Articles Tagged ‘Kathleen Sebelius’

Republican Governors Condemn Baucuscare

Monday, October 12th, 2009

Likely anticipating skyrocketed state liabilities, 14 out of the 28 Republican governors in the U.S. have sent letters to their respective Congressional delegations urging them to vote against the health care reform proposals of Sen. Max Baucus (D-MT).

According to an article from The Hill, the efforts of these GOP governors have been complemented by the active assistance of Republican lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

Though Barbour coordinated the letter-writing effort among the governors, it is part of a larger initiative launched by House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) earlier this year to increase the outreach among state heads and congressional leaders. Sources say Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) is also playing a leading role on this issue. 

Those Republican doctors who have not committed to writing critical letters are: “Charlie Crist (Fla.), Jodi Rell (Conn.), Tim Pawlenty (Minn.), Bob Riley (Ala.), Bobby Jindal (La.), John Hoeven (N.D.) and Jim Douglas (Vt.). Of these, Crist, Douglas and Rell were strong proponents of the stimulus package that was rejected by all but three Republicans in Congress.”

The main concern regarding Baucus care is the unprecedented financial burden it will place in the form of liabilities of the states:

GOP Nebraska Gov. Dave Heineman told his delegation, including Sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.), that that “this new unfunded federal Medicaid mandate could result in the higher taxes on Nebraskans or in cutting state aid to Nebraska’s school districts as well as state appropriations to our universities, state colleges and community colleges.” 

Nelson, a centrist, has refused to commit to voting with Democrats on procedural roll calls on healthcare reform legislation. If Nelson sided with Republicans, he would significantly increase the chances of a successful GOP filibuster.

Other Republican governors, including Haley Barbour (Miss.), Mitch Daniels (Ind.) and Rick Perry (Texas), echoed Heineman in letters they have recently sent to Capitol Hill. Governors from Hawaii, Arizona, Alaska, California, Rhode Island, South Carolina and others plan to follow suit before week’s end. 

Barbour, chairman of the Republican Governors Association (RGA), was the first to pen a “letter of concern” to lawmakers from his state. And it provided a template for others to follow.

While Democrats in the Senate claim that this program will be funded by the federal government and run by the states, many Republican governors are skeptical. 

“The current proposals, both in the House and Senate, will expand the Medicaid program at additional costs paid not by the federal government, but passed down to the states,” Barbour wrote earlier this month.

Republicans are touting an editorial in Monday’s Wall Street Journal titled, “Max’s Mad Mandate.” The op-ed called Baucus’s bill “the mother — and father and crazy uncle — of unfunded mandates.”

GOP governors are not the only ones who have voiced their criticisms: 

Democratic governors have raised concerns about the House healthcare bill, but some of them backtracked this summer. The Democratic governors, including Brian Schweitzer (Mont.) and Martin O’Malley (Md.), accused staff at the National Governors Association of giving them false information after a meeting with Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, according to a FoxNews.com report.

Seven Fatal Flaws of Baucus Bill

Sunday, September 20th, 2009

In the last forty-eight hours since Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Montana) released his health care proposal, America’s Healthy Future Act of 2009, much of the focus has been on criticism stemming from the left side of the health care debate. It must be noted, however, that the bill is not viewed without harsh criticism over on the right side of the aisle either.

One of the more vocal groups is The Heritage Foundation and its health care-based project, Fix Health Care Policy. There is general agreement on both sides of the debate that the problem concerns the rising costs of health insurance. While President Obama and the Congressional Democratic leadership believe expanding the federal government’s grip on the health care industry is the solution, Heritage’s analysis, however, is precisely the opposite. They believe promoting personal ownership will give Americans more health choices and force health plans and providers to compete directly for their dollars. The end result, they say, would lower costs and guarantee better quality care.

As far as Baucuscare is concerned, Heritage believes it to be nothing more then a Trojan horse, a public plan cleverly disguised as a co-operative. The Washington D.C.-based think tank concluded that there were seven fatal flaws to the health care proposal. The first is the that Montana senator’s proposal would introduce a new middle-class tax hike that would include a sales tax on drug and medical devices as well as a new federal excise tax on insurance plans that exceed $8,000 for an individual and $21,000 for a family.

Beginning in 2013, Baucus’s health care bill would force everyone in the United States to purchase health insurance that complied with newly instituted federal quality standards, taking the choice out of the hands of the individual and into that of the federal government. Penalties of $750 and $950 would instituted to those three hundred percent below the poverty line and families three times above the poverty line, respectively, who failed to comply with this regulation. But in order to enforce such a requirement, detailed health insurance information on every single American citizen would be collected, significantly reducing patient privacy and bolstering the administrative costs to employers and insurers.

The bill’s other faults, so says Heritage, include the expansion of the already unsustainable Medicaid program, a pay-or-play employer mandate, and the establishment of a value-based purchasing, which, if not followed, would result in lower-Medicare payments for hospitals and physicians, thus biasing their decisions and violating existing federal law on the federal government interfering with the practice of medicine.

Perhaps the most frightening defect is the open invitation the legislation presents for infinite federal control over the ‘co-operative’ through the arraignment of six billion dollars in federal funding for startup loans and grants. This, in turn, would provide Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius with very broad latitude to regulate and/or promote co-ops as she saw fit.

To remedy the situation, the Heritage Foundation offers President Obama two paths he should pursue in the coming days and weeks in the ongoing health care debate:

The President needs to lead by meeting with key leaders of both parties and seek bipartisan reform around two key themes: 1) instead of a one-size-fits-all federal solution, Congress should let the states take the lead on reform, and 2) reform the tax treatment of health insurance to give all taxpayers tax relief for purchasing private insurance and extend assistance (through spending offsets) to low-income families to purchase private insurance instead of expanding government care.

President Obama, however, is unlikely to follow through with either one of these suggestions. He is still naively under the impression that ‘We won, we can do what we want’ and therefore he can Rahm … umm, ram through the public-option proposal without any kind of Republican support whatsoever. It will be yet another brilliant example of how inexperienced and politically inept Barack Obama is, demonstrating even further why it was a mistake to have elected him to serve in the highest office in the land in the first place.

After Starting “Universal” State Insurance Program, Maine has MORE Uninsured

Friday, September 18th, 2009

Originated from Statehousecall.org

By Tarren R. Bragdon

The U.S. Census Bureau last week released updated information on the number of uninsured people in Maine. Maine’s number of uninsured is now 21,000 higher than pre-Dirigo (2004) and the second highest in New England. In contrast, the number of uninsured in neighboring New Hampshire has dropped, despite the fact that New Hampshire’s Medicaid program is less than half as large as Maine’s.

The numbers speak for themselves. The promise of Maine’s public option experiment was to cover all of the state’s uninsured people by 2009 through Dirigo Health. Unfortunately, after spending more than $155 million in taxpayer funds and raising taxes on private health insurance to fund the Dirigo experiment, we now learn that Maine has more uninsured people than before Dirigo began.

The Dirigo policies are expensive with premiums skyrocketing 74% in four years, the benefits have been reduced, the program has been closed to new enrollees for two years, and the taxes to pay for this scheme actually make other health plans more expensive. How much worse does it have to get before Maine politicians can admit that this is not working and should not be duplicated by Congress with a federal government plan like Dirigo?

Two weeks ago, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius was in Maine to announce that millions of federal dollars will be spent to help prop up Maine’s Dirigo disaster. Here are several questions that she did not answer, but should have. Given the lack of success in trimming Maine’s uninsured population, how can Maine’s leadership possibly justify taking federal money, during a time of unprecedented federal deficits, to prop up Dirigo?

The latest US Census Bureau figures show Maine’s number of uninsured climbed by 22,000.

  • Maine now has 136,000 non-elderly uninsured, up 22,000 from last year and up from 115,000 in 2004, the first year before Dirigo was implemented (DirigoChoice began covering people on Jan 1, 2005).
  • New Hampshire, with an almost identical size population, actually experienced a drop in the number of uninsured, from 136,000 in 2007 to 131,000 in 2008, despite the fact that NH’s Medicaid program covers 97,000 people compared to Maine’s 223,000 for this same non-elderly population.
  • Maine (at 12.3%) has the second-highest percent uninsured of all the New England states - NH (11.5%), CT (11.4% ), VT (10.6%), MA (6.3%) and RI (13.4%) and the highest in northern New England.

Kathleen Sebelius: Obama’s Fox Guarding the Henhouse?

Friday, September 11th, 2009

President Barack Obama announced last night in his address to a joint session of Congress that his administration would try test programs of tort reform in different states throughout the U.S. This move was meant to alleviate the burden of GOP criticism for his refusal to acknowledge medical malpractice as an ongoing thorn in the side of medical professionals and is seen by many as politically risky for a man who received much of his financial backing from trial lawyers.

According to Stephen F. Hayes of the Weekly Standard, who offered commentary for FOX News after President Obama’s speech last night, mandating tort reform in all 50 states could save Americans between $100 billion and $200 billion annually. 

His speech touted that they would work for bipartisanship by submitting to Republicans’ demands for tort reform, but President Obama admitted that it would not be a widespread institution of these measures. Instead, the White House will simply test how effective these changes are in trimming down costs in the medical industry. 

The question arose: who will determine the success of such a pilot program for tort reform? It seems President Obama found Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius to be the best fit.

That’s right: Kathleen Sebelius. Sebelius is the former governor of the great state of Kansas. She might find it awfully difficult to take on her new task, as she served for eight years as the head of the Kansas Trial Lawyers Association.

Trial lawyers, who clearly reject the notion of tort reform, found a friend in Sebelius, who spent her career lobbying against the sorts of provisions that tort reforms would create: protections for doctors from frivolous lawsuits that impede progress and cause prices to skyrocket.

Obviously, it is unlikely that Secretary Sebelius could ethically carry out such investigations, but that seems to be of no concern to the far-Left, who clearly recognize the need to maintain their campaign coffers with trial lawyer dollars. Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean, stupidly, but honestly, admitted the true feelings of liberals regarding tort reform in a town hall two weeks ago.

 ”Here’s why tort reform is not in the bill. When you go to pass a really enormous bill like that, the more stuff you put in it, the more enemies you make, right? And the reason that tort reform is not in the bill is because the people who wrote it did not want to take on the trial lawyers in addition to everyone else they were taking on. And that is the plain and simple truth.”

Lovely. Looks like Kathleen Sebelius is just the right person for the job then. After all, she’s the least likely to make “more enemies” for the Democrats and seems content cozying up the trial lawyers without reservation. While this might be great for the White House, it’s bad for America. We don’t want the fox guarding the henhouse, now, do we?

Obama’s New Medical IT Director Long Advocated for Medical IT Records Before They Came to the Forefront

Friday, September 4th, 2009
Dr. David Blumenthal

Dr. David Blumenthal

The former Harvard Professor and Massachusetts General Hospital doctor long advocated for an electronic medical records system and has criticized others for not adopting such a system

By Ron Smith

Many people do not know that there is one person in the Obama Administration who may oversee every person’s medical records that would be stored in electronic databases under HR 3200.    Dr. David Blumenthal earlier this year was named by Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Seibelius the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology.  Under this position, Dr. Blumenthal will oversee the administration of a national electronic medical records system.  Blumenthal has authority to make sure close to $20 billion dollars from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act is spent towards creating the system.

Before being named to his current post, Blumenthal has long written academic works arguing for the use for electronic medical records all the way back to the late 1970’s.  Blumenthal first advocated for an electronic medical records system while working for the late Senator Edward Kennedy on the Senate Subcommittee on Health and Scientific Research during the Carter Administration.  Many people in the political arena have called Dr. Blumenthal a classical liberal as he has worked with Congressmen like Barney Frank on the issue of health care.  Dr. Blumenthal’s stance was noted upon by a New York Times column written in 2005 praising President Lyndon Johnson for creating Medicare and ripping on Republicans who opposed the plan claiming that the Medicare was the first step for health care for all.

Blumenthal, in a written publication by the Harvard Medical School in 2006, said that health systems have been on the way to establishing computerized records for billing and administration, but have been slow to adapt technology to medical records.  However, a separate publication from the Harvard Medical School in 2009 listed reasons that hospitals across the nation may rebut Dr. Blumenthal’s long-standing call for a nationwide electronic medical records system.

According to an article written on March 25, 2009, Harvard Medical School citied that 73 percent of hospitals and health systems nationwide are not using electronic records because of the large amount of capital needed to build the infrastructure.  Another 44 percent of the same people surveyed said that the maintenance costs are the second biggest reason why hospitals are lukewarm towards Dr. Blumenthal’s approach.  Only 36 percent of hospitals and health systems have physician resistance, while another 30 percent of health care providers lack the information technology staff necessary to maintain a system.

However, not everyone is singing Dr. Blumenthal’s praises.  Dr. John Shomberg from Rush Medical Center in Chicago also rebuts Dr. Blumenthal’s claims that electronic medical records can lower health care costs.  Dr. Shomberg said: “it makes it easier for me to do my job, but basically it does nothing to contain costs.”  Lennie Jarratt, an internet technology specialist told Health Care Horse Race that there are technical issues to be addressed before people can trust their own medical records stored in a national database.  Jarratt refuted Blumenthal’s assertions that the accuracy rate can be improved using electronic over paper records claiming, “there is the possibility electronic systems can be prone to errors like under the traditional paper method.”  Jarratt also expressed concerns about a patient’s privacy under an electronic system.  Jarratt stated: “that if patients can trust a system to uphold their privacy that the data must encrypted at a very high level and if anyone needs access to a record must log on with matching security key to gain access.”  Also, many electronic medical record systems according to Jarratt are built with back end databases and not too much with web based applications.  The large costs associated in building a back end database system is a reason why many hospitals and health systems have not moved onto making their medical records computerized.

Close to $20 billion from the stimulus is set aside for creating electronic medical records systems.  $18.5 million will be awarded to states on a competitive basis for their Medicaid, Medicare, and S-Chip programs.  Vice President Biden announced an additional $1.2 billion for high risk hospitals on August 20, 2009.  Despite the amount spent, Dr. Blumenthal calls the $20 billion a “down payment” towards the system claiming a lot of work needs to be done to make it fully functional.  However it is still to be seen how Dr. Blumenthal will finally make his long advocated electronic medical records a reality.  Only time will tell.

Air America Calls Obama ‘Fascist Liar’

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Does President Barack Obama have any friends left at all? It seems everyone is taking political pot shots at the guy. And it is not just conservatives and libertarians either. You have comedian Jon Stewart, a member of the mainstream media and an unapologetically staunch liberal, chastising the Obama administration for not pounding home the message of public-option while at the same praising the Bush presidency. Did we slip into some weird parallel dimension or something? Then there’s the far-left blogosphere that went totally unhinged when Kathleen Sebelius said the public option proposal was not ‘essential’ for the president’s health care reform bill, with some, especially at America Blog, calling for Howard Dean to replace Obama as the Democratic presidential candidate in 2012.

But now Air America Media, formerly Air America Radio, is attacking the president for his backroom deal with Billy Tauzin, President and CEO of PhRMA, an industry trade group representing the pharmaceutical research and biotechnology companies in the United States. The deal entails the drug industry agreeing to give Americans a future savings of $80 billion on the condition that President Obama agrees not to negotiate for lower drug prices. The kicker in this (outside the fact that he broke a prominent campaign promise to include the American people in any negotiates made with lobbyists and that there would no longer be any backroom deals in Washington under his reign) is that Obama’s own administration announced that over the next ten years Americans will spend roughly $3.6 trillion for prescription drugs. That $80 billion in future savings covers roughly two percent of that.

The audio showcased in the video below features guest radio host Christiane Brown talking with investigative reporter Greg Palast:

Want to know what the real scary part about this conversation is? Greg Palast poses the question of whether “the people out there screaming and breaking up the discussion at town meetings are correct.” Has the world gone mad? Next thing you know dogs and cats will be living together. Mass Hysteria!

Why Obama’s Public Option Would Lead to No Option

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

Originated at statehousecall.org

By Pearl Hahn

Categories:  Hawaii

American citizens who value choice and freedom have done it again. They rallied enough to force President Obama to back away from single-payer health care following his election. This week, the Department of Health and Human Services Secretary, Kathleen Sebelius, announced that a public option is no longer an essential element in national health care reform. Despite these victories, the fact remains that a majority in Congress are intent on passing health care reform that would greatly increase the scope of government in the most personal aspect of our lives. Lawmakers are still turning to mandates and other regulatory means to cover the uninsured in the nation.It appears the Obama administration is now promoting a government “co-op” in lieu of a public option. A co-op may appear to be a watered-down version of Obama’s original proposal, but the truth is that a co-op is really a public option. The difference is only in the semantics. A co-op would be run by-you guessed it- the government, under Secretary Sebelius. While proponents like Senator Conrad claim such a plan would be non-profit and non-government, taxpayers would be providing the initial funding and the government would be setting the rules.

A co-op would effectively put the country on a one-way track to a government controlled health care system.

Here’s how it will happen. From its inception, a government-run plan would have an innate advantage over all other plans because it would be subsidized by taxpayers, allowing it to maintain artificially low premiums and offer extra benefits. Shortfalls could be covered by loans from the government or tax hikes. Subscriptions would be high as consumers would naturally be drawn to a cheap, high-benefit government program, heavily undermining private insurers that would be left with few measures to compete.

Having established market dominance, the government program would then be in a position to reimburse providers and hospitals at very low rates. (We can already see this with Medicare and Medicaid, which typically pay providers about 25 percent less than private insurers.) Providers and hospitals need to earn their income somehow, the easiest way being to charge much more to those under private insurers. According to Ronald Williams, CEO of Aetna, cost-shifting forces patients under private insurers to pay an additional $89 billion each year.

This summer, the American Medical Association (AMA), the nation’s largest physician organization, advised Congress against a government-sponsored insurance plan in regards to the dangers of cost-shifting, cautioning that “the corresponding surge in public plan participation would likely lead to an explosion of costs that would need to be absorbed by taxpayers”.

The AMA is right. Cost-shifting would launch the private market’s death spiral. Saddled with rapidly rising costs, private insurers would have no choice but to raise premiums, leading their customers to drop out and enroll in the so-called “cheaper” government plan. It would only be a matter of time for the government plan to become the only option.

President Obama remains a staunch advocate of H.R. 3200, or America’s Affordable Health Choices Act of 2009, whose stated goal is “to provide affordable, quality health care for all Americans and reduce the growth in health care spending, and for other purposes”. There is not nearly enough space to expound on the specifics of this 1,000+ page bill. Of those who oppose the bill’s elements, Obama said, “people who want to keep things the way they are will try to scare the heck out of folks, and they’ll create boogeymen out there”.

But many were scared of government health care before the boogeymen came along. In fact, last month, most of Obama’s Democratic colleagues in the Senate health committee voted against an amendment (sponsored by Senator Tom Coburn, himself a physician) that would require all members and their staff to enroll in any new government health plan. Senators Sheldon White and Sherrod Brown previously proclaimed in an editorial that a national plan “will offer benefits that are as good as those available through private insurance plans- or better,” but funnily enough, voted against Coburn’s amendment.

The fear that a national insurance plan can’t measure up to a private one of choice is real, and lawmakers who want you in it are unwilling to sign up themselves. On top of its questionable quality, such a plan would cause the federal deficit to skyrocket.

Costs of a Government Takeover

The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation completed a preliminary analysis of the cost of the America’s Affordable Health Choices Act and found that enactment would result in a net increase in the federal budget deficit of $239 billion from 2010-2019 alone.

Furthermore, CBO estimates key provisions of the bill, namely the mandate to have health insurance (including legal residents), expanded eligibility for Medicaid, and substantially subsidized coverage offered in new insurance exchanges would raise deficits by $1,042 billion over the 2010-2019 period.

While plunging our nation deeper into the red, provisions like individual and employer mandates would fail to expand coverage for Americans while raising, not reining in, health care costs.

Failures of government controlled health insurance under mandates have played out in Hawaii and Massachusetts. Hawaii, which has implemented an employer mandate since 1974, has experienced a doubling of its uninsured rate from the 1980s, when it was at a low of 5 percent, to nearly 10 percent today. Rapidly rising insurance premiums under employment-based insurance have also led employers to cut benefits, reduce wages, and lay off workers altogether, contributing to both the unemployed and uninsured rate. Currently, Hawaii’s uninsured rate is not statistically different from that of Wisconsin, Iowa, and Minnesota, none of which implement an employer mandate.

In spite of Hawaii’s woes, Massachusetts followed in 2006 with both individual and employer mandates. Massachusetts has since achieved a greater number of covered residents, but the increase in coverage was due primarily to significant subsidies, not the individual mandate. At least 200,000 residents in the state remain uninsured. Health care costs in Massachusetts are also rising faster than the national average, as state health care spending increased by 28 percent since 2006. Insurance premiums increased from 8 to 10 percent each year, nearly double the national average.

Imagine the result should the rest of the nation follow Hawaii’s and Massachusett’s example.

One Size Does Not Fit All

In addition to implementing mandates, America’s Affordable Health Choices Act would prohibit premium variances, meaning that a person in excellent health would be shelling out the same amount as a person in poor health. The young, caught in a shrinking job market, will subsidize the middle-aged who are in their peak earning years, and the fit will subsidize the obese. How many people would sign up for an auto insurance plan in which those with a reckless driving history and DUIs are charged the same as someone with a perfect record?

The problem is too much, not too little, government interference in health care. Of the nation’s $2.5 trillion health care sector, the majority, 43 percent, is shored up by the government (employers constitute 28 percent and consumers only 26 percent). As early as 2007, the Congressional Budget Office issued an alert that growth in Medicare and Medicaid— the government programs accounting for most of the spending— was “unsustainable”. According to the CBO Director, increases in spending for Medicare and Medicaid will account for 80 percent of spending increases for the three entitlement programs between the present time and 2035 and 90 percent of spending growth between the present time and 2080. We already have government health care, and the government is doing a poor job of managing the finances.

No one in Congress has proposed how an unprecedented level of government control over one-sixth of the U.S. economy will improve the state of health care in the country nor how it will be financed. A national health insurance plan would effectively eliminate health insurance competition in the country, burdening Americans with unforeseen debt and lack of freedom in choosing health care that best fits their needs. All of its provisions only add up to one big catastrophe.

If Sebelius misspoke in the media jungle, did she misspeak?

Monday, August 17th, 2009

“Sibeleius Misspoke” headlines Marc Armbinder’s Atlantic.com blog on Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius’ comment that the public option is “not an essential part” of reform.

Later in the post, Armbinder quotes an unnamed third Administration official who said that Sebelius didn’t misspeak, “The media misplayed it.”

Obama himself, in Colorado Springs on Saturday, said the public option wasn’t the end-all and be-all of reform, but these statements are fixating the media and enraging the far left.

Town Hall Blogger Matt Lewis had his own interpretation.

“A Washington gaffe can be defined as accidentally telling the truth.  As such, I think it’s clear the “public option” is being abandoned — whether they want to admit it, or not,” he said.

Michelle Malkin, followed by Hot Air’s Ed Morrissey went further to call the whole misspoke/misplayed/retraction kabuki dance a trial baloon to guage public reaction through a mouthpiece.

I’m not buying the hype. Are you?

The real Obama is a declared proponent of single-payer and universal health care Trojan Horses. All else is political theater.

Late Sunday, the health care czar’s office said Sebelius “misspoke.”

It’s not a misstatement. It’s not a surrender flag. It’s a trial balloon to measure the potential nutroots backlash versus the potential Senate pick-ups.

Besides, the public option provision can always be stuffed back in via a 3am manager’s amendment or during the House/Senate conference to reconcile each chamber’s Obamacare bills.

“Perhaps the better question is whether the public option was ever really ‘alive’, meaning that it ever had enough votes to pass both the House and the Senate,” Nate Silver asks on FiveThirtyEight.

Silver then goes one to cite his own blog and outdated Congressional Budget Office numbers to say, “You’d think that a provision that is both fairly popular and money-saving was a good bet for passage. But the insurance industry really, really does not like the public option.”

Forget that the CBO has since come out to say the reform savings are smoke and mirrors.

White House Considers Abandoning “Public Option”

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

According to a report published today by the Associated Press, the White House seems prepared to drop the “public option,” the pride and joy of their administration’s policy proposals, from health care reform legislation up for debate in Congress.

Bowing to Republican pressure and an uneasy public, President Barack Obama’s administration signaled Sunday it is ready to abandon the idea of giving Americans the option of government-run insurance as part of a new health care system.

The Obama Administration appears at least somewhat willing to ditch the public option and sign on to a plan that would create health insurance cooperatives as a means of increasing health care coverage. Many liberals have already indicated that a public option would be too much of a compromise and instead push for a single-payer, government-run health care system.

The President and Democrats in Congress must decide if they will accept the will of the majority, potentially angering bleeding heart liberals, or if they will reward die-hard leftist supporters by promoting a more sweeping measure of reform. Certainly, health care has been a top priority for President Obama, and the failure of his administration to deliver any results could, indeed, become his “Waterloo” (via Sen. Jim DeMint [R-SC]).

With public support for a government overhaul of health care plummeting daily, the Obama Administration is forced to seek more moderate alternatives to reform the industry.

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said that government alternative to private health insurance is “not the essential element” of the administration’s health care overhaul. The White House would be open to co-ops, she said, a sign that Democrats want a compromise so they can declare a victory.

One such proposal comes from Sen. Kent Conrad (D-ND), where “consumer-owned nonprofit cooperatives” would offer insurance to compete with private providers. This procedure would mimic that of electric and agriculture co-ops found in rural states in the U.S.

With $3 billion to $4 billion in initial support from the government, the co-ops would operate under a national structure with state affiliates, but independent of the government. They would be required to maintain the type of financial reserves that private companies are required to keep in case of unexpectedly high claims.

“I think there will be a competitor to private insurers,” Sebelius said. “That’s really the essential part, is you don’t turn over the whole new marketplace to private insurance companies and trust them to do the right thing.”

Apparently, the White House is getting the message from the American people: a public option would not compete with private insurers, but instead, simply squash competition all-together, thanks to increased regulations, profit caps and tax hikes.

In typical incoherent fashion, America’s Oracle at Delphi, White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs refused to indicate whether or not the President would view the public option as a “make-or-break choice” for his plans for reform.

“What I am saying is the bottom line for this for the president is, what we have to have is choice and competition in the insurance market,” White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said Sunday.

A day before, Obama appeared to hedge his bets.

“All I’m saying is, though, that the public option, whether we have it or we don’t have it, is not the entirety ofhealth care reform,” Obama said at a town hall meeting in Grand Junction, Colo. “This is just one sliver of it, one aspect of it.”

Right, but didn’t the American people (and economists, and pretty much everyone) already explain that a public option would ensure that couldn’t happen? If the President wants to guarantee competition, why would he create a system that would hinder it?

The idea of co-ops is not new. Many lawmakers have considered cooperatives for some time now, asserting that it would expand coverage while maintaining private insurance already in place.

Lawmakers have discussed the co-op model for months although the Democratic leadership and the White House have said they prefer a government-run option.

Conrad, chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, called the argument for a government-run public plan little more than a “wasted effort.” He added there are enough votes in the Senate for a cooperative plan.

“It’s not government-run and government-controlled,” he said. “It’s membership-run and membership-controlled. But it does provide a nonprofit competitor for the for-profit insurance companies, and that’s why it has appeal on both sides.”

As public opinion turns on the President and Democrats in Congress, it is obvious they are buckling under pressure, not having a change of heart. However, the absence of a public option does not make it any easier for conservatives in Congress to block legislation that would ultimately reject free market-based, patient-centered reforms.

A shift to a cooperative plan would certainly give some cover to fiscally conservative Blue Dog Democrats who are hardly cheering for the government-run plan.

“The reality is that it takes 60 percent to get this done in the Senate. It’s probably going to have to be bipartisan in the Senate, which I think it should be,” said Rep. Mike Ross, D-Ark., who added that the proposals still need changes before he can support them.

A public option, though certainly dangerous if passed, brings together opponents with varying interests. Social conservatives disapprove of the current health care proposals because they do not protect the sanctity of life and do not allow for doctors to opt out of performing abortions based on their own religious or moral beliefs. Fiscal conservatives fight the bill because of tax hikes. Small business owners dislike it because of the enormous strain a public option would place through excess regulation and increased financial burdens.

If a public option is removed from the legislation, it would be significantly easier for Congressional liberals to push their proposals through in pieces. Blue Dog Democrats and moderate Republicans might be willing to accept an employer mandate, individual mandate or expansion of government-run programs, allowing Democrats to chip away at the opposition little by little. They will also be able to shield themselves from public scrutiny, as each component, though notable by itself, seems less detrimental to the American public as the massive overhaul they once feared.

The GOP is in a quandary. Should they rejoice in a victory of destroying the White House’s hopes of socializing medicine through state-run health care or must they scramble to assimilate the votes to block further disastrous health care legislation from the Left as it is proposed piece by piece?

Chris Dodd: Playing politics with his own health?

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

In a bizarre case of life imitating politics, Senator Chris Dodd, the acting chairman of the HELP (Health Education Labor and Pensions) Committee, announced that he had prostate cancer on Friday. The good news is that the senator from Connecticut looks like he’s going to be fine. The bad news is that the timing of his announcement makes it look like he’s playing politics with his own health.

Now, let me say three very important things, and then I’ll be happy to answer your questions.

First, I feel fine. As you have probably noticed, I’m working some long and hard hours lately. And that will continue.

Second, I’m going to be fine. We caught this early. The biopsies I had showed a minimal amount of cancer, and that it hasn’t spread. My prognosis is excellent.

Third, as a Member of Congress, I have good health insurance. I was able to seek the opinions of highly skilled doctors, consider all the available options, and choose the treatment that’s right for me.

(The full transcript of Dodd’s announcement regarding his cancer can be found on his Senate website.)

Let me make three points of my own about Senator Dodd’s announcement.

First, I - and I daresay everyone here at HealthcareHorserace.com - is happy to hear the senator is expected to beat his cancer.

Second, it is hard to conclude that the timing of his announcement is anything other than political. Sure, Dodd’s expected to have surgery next week and it would look a bit odd for him to be M.I.A. over the August recess as Democrats stump for a healthcare bill that he led the crafting of over the past couple of months, but there’s clearly more to the timing of this announcement than that. For both Dodd and Ted Kennedy to be fighting cancer - albeit with very different prognoses - at the same time has to tug at the heartstrings of not only fellow senators, but also of the Connecticut voters as Dodd fights for his political life in the upcoming 2010 elections.

Third, Dodd’s mention of his government-provided health insurance is nothing more than political theater. To compare his situation as a wealthy career politician living in one of the wealthiest states in the country to that of the average American struggling to make ends meet and to afford quality healthcare is quite simply false advertising. 

Dodd has already gone on to incorporate his diagnosis into his healthcare reform stump speech. Earlier today, he appeared at a town hall meeting in Hartford - the capital of Connecticut - alongside Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and was quick to highlight his own situation as an example of why healthcare reform is vital for all Americans.

I didn’t wake up the morning of June 19th — when I found out I had prostate cancer — and worry about whether or not I have a health care plan or whether I would get access to good care. I want every American to go wake up with that same sense of security. (Taken from an Associated Press account of the event.)

Given the battle for his political life the Senator is facing back home, it is hard to fault him for playing the sympathy card with Connecticut voters. Down 9 points (48% to 39%) to former Congressman Rob Simmons and with a 52% disapproval rate statewide, the move is a smart political tactic heading into a re-election year. But, let’s call a spade a spade. With or without his Senate healthcare plan, the senator from Connecticut’s early diagnosis and quick surgery is far from typical in a government run healthcare system. Just ask poor Barbara from Oregon in Warner Todd Huston’s Cancer Patient Offered Gov’t Suicide Funds But Not Medical Care.

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