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Think Progress

June 16, 2009

by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Ali Frick, Ryan Powers, and Nate Carlile

HEALTH CARE

The Public Option

Few issues are more pressing to President Obama right now than health care reform. As the New York Times recently reported, Obama has decided to "exert greater control over the health care debate," with an "intense push for legislation" that includes "speeches, town-hall-style meetings and much deeper engagement with lawmakers." Yesterday's speech to the American Medical Association (AMA) was a major part of this effort, since the group recently registered its opposition to the creation of a public insurance plan -- a key plank of Obama's health reform efforts. "The public option is not your enemy, it is your friend," Obama told the nearly 500 attendees at the address. Indeed, as The Wonk Room's Igor Volsky has explained, the public option remains the best way to "restore competition into the consolidated health insurance market, lower health care premiums, lead the way in innovation, and improve health quality." (The Wonk Room has put together a document debunking the top myths about the public option here, and the Center for American Progress Action Fund has a new analysis showing how few health insurance choices most Americans currently have.)

DOCTORS SUPPORT A PUBLIC PLAN: The AMA is opposed to the creation of a public health insurance option, claiming that it "threatens to restrict patient choice by driving out private insurers, which currently provide coverage for nearly 70 percent of Americans." While the organization has tried to walk back its criticism, it still seems to oppose the essential aims of a public plan: the ability to negotiate cheaper rates with providers and push private insurers to do the same. Obama's speech yesterday before the AMA's House of Delegates -- "the burial ground of health overhaul efforts past" -- was thus widely anticipated. In fact, he is the first president to address the group since Ronald Reagan in 1983. In the speech, Obama stayed firm in his commitment to a robust public option. "Insurance companies have expressed support for the idea of covering the uninsured -- and I welcome their willingness to engage constructively in the reform debate. I'm glad they're at the table," Obama said. "But what I refuse to do is simply create a system where insurance companies suddenly have a whole bunch more customers on Uncle Sam's dime but still fail to meet their responsibilities." Not all doctors are on the AMA's side. Although the group still calls itself the "house of medicine," only about half its members are actually practicing physicians and the group "represents maybe 20% of physicians in this country." Indeed, doctors nationwide have begun to distance themselves from the AMA. Doctors For America -- a grassroots organization representing doctors in all fifty states -- recently issued a statement and hosted a conference call in support of a robust public option.

THE GHOSTS OF 1993: Part of the drive behind Obama's recent "push" on health care legislation, according to the New York Times, is the memory of President Clinton's failure to pass reform. Yesterday, The Progress Report joined other progressive bloggers for a small meeting with Clinton at his office in Harlem. He said that Obama has a far better chance of passing health care legislation than he himself did in 1993, when Clinton faced a hostile political environment and severe budget constraints. "I had just passed a budget in which we raised taxes on the wealthy, cut taxes on the working poor, and were on track to reducing the deficit, and...we couldn't raise taxes again," explained Clinton. "So when I had an employer-mandate that in effect, guaranteed that the health insurance companies would be joined by the small business community -- at least the organized small business community -- which made it harder to pass." Clinton said that he believes Obama will work with the Senate to achieve the 60 votes needed to break a filibuster. But he urged Obama to be ready to use the budget reconciliation process if necessary -- which would require just 51 votes to pass health care -- to achieve a bill that would ensure universal coverage, cut costs, improve the delivery system, and boost preventive care. "If he can't get a good bill, I wouldn't give away the store on that," he said.

CO-OPTING THE DEBATE: Although the AMA opposes the robust public option that Obama is proposing, it has said that it is "willing to consider other variations of the public plan that are currently under discussion in Congress." One of the alternatives that has received the most attention is Sen. Kent Conrad's (D-ND) idea of consumer-owned health cooperatives that would "be subject to the same standards [as private plans]." But co-opts, however defined, are not a substitute for a public plan with the capacity to "improve health quality by championing payment innovations or other delivery system reforms." As Volsky writes, "After all, one of the advantages of a truly national public plan is its ability to improve care quality by spearheading reforms and innovations."

UNDER THE RADAR

TORTURE -- 9/11 MASTERMIND SAYS HE MADE UP STORIES IN RESPONSE TO TORTURE: Newly declassified documents show that 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheik Muhammad said he lied about the whereabouts of Osama bin Laden after being subjected to torture. "I make up stories," Muhammad said when talking about his reaction to the techniques personally authorized by President Bush. When told to reveal the location of bin Laden, Muhammad said he would relent and say, "Yes, he is in this area." This information "underscores the unreliability of statements obtained by torture," said Jameel Jaffer, director of the ACLU's National Security Project, the group that fought for the release of the documents. The documents also undercut Vice President Cheney's assertion that torture techniques resulted in "first-rate intelligence." According to the documents, which  include transcripts of Combatant Status Review Tribunals at Gitmo, detainee Abu Zubaydah, who was waterboarded 83 times, said the CIA told him that "they had mistakenly thought he was the No. 3 man in the organization's hierarchy and a partner of Osama bin Laden." "They told me, 'Sorry, we discover that you are not Number 3, not a partner, not even a fighter,'" Zubaydah said. Ben Wizner, the ACLU's lead lawyer in the lawsuit, said there was no reason to keep the reports of detainee abuse secret. "There is only one explanation for the continued suppression. It is not to protect national security, it is to protect the CIA from accountability," Wizner said.


THINK FAST

The Human Rights Campaign sent a letter to President Obama yesterday "to protest the administration's recent legal backing of the Defense of Marriage Act." "This brief would not have seen the light of day if someone in your administration who truly recognized our humanity and equality had weighed in with you," the letter said. The New York Times criticizes the administration's decision as a "bad call on gay rights."

Iran's Guardian Council said today that "it was prepared to order a recount of disputed ballots in Friday's deeply divisive elections, but ruled out an annulment of the vote." Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei yesterday ordered a formal review of the electoral process. Opposition candidates, including top challenger Mir Hussein Mousavi, are calling for a new election to be held. 

"Defense Department officials are debating whether to ignore an earlier promise and squelch the release of an investigation into a U.S. airstrike last month, out of fear that its findings would further enrage the Afghan public, Pentagon officials told McClatchy Monday." The decision about what to release regarding the May 4 air attack that killed dozens of Afghan civilians "is now in limbo," the official said.

After a meeting with President Obama yesterday, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi agreed to take three detainees from Guantanamo Bay. The EU also said that European nations "are ready to help the Obama administration 'turn the page' on Guantanamo, and take detainees on a case-by-case basis."

With the Boston Red Sox coming to town next week to play the Washington Nationals, members of Congress sense a great fundraising opportunity. More than a dozen lawmakers have scheduled fundraisers at Nationals Park, selling lobbyists marked-up seats and the chance to make their own pitch.

Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK) has released a report alleging to have found $5.5 billion in wasteful spending among President Obama's stimulus projects. "Senator Coburn's report, however, is filled with inaccuracies," an Obama economic adviser replied, "including criticisms of projects that have already been stopped, projects that never were approved and some projects that are working quite well."

President Bill Clinton, currently serving as the U.N.'s special envoy to Haiti, said that "Haiti has the best chance in decades to escape poverty and political upheaval and he will seek in his new job as U.N. special envoy to improve life for the estimated 9 million Haitians."

The top U.S. commander in Iraq, Gen. Ray Odierno, said combat troops will leave all Iraqi cities by their scheduled deadline of the end of this month, "including Mosul, which remains the country's most dangerous urban area."

A new report from the Department of Veterans Affairs Inspector General finds that "[f]ewer than half of Veterans Affairs centers given a surprise inspection last month had proper training and guidelines in place for common endoscopic procedures such as colonoscopies" and that "errors in...minimally invasive procedures performed at VA facilities may be more widespread than initially thought."

And finally: Sen. John McCain twitters about the purchase of his new car. "Time to get a new car -- decided on the Ford Fusion Hybrid," McCain wrote in a tweet yesterday. In a 2007 interview, the Arizona Senator famously couldn't remember what kind of car he drove. (An aide had to remind him that he owned a Cadillac.) McCain's new hybrid gets 41 miles per gallon in the city and 36 mpg on the highway.



BLOG WATCH

Ezra Klein explains the latest CBO scoring of health care reform legislation.

A viewer's guide to Obama's regulatory reform announcement.

Ari Fleischer argues President Bush is responsible for Iran's reform movement.

Minuteman leader allegedly kills a 9-year-old girl in an effort to finance her hate group.

John McCain once again demonstrates total ignorance of vital public policy debates.

What would have happened if we had bombed Iran?

Maintaining business as usual, the U.S. will face scorching temperatures by the end of the century.

Army suicide rates continue to grow.

DAILY GRILL

"One of the top priorities for the president, back home, government-funded health insurance. And today President Obama pushed his plan before a group largely opposed to it -- the nation's doctors."
-- CNN's Kitty Pilgrim, 6/15/09, referring to the American Medical Association (AMA) as "the nation's doctors."

VERSUS

"Based on the AMA figures, the association represents slightly less than 29 percent of licensed physicians in the United States."
-- Media Matters, 6/15/09


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