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

Think Progress

June 8, 2009

by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Ali Frick, Ryan Powers, and Igor Volsky

HEALTH CARE

The American Health Choices Act

Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-MA), the chairman of the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, is circulating draft legislation designed to overhaul the nation's health care system. This so-called "draft of a draft" is the first piece of concrete health reform legislation to emerge from Democrats in Congress. As the Washington Post notes, "[A]t least five congressional chairmen are working on health-care reform bills," and Kennedy's draft represents the Democrats' first attempt at "a partial road map for how the nation might address health coverage gaps and problems such as rising costs and inferior quality." The legislation, called the "American Health Choices Act," would provide affordable coverage to all Americans, require businesses to provide and individuals to obtain coverage, and establish a new public health care plan to compete alongside private insurers.

EVERYBODY IN, NOBODY OUT: Kennedy's bill aims to improve access to coverage by regulating insurers, expanding Medicaid and the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), and building state-sponsored insurance Gateways (or exchanges) to help Americans find affordable coverage. Americans who like the insurance they have can keep it, but those who are dissatisfied with the porous policies of the individual market -- and those who are uninsured -- would be able to purchase affordable and adequate coverage. Under the legislation, "a group or individual health insurance plan may not impose preexisting condition exclusions." In fact, "rates cannot vary by health status, gender, class of business, or claims experience." Insurers must accept every employer and individual that applies" for coverage and must also renew their policies. The bill eliminates lifetime or annual limits on benefits and limits the cost sharing for certain preventive services and immunizations. Individuals and employers would be required to purchase insurance, but families earning up to 500 percent of the federal poverty line (FPL) -- $110,000 for a family of four -- could "buy insurance on a sliding scale with government subsidies." Anyone with incomes up to 150 percent of the FPL -- $33,000 for a family of four -- would also be eligible for Medicaid, and people up to age 26 would be able to participate in SCHIP. The new state-based insurance Gateways -- where individuals and small employers could compare plans side by side, find options with a minimum benefits package, and buy coverage -- would help applicants find and enroll in comprehensive and portable coverage and certify qualified health plans to ensure they "provide a level of standard benefits."

A MUSCULAR PUBLIC OPTION: The new public health plan would provide all Americans under 65 the choice of public coverage, restore competition into the consolidated health insurance market, lower health care premiums across the board, lead the way in innovation, and improve health quality. As CAPAF Senior Fellow Peter Harbage and Director of Health Policy Karen Davenport argue in a recent report about the public plan, "In the face of tremendous consolidation in the health insurance market, employers and individuals have a shrinking set of health insurance options. Private insurers have used this market power to boost their profits." Harbage and Davenport add, "By including a public health insurance plan as another insurance option and creating a health insurance exchange that delivers transparency and accountability to the market, we can assure both viable competitors and real competition." A new public plan has the potential "to drive improvements in the health care system" and set the standard for developing new payment models and investing in preventive care and care coordination. Critics of the public option, including the insurance industry and most Republicans, argue that a public plan could not compete fairly with private insurers because its lower reimbursement rates would "crowd out" private coverage and spell death for the private insurance industry. But as health care economist Uwe Reinhardt explains, "If the new public plan had to negotiate its own prices, then it would not have a competitive advantage any more 'unfair' than is the ability of large insurers -- such as Aetna and Wellpoint -- to negotiate lower prices with hospitals and physicians than these providers charge smaller insurers. For some reason, no one has ever called this form of price discrimination 'unfair.'" Under Kennedy's bill, the new public option would reimburse providers 10 percent above current Medicare rates. It would not have to negotiate its own rates, but could piggyback off of Medicare's considerable reach. Using "Medicare plus 10" rates, rather than the prevailing market rates, would lower costs and allow the plan to charge lower premium rates.

'HEALTH CARE REFORM BY OCTOBER': President Obama "is preparing an intense push for legislation that will include speeches, town-hall-style meetings and much deeper engagement with lawmakers," the New York Times reports. In Saturday's radio address, Obama argued that "fixing what's wrong with our health care system is no longer a luxury we hope to achieve -- it's a necessity we cannot postpone any longer. ... Today, at this historic juncture, even old adversaries are united around the same goal: quality, affordable health care for all Americans." The radio address kicked off a "50-state grass-roots effort that Organizing for America, the president's political group, began Saturday to promote a health care overhaul." The push also follows Obama's letter to Kennedy and Senate Finance Committee chairman Max Baucus (D-MT), in which he reiterated his support for the public health plan and committed to "fully offset the cost of health care reform by reducing Medicare and Medicaid spending by another $200 to $300 billion over the next 10 years" and "by enacting appropriate proposals to generate additional revenues." The Washington Post's Ezra Klein, who obtained a timeline of Congress's legislative schedule for passing health reform, reports that the Senate -- which is expecting a separate bill from the Senate Finance Committee on June 17 -- will vote on a single health bill during the last two weeks of July, and the House is expected to move a bill to the floor in "the last week of July." "The overarching goal is to get health care reform to the president's desk by Oct. 1," Klein writes.

UNDER THE RADAR

WOMEN'S RIGHTS -- DESPITE THREAT OF VIOLENCE, ABORTION PROVIDERS PLEDGE TO CONTINUE CARING FOR WOMEN: Abortion providers joined together in Wichita, KS this past weekend for the funeral of the late Dr. George Tiller, who was murdered at his church on May 31. Tiller's colleagues called the doctor a hero, pledging to honor Tiller by continuing their work for women. Toni Hawkins, executive director of the Atlanta SurgiCenter, declared at the funeral that the killing "will make us more firm in our resolve in what we do and why we do what we do." The murder of Tiller -- who had already survived a 1993 attack in which he was shot in both arms and a 1986 bombing of his Wichita clinic -- highlights the dangers doctors face from the domestic terrorism of anti-abortion extremists. Since 1977, there have been over 6,100 acts of violence perpetuated against abortion providers in the United States and Canada. Last year, the Feminist Majority Foundation found that incidents of intimidation at abortion clinics had increased since 2005. For abortion providers, the climate of fear was intensified yesterday when Scott Roeder, the man charged with Tiller's murder, told the AP, "I know there are many other similar events planned around the country as long as abortion remains legal." The Justice Department said that while it didn't know if the threat was credible, it was being taken seriously. Last week, Attorney General Eric Holder dispatched U.S. Marshalls to protect "appropriate people and facilities around the nation" in the wake of Tiller's murder.


THINK FAST

After a "nearly unprecedented turnout" by Lebanese voters, the "American-backed alliance appeared to retain control of the Lebanese Parliament on Sunday," representing "a significant and unexpected defeat for Hezbollah and its allies, Iran and Syria." Iran follows with its own presidential election this Friday.

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin (R) "admonished the Obama administration on Saturday for proposing cuts to Alaska's missile defense network," giving her "strongest public remarks to date on the matter." "Reducing Alaska's defense readiness in these perilous times is a show of weakness, it is not a sign of strength," Palin said at a speech in upstate New York.

A Gallup poll released late last week found that conservatives are now in favor of allowing gay Americans serve openly in the military. Majorities of "weekly churchgoers (60%), conservatives (58%), and Republicans (58%) now favor what essentially equates to repealing the 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' policy."

North Korea sentenced American journalists Laura Ling and Euna Lee to 12 years of hard labor today for "committing hostilities against the Korean nation and illegal entry," charges that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has called "baseless." White House Deputy Press Secretary Bill Burton released a statement saying that the Obama administration is "engaged through all possible channels to secure their release."

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said yesterday on ABC's This Week that the U.S. "will consider reinstating North Korea to a list of state sponsors of terrorism." At the same time, however, she acknowledged that there was a legal process for the move. "Obviously we would want to see recent evidence of their support for international terrorism," Clinton said.

President Obama promised today "to deliver more than 600,000 jobs through his $787 billion stimulus plan this summer, with federal agencies pumping billions into public works projects, schools and summer youth programs." The administration "had always viewed the summer as a peak for stimulus spending," but "Obama now promises an accelerated pace of federal spending over the next few months to boost the economy and produce jobs."

Former Sens. Bob Graham (D-FL) and Jim Talent (R-MO), who currently head a "bipartisan commission on weapons of mass destruction," sent a letter to OMB Director Peter Orszag yesterday saying that Obama's plan to finance swine flu vaccine production using the BioSheild Reserve Fund would "severely diminish the nation's efforts to prepare for WMD events and will leave the nation less, not more, prepared."

In its first report to Congress, the Wartime Contracting Commission found that "the Defense Department has failed to provide adequate oversight over tens of billions of dollars in contracts to support military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan." The report, which will be released publicly on Wednesday, says that U.S. reliance on private sector employees has grown to "unprecedented proportions."

In what amounts to an "end-run" around campaign finance laws, lobbyists in 2008 made $35.8 million in payments to charities affiliated with lawmakers and to "honor" lawmakers and other federal officials. The USA Today analysis found that "[m]ost of the money -- about $28 million -- went to non-profit groups, some with direct ties to members of Congress." Twice, the donations "came in response to a personal appeal for funds from the lawmaker."

And finally: Stephen Colbert yesterday taped the first of the four shows he will be doing in Iraq this week, "wearing a business suit made of the same camouflaged material used for soldiers' desert uniforms." "It must be nice in Iraq, because some of you keep coming back again and again," Colbert joked, referring to the multiple tours many soldiers have gone through. During the show, Colbert also received a regulation military haircut, called Gen. Ray Odierno "Shrek," and "declared himself the only person man enough finally to declare victory in Iraq."



BLOG WATCH

How many times will Jon Kyl side with the banking lobby?

Are women more likely to be elected in male-dominated districts?

Hillary Clinton denies knowledge of secret Bush-era agreement with Israel on settlements.

"Diplomacy! The horror!"

"We still on skedul/even workinWKEND," tweets Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA).

Are pseudonymous bloggers "unaccountable"? Not quite, says Hilzoy.

Stay in school, kids: The more educated you are, the less likely you are to be unemployed.

The New York Times finally reports that "academic studies" undermine cramdown critics.

DAILY GRILL

"Did you notice, in the speech that [President Obama] gave in Cairo -- now for those that don't know, Hamas, a terrorist organization that has...a pledge for the destruction of Israel -- that he says Hamas can play a role in the future of the Palestinian people. Did you catch that?"
-- Fox News's Sean Hannity, 6/05/09

VERSUS

"To play a role in fulfilling Palestinian aspirations, to unify the Palestinian people, Hamas must put an end to violence, recognize past agreements, [and] recognize Israel's right to exist."
-- President Obama, 6/04/09, address at Cairo University


Jump to Top

About Think Progress | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy (off-site) | RSS | Donate
© 2005-2010 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