance reform.


Source:
http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/healthcare/63637-democrats-stop-kissing-elephant-trunk-and-reform-health-insurance-right

Comments (10)

What polls show that 60 percent back the public option? Every poll I see has the public against it by 10-15 points. Please link to the poll you refer to.As far as the public option creating competition, this is a farce. The government option could lower their costs by hiding administrative costs in other departments, which is exactly what was happening in the original bill, and artificially undercutting private insurers. Government can run at a deficit (although not forever, see California, State of) while private companies can not. This leads to unfair competition, and there eventually will be no choice but the public option. There are other options out there being proposed by "elephant" Congressmen. Allow insurance companies to go national, and all of the sudden you have more than a couple otions in every region. Push HSA's, and get people shopping around for the best price for whatever they need. Right now, nobody cares because insurance picks up the tab, so there is no shopping around, and the driving force behind the free market system is gone. Something needs to happen, this is true. But going to the public option is a giant step backward, not forward.BY Dan B on 10/19/2009 at 10:43
Support the public option so that all Americans get the health care they need, not what little care FOR-PROFIT insurers often reluctantly agree to. Rep Anthony Weiner has an online petition going, and those who favor the public option, please add your vote to the list at:http://countdowntoheal thcare.com/Thank you, all.BY Greg Williams on 10/19/2009 at 12:20
Healthcare is not a right; just as driving and owning a car is not a right. People just don't want to pay for it. It's a choice to have fake nails, hair color, fancy rims on wheels and not pay for a visit to the doctor. THAT's the bottom line issue. Profit is not the evil here. It is the lack of responsibility and the idea that government can fix it. Government has created useless people who can only decide to get their nails done - not take care of themselves or their families. I am not interested in the government giving me things. I believe government should solely provide a safe forum for ME to provide for myself and my family. But, government has become the problem not the solution and I am alarmed at my countrymen who prefer being SLAVES to government and what it will give them than growing up and taking care of themselves. Let's call it what it is - slavery and this Congress, Whitehouse and Judiciary are interested in being our masters.BY Nell on 10/19/2009 at 13:04
Nell, with all due respect, profiteering from the pain and misery of others is EVIL! Yes the physicians deserve to make a living as do pharmacies, hospitals, et al, and a good one at that. For the FOR-PROFIT insurers to syphon off up to 30% of premiums paid to cover health care costs should be a crime. Driving a car as you imply is not a right, indeed it is a privilege which can be revoked if a person violates the laws governing driving. How do you apply this when it comes to health??? The public option, and a STRONG one at that is THE ONLY WAY we as a Nation can solve the health insurance debacle. Make your voices heard at Rep Weiner's online petition at http://countdowntohealthcare.com/ Thank you, all.BY Greg Williams on 10/19/2009 at 13:56
Hey Leo, maybe you could have added another paragraph to your article and let us all know what back door deal the Steelworkers have already worked on on healthcare? Your right, you sure don't need any Republican votes. That darned "open tent" policy that said any old democrat is better than none is all that is standing in your way now. Still like to know why the United Steel Workers union president is hawking this health care bill here on the hill.BY Partick Michael on 10/20/2009 at 01:11
Greg, selective profiteering is OK? Congress can pad, dupe and profit from and for their own and that is ok? But the rest of us should just get in line, pay the bill and hope for the best? No, healthcare is no different that Wall Street or Countrywide. Health insurance is a problem because of government controls, not inspite of them. Don't like health insurance? Most doctors and hospitals have a cash discount. You just want something for free. You should run for Congress.BY Nell on 10/20/2009 at 12:20
You finally identified the real goal Greg; the health INSURANCE debacle. This has absolutely nothing to do with reducing health care cost or improving care and everything about destroying the health insruance industry. You must be an attorney, buecause only a lawyer could see any value in your position.BY Jimmy Knuckles on 10/20/2009 at 13:41
Greg with all due respect,I would love to know what credentials, inside source you have regarding the insurance industry. Nell is on target. Since when is it wrong for a company, insurance or otherwise to make a profit. I don't care if it a service based company or a company that sells software. You progressionists put everyone and everything in a neat little package and then call it a debacle! Do you have ANY idea what goes into determining an insurance premium I guarantee you don't. Have you questioned your insurance company or any for that matter to see what they have done to bring down costs! No, don't think so. All you laymen have the answer. Obama says it's the insurance industry so it must be so. BAAAAAH! Soon be time for sheering the sheep. I have no doubt this bill will pass in one form or another. Obama, like a spoiled child, will get his way no matter what. As far as I'm concerned it will all fail. People will be thinking wow…remember when we had insurance and our employers paid a large share? Remember when we called the dr when our children were sick and they saw us within the hour while they still had the fever, not 3 days later, after we had already been to the ER. Yes very cost effective. I wonder how many new diagnostic tests will be developed and instituted in the next ten years. Yes, the insurance companies have to project those costs into their premiums. They have to be able to project what services are going to be used and when a new test is instiuted it may be wonderful but it is also expensive.. After all, they have to pay for the research etc. Hmmmm, the government will have to now pick up that tab. somehow I don't think Obama and the House will be paying that on their own…oh wait! Guess that means higher taxes or…Granny doesn't get her hip replaced because Medicare has to be reduced…AGAIN! Oh well, i have written my last letter,made my last phone call. When the millions of insurance company employees are on the unemployment rolls look for mine first…I will be applying for every program out there and sitting back in my chair drinking my Margarita and thinking wow…darn insurance companies have certainly ruined the country. Oh let me check my bank account to see if my check has deposited yet. I have never taken anything form the government but those days are over. I think we should all just become one big burden to society. After all we can't think for ourselves. We need to be "nudged" into the Obama way of thinking. Good luck to you with your public option. me I'll pay the fine and do what I want with MY health.BY Kim  on 10/21/2009 at 05:51
Amen to Jimmy Knuckles!BY Kim on 10/21/2009 at 05:52
Evan Bye is a whore of the Health care industry… he and his wife have benefited to the tune of $ millions. Bye EvanBY Hans on 11/11/2009 at 02:59

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