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Healthcare update: Republican reading room (Rep. John Campbell)

By Rep. John Campbell (R-Calif.) - 11/04/09 04:31 PM ET

Factoid of the day: President Barack Obama's economic recovery program saved 935 jobs at the Southwest Georgia Community Action Council, an impressive success story for the stimulus plan. Trouble is, only 508 people work there.

– Quote from an Associated Press Report on overstating of stimulus job creation by the White House.

Pelosi Health Care Update: Last night at 10:07 PM Eastern time, Speaker Pelosi released the latest version of her health care plan. This version added 42 pages to make the total bill now a whopping 2,032 pages. Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD) had pledged to have the final bill in print for 72 hours before it is voted upon. That means that the soonest the bill could be brought to a vote on the House floor is 10:07 PM on Friday night.

But by all accounts, they have not yet cajoled the necessary 218 votes to ensure the bill’s passage. It also appears clear that they may make more changes to the bill in order to secure more votes before Friday night or Saturday. But they have also been clear that they will not wait until 72 hours after any further changes.



Yesterday, I spent some time in a “bill reading room” set up by Republicans to read the bill. In between floor speeches and committee votes, I randomly picked 3 sections of the bill to read. Each one was instructive. Here’s what I learned that I had not before known about the bill in just a short reading:

1. The bill contains a section called “Individual responsibility.” It is less than 20 words long. It merely refers to a section in the Internal Revenue Code of 1986. But immediately following, is a section called “employer responsibility.” It goes on for many sections and pages. We will never control health care costs as long as people are disconnected from the choice, cost, and quality of the services they receive. This bill moves people farther away.

2. In another section of the bill, I only went a few pages before encountering an entirely new “private right of action.” A “private right of action” is an opportunity to file a lawsuit on the basis of federal law. This particular new lawsuit opportunity would be for employees to sue employers if they don’t like their health care choices. There are many more such new litigation opportunities in this bill. It is universally (except of course for Pelosi and her minions) acknowledged that lawsuit abuse is driving up health care costs through direct costs as well as “defensive medicine”  by tens of billions of dollars annually. However this bill not only contains no lawsuit reform, it actually will make the problem far, far worse.  The trial lawyer lobby, however, must be very happy.

3. There is a 5.4% surtax on incomes over $500,000. This is just a “soak the rich” tax to partially pay for socialized medicine. But interestingly, the tax applies to adjusted gross income, not to taxable income. That means if you make $500,000 and give it all to charity, you will still pay a surtax of $27,000 even though you have no net income. I am not aware of any other provision of the tax code that applies the tax on gross income, rather than taxable income.

It just gets worse and worse and worse.  We will keep up the fight. I hope you will too.

Cross-posted from Townhall.com

Source:
http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/healthcare/66377-healthcare-update-republican-reading-room-rep-john-campbell

Comments (4)

Congressman Campbell, thank you for your summary notes. I especially appreciated the list of new commissions you indicate that were in the House bill in your weekly e-newsletter. Yes, keep fighting the good fight. Stephanie OchoaSanta Ana, CABY Stephanie Ochoa on 11/04/2009 at 16:57
Thank you for your partial summary. Please read the rest of the bill when you get a chance and get back to us when you're done.BY Keith on 11/04/2009 at 17:33
Nancy Pelosi and her ilk, need to stop drinking the government run socialized health care kool aide and face reality. The reality is government run programs never come in under budget and are unfailingly engulfed in fraud, waste and corruption. Government's track record is always failure when it comes to running anything including Social Security, Medicaid, Medicare, the Post Office and Amtrack that are without exception running in the red and going bankrupt. So expecting a different outcome from the Senate and House's Health Care Reform Bills is pure insanity. Moreover the Senate and House Health Care Reform Bills are filled with thousands of pages of government laws and mandates, 700 billion dollar increases in taxes, an evisceration of Medicare services for Seniors plus promises of higher quality health care at lower costs which will inevitably be broken. The bottom line is government can never be counted on to keep their promises of higher quality and lower cost Health Care for all. Just look how the promises to Seniors are being broken by government. The House and Senate Bills eviscerates health care services to Seniors who need health care the most. Likewise the promises that are being made to everyone of lower costs and higher quality health care will also be broken. Why? Because there is no way to realistically pay for them other than eviscerating the services promised to everyone when the costs go out of control as they inevitably will. The real tragedy is that once the leftist Democrats succeed in their goal of destroying the private health care system, only the elite in DC will have the luxury of a "Cadillac" health care system. The rest of us "masses" as Nancy Pelosi and her ilk like to call us, will be standing in line in vain, waiting for the government to provide us that surgery or treatment we need to save our lives.BY mary on 11/04/2009 at 19:27
Of what are the Dems afraid? Let Joe Lieberman play Mr. Smith goes to Washington, Call his (and their) bluff. He won't last and even if he did, his chain to the insurance companies could be blasted over the airwaves. Plus, the rest of the country would be able to see what a unsyympathetic, unforgiving and uncaring man he is along with the rest of his cohortsBY Ilsa Draznin on 11/04/2009 at 20:28

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