Deliverance error: no theme matched
rule: <drop theme="//div[@class='entry']/*"/>

Think Progress

June 6, 2008
by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Satyam Khanna, Matt Corley, Ali Frick, Benjamin Armbruster, and Igor Volsky
HEALTH CARE

McCain's Radical Prescription

While Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) has revealed little about his health care plan, the broad outlines of his proposal represent a "radical" departure from the current employer-based system, providing less coverage and imposing higher costs. McCain envisions a system where most Americans shop for health insurance on their own in a highly deregulated market, which would charge higher deductibles and co-payments and provides less coverage. Ultimately, McCain's vision places the 158 million Americans who receive their health care through their jobs in danger of losing coverage. McCain replaces the current tax breaks for employer-sponsored health insurance with a one-size-fits-all tax credit of $2,500 for individuals and $5,000 for families, equalizing the tax treatment of employer and individual plans and enticing healthy workers to buy cheaper but less substantive insurance in the individual market place. But the departure of healthy workers from employer insurance pools would drive up average health costs, forcing more workers to opt out entirely. The entire employer health insurance system could unravel, "ending this as an option for Americans who prefer it," as the Center for American Progress Action Fund noted. Among those who would lose their health care are fifty-six million Americans with pre-existing chronic health conditions. Thus, McCain, a cancer survivor, would be unlikely to get coverage under his own plan if he did not have government-provided insurance. The McCain plan offers a simple prescription for Americans: don't get sick.

LESS COVERAGE: Plans in the individual insurance market cost less but also cover less, and furthermore, provide inadequate safeguards against insurers who refuse to cover patients with pre-existing illnesses, deny coverage outright, or engage in other discriminatory practices. As Elizabeth Edwards points out, "nine out of every ten people seeking individual coverage on the private insurance market never got it. Insurers will disqualify you for just taking certain medicines because of the possibility of future costs...and insurers make it a practice to deny coverage to individuals in high risk occupations, such as firefighting, lumber work, telecom installation, and pretty much anything more risky than working in an office." Georgetown University professor Karen Pollitz noted, "[I]t's true that the advertised prices for many individual policies in many states are eye-poppingly low. The policies often cover very little: $5,000 deductibles, four doctor visits a year, no drugs." In addition, individual plans have lower premium costs because state laws offer much weaker protections in the individual market than they do in the group market and therefore can avoid covering sick people. Moreover, as healthy patients develop medical conditions over time, their costs increase dramatically. In what is known as the death spiral, insurance companies in the individual market "stop accepting new customers in a plan" and increase costs for customers. "Healthier members find cheaper plans, but sicker ones are effectively forced out because they can't afford coverage," according to Consumer Reports.

INCREASED COSTS: 
While McCain's individual tax credit may assist a limited number of families who currently lack any kind of health insurance, workers who receive a higher tax subsidy through employer-based plans would experience a tax increase. The individual consumer would also have to stretch McCain's tax credit to cover the ever-growing costs of medical premiums. McCain indexes the growth of his initial tax credit to inflation, not premiums. Since premiums grow at a higher rate than inflation, McCain's proposal could impose an estimated $3.6 trillion tax increase on workers. At the same time, administrative costs would increase dramatically. Individual plans would require greater "marketing and processing" and waste premium dollars on the medical review and legal costs of underwriting. According to a new study released by the Center for American Progress Action Fund, McCain's plan could generate as much as $20 billion in new administrative costs -- which represents an increase of more than 20 percent in 2007 dollars. Since McCain's plan would allow insurance companies to ignore in-state consumer protections, companies would offer cheaper plans to healthier Americans, charging higher premiums -- or not offering any coverage -- to the sickest Americans.

MILLIONS LEFT UNINSURED: In April, Edwards astutely noted that McCain's plan offered nothing for the sickest Americans. In response to her criticism, McCain offered to subsidize state-sponsored high-risk pools to the tune of $7 to $10 billion. But experts suggest that McCain's proposed funding boost is "nowhere near enough, [to cover the uninsured] particularly given the large number of people with pre-existing conditions who would need this help if employers send their workers out to the open market." In fact, historically, high risk pools have led to  inadequate coverage or high costs. "Only 200,000 Americans are covered by state high-risk pools, with health expenditures of $1.6 billion. This means that a similar national program funded at $7 billion per year would cover only 875,000 people --  a fraction of the 56 million Americans with employer coverage who have chronic illnesses. Even if participants had to pay half of their own premiums, as is generally the case today in state high risk pools, less than 2 million Americans would be covered," noted reporters Laura Meckler and Anna Wilde Mathewss. Most high risk pools impose pre-existing condition exclusions on potential enrollees, have higher premiums, deductibles, and co-payments -- preventing chronically sick patients from receiving the health care they need.

UNDER THE RADAR

IRAQ -- ADMINISTRATION BLACKMAILING IRAQ OVER LONG-TERM MILITARY AGREEMENT: A troubling report yesterday in the U.K. Independent by Patrick Cockburn revealed a "secret plan" being pushed by the Bush administration to keep the U.S. military in Iraq "indefinitely" after the U.N. mandate expires in December. Under the plan, U.S. troops "would occupy permanent bases, conduct military operations, arrest Iraqis and enjoy immunity from Iraqi law." In a follow-up article today, Cockburn reports that the Bush administration is "holding hostage some $50bn (£25bn) of Iraq's money in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to pressure the Iraqi government into signing" the agreement. Iraq's foreign reserves "are currently protected by a presidential order giving them immunity from judicial attachment but the U.S. side in the talks has suggested that if the U.N. mandate, under which the money is held, lapses and is not replaced by the new agreement, then Iraq's funds would lose this immunity." The Washington Post reports today that "the Iraqi government may request an extension" of the U.N. mandate citing only domestic opposition to Bush's "proposals for unilateral authority over U.S. military operations in Iraq and the detention of Iraqi citizens, immunity for civilian security contractors, and continuing control over Iraqi borders and airspace." 

ETHICS -- JUSTICE DEPARTMENT ETHICS OFFICE REVIEWING 2002 DECISION TO SEND DETAINEE TO SYRIA: The Justice Department's Office of Professional Responsibility is reviewing a 2002 decision by department officials in the case of Canadian citizen Maher Arar.  In 2002, Arar was detained at Kennedy International Airport, accused of being a terrorist and eventually sent to Syria, where he says he was tortured. He was released after a year in confinement and was given a $10 million dollar settlement by the Canadian government after a commission found that Canadian officials had "provided inaccurate information" about him to the United States. Yesterday, Homeland Security Inspector General Richard Skinner revealed to a congressional committee that the Justice Department's ethics office began a review in March 2007 "examining the role of department lawyers in expelling" Arar to a country that is known to torture prisoners. Skinner said that he "could not rule out" that U.S. officials were aware that Arar would be tortured in Syria, yet still deported him there instead of sending him to Canada. "Senior American officials ought to go to jail for this," said Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-NY). Skinner also testified that "his office had recently reopened its four-year inquiry into the Arar matter after receiving new information," but that the matter was classified and "he could not discuss it."

INTELLIGENCE -- SENATE REPORT SAYS WHITE HOUSE EXAGGERATED IRAQ THREAT: Yesterday, the Senate Intelligence Committee released the final two sections of its report on the Bush administration's use of pre-war intelligence on Iraq. Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) said the committee "has concluded that the Administration made significant claims that were not supported by the intelligence." "Sadly, the Bush Administration led the nation into war under false pretenses," Rockefeller added. The report also noted that White House statements about the post-war situation in Iraq -- including Vice President Cheney's infamous declaration that the U.S. would be "greeted as liberators" -- "did not reflect the concerns and uncertainties expressed in the intelligence products." Brushing off the report yesterday as "a selective view," White House Press Secretary Dana Perino insisted that "other countries around the world" "were all working from the same intelligence" as Bush. At the same time, she admitted that "dissent amongst experts within the intelligence community at some level did not reach the president." Yet as the Senate report notes, the intelligence reports clearly presented "dissent." For example, the October 2002 National Intelligence Estimate, which Bush used to make his case for war, included an entire section devoted to "clear dissenting views."


THINK FAST

According to Department of Labor data released today, the unemployment rate rose from 5.0 to 5.5 percent in May, which is higher than the expected 0.1 percent jobless rate increase.

In "the most explicit threat yet against Iran" from a member of Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's government, Transport Minister Shaul Mofaz told a newspaper yesterday that Israel "will attack" Iran if it "continues with its program for developing nuclear weapons." He added that such an attack would be "unavoidable." Mofaz's comments were cited as helping to drive the price of oil above $130 a barrel.

During yesterday's arraignment of five detainees at a Guantanamo military court, "security officials cut the sound fed to reporters" in the press center when the judge asked a detainee why he was on psychotropic drugs. "It was one of half a dozen times" a security consultant cut the sound "when detainees appeared to be discussing what several of them said had been years of torture."

"In the wake of fierce pushback from the White House," Scott McClellan's brother, Mark McClellan, a former Bush administration official, said Scott "really believes what he's saying." "He worked long and hard on that book -- I have respect for Scott's beliefs. This is what he wanted to do," he said.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates forced the Air Force's senior civilian official and its highest-ranking general to resign yesterday "following an official inquiry into the mishandling of nuclear weapons and components, an episode that Mr. Gates called an indication of systemic problems in the Air Force."

Blackwater Worldwide has opened a new training facility in San Diego, CA. The company has been targeted by protesters who objected to the facility, and last month, Blackwater sued "because city officials refused to issue final occupancy documents without a vote by the planning commission."

Record numbers of Americans are "raiding their retirement savings as the economy has soured, threatening their long-term financial security to make their mortgage payments, pay medical bills, and cope with rising food and fuel costs." At Fidelity Investments, the nation's largest retirement plan administrator, "the number of people making hardship withdrawals rose 17 percent last year."

And finally: Swing 'em home. See the video here.


GOOD NEWS

Congress yesterday approved a $3 trillion spending plan that proposes increases "education and renewable energy programs, as well as transportation infrastructure. Military veterans would get about $3.3 billion more than Bush requested."

STATE WATCH

OREGON: "[T]he owner of a company that repeatedly mishandled waste oil and other hazardous material has been sentenced to six months in a federal penitentiary."

MISSOURI: "Governor Matt Blunt (R-MO) has signed legislation aimed at encouraging donations for breast cancer services."

SOUTH CAROLINA: "South Carolina drivers will be the first in the nation to be offered license plates that carry the phrase 'I Believe' and a Christian cross over a stained-glass window under a law that took effect on Thursday."

BLOG WATCH

THINK PROGRESS: Rush Limbaugh: President Bush's donors say he'll strike Iran before term ends.

ATTACKERMAN: The Weekly Standard's Stephen Hayes uses a flawed argument to attack the Senate Intelligence Committee's new report on the Bush administration's misleading efforts to sell the Iraq war.

EMPTYWHEEL: CIA leak Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald indicates he may be ready to testify about Karl Rove's efforts to push him out.

DEMOCRACY ARSENAL: Neoconservative Fouad Ajami rewrites the history of slavery and the Civil War in order to defend the Iraq war.

DAILY GRILL

"I am in favor of doing whatever's necessary to save the Everglades."
-- Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), 6/5/08

VERSUS

"I believe that we should be passing a bill that will authorize legitimate, needed projects without sacrificing fiscal responsibility."
-- McCain, 2007, supporting President Bush's veto of sweeping Everglades clean-up legislation


Jump to Top

About Think Progress | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy (off-site) | RSS | Donate
© 2005-2009 Center for American Progress Action Fund
Advertisement

What We're About

Featured

image
Subscribe to the Progress Report



imageTopic Cloud


Visit Our Affiliated Sites

image image
Reports


Got a hot tip?
Have a hot news tip? We'd love to hear from you. Use the form below to send us the latest.

Name:
Email:
Tip:
(required)


imageArchives


imageBlog Roll