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Think Progress

November 10, 2009

by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, and Zaid Jilani

HEALTH CARE

Stomping On Women's Rights

On Saturday, one Republican joined 219 Democrats in the House of Representatives to pass sweeping health care reform legislation, a $1 trillion bill that the Congressional Budget Office says would not add to the budget deficit and would expand health insurance to 36 million Americans. However, the bill's passage has come with considerable compromise. Shortly before the final vote, the House passed an amendment sponsored by Rep. Bart Stupak (D-MI) that sharply restricts the availability of coverage for abortions and "goes beyond long-standing prohibitions against public funding for abortions, limiting abortion coverage even for women paying for it without government subsidies." Stupak argued that the amendment would garner more support from conservative Democrats for the overall bill. But of the 64 that voted for his measure, just over 20 ended up voting for bill. Despite Stupak's amendment, the bill contains added benefits for women such as ending discriminatory pre-existing condition clauses -- measures which House Republicans indicated this weekend that they "object." 

THE STUPAK AMENDMENT: The so-called Hyde Amendment -- a measure first passed in the late 1970s -- bars the use of federal Medicaid funds for most abortion procedures. Before the introduction of Stupak's amendment, the House bill contained the Capps Amendment, a compromise that maintained the Hyde Amendment restrictions by specifying that subsidy dollars could be used only to end pregnancies that threaten the life of mother or result from rape or incest (Hyde allows for this). Other kinds of abortions would have to be funded with private premiums. But the House passed Stupak's much more restrictive amendment after efforts to arrive at a compromise "fell apart." In fact, the Stupak amendment goes further than any other federal law to restrict a woman's access to abortion. The measure effectively bans public and private health insurance plans in the Exchange from covering abortions by prohibiting public funds from being spent on any plan that covers abortion even if paid for entirely with private premiums. The Center for American Progress Action Fund's Jessica Arons noted that "no plan that covers abortion services can operate in the Exchange unless its subscribers can afford to pay 100% of their premiums with no assistance from government 'affordability credits.'" While the amendment provides only the narrowest exceptions, it also allows for discrimination against abortion providers. "With a single amendment, Congress is making a legal medical procedure potentially unattainable for a huge number of American women," said MSNBC's Rachel Maddow last night. "One in three women will have an abortion in their lifetime," Arons adds. "Eighty-seven percent of employer plans offer abortion coverage. None of that will matter if the Senate takes its cues from the House. In every other way, this bill will expand access to health care. But for millions of women, they are about to lose coverage they currently have and often need," she said.

PRO-CHOICE CAUCUS STRIKES BACK: Reps. Diana DeGette (D-CO) and Louise Slaughter (D-NY), who co-chair the Congressional Pro-Choice Caucus, said they have more than 40 signatures -- more than enough to derail final passage of health care reform in the House -- in a letter stating that the Stupak Amendment "represents an unprecedented and unacceptable restriction on women's ability to access the full range of reproductive health services to which they are lawfully entitled." "We will not vote for a conference report that extends abortion restrictions beyond current law. We think that's fair. That's the compromise we reached this summer," DeGette said last night on MSNBC, adding, "We're not going to accept language that vastly restricts a woman's legal right to choose." Seeming to offer his support for DeGette's position, President Obama said yesterday in an interview with ABC News that "there needs to be some more work before we get to the point where we're not changing the status quo." "I want to make sure that the provision that emerges meets that test," he said, "that we are not in some way sneaking in funding for abortions, but, on the other hand, that we're not restricting women's insurance choices." Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-MO) also announced her opposition to the Stupak amendment. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL) said yesterday, "I am confident that when it comes back from the conference committee that that language won't be there, and I think we're all going to be working very hard, particularly the pro-choice members, to make sure that's the case."

GOP GONE WILD: On the sidelines of the Stupak amendment debate, Republicans offered their own rhetorical restriction on women's rights on the House floor on Saturday, shouting down members of the Democratic Women's Caucus who were giving statements in support of how the House health care bill would offer added benefits for women. Indeed, one key measure in the House bill provides that insurers in the individual market would no longer treat domestic violence and other issues affecting women as a pre-existing conditions. The Republicans -- led by Rep. Tom Price (GA) -- repeatedly talked over them, screamed, and shouted, "I object, I object, I object, I object, I object!" The moves amounted to "the Republicans' back-of-the-hand treatment to women," Wasserman Schultz said of the GOP's obstructions. Rep. Mary Jo Kilroy (OH), one of the Democrats on the receiving end of the GOP's stall tactics, told The Progress Report that their actions were "sexist." "You heard recently comments -- from the Republican side of the aisle, some of my Republican colleagues over there -- saying Speaker Pelosi should be put in her place, and I think that's what they thought they were doing with the Democratic women. And it's simply outrageous to me to have women being treated like that on the floor of the House," she said.

UNDER THE RADAR

ECONOMY -- GOLDMAN SACHS' CEO 'REJECTS ANY NOTION' THAT THE COMPANY BENEFITED FROM TAXPAYER HELP: In a piece in the Sunday Times, Goldman Sachs' CEO Loyd Blankfein denied that any part of his company's success was related to the U.S. government's financial support of his firm and the entire financial industry. He also feigned modesty saying that he was nothing more than a banker "doing God's work." Blankfein's assertion that Goldman's recent surging profits --  last quarter alone it pulled in $3.19 billion in profits -- had absolutely nothing to do with the federal bailout of the financial sector seems to be directly at odds with even a cursory glance at recent history. After all, at the height of the crisis, the government allowed Goldman to convert into a bank holding company -- and access cheap money from the Federal Reserve -- a status which it still holds, despite engaging in no lending activity at all. As Alan Schram, the Managing Partner of the Los Angeles based investment firm Wellcap Partners, wrote, "[N]ow that they are a regular commercial bank they actually trade more, which makes sense: if the US Treasury covered my losses, I would also be happy to take major risks." In addition, as Daniel Harrison pointed out at bNet, Goldman's implicit guarantee as a "too big to fail" firm was likely the only thing that enabled it to raise capital last year. That said, Blankfein hasn't hit all sour notes recently. He has been the foremost advocate on Wall Street for restructuring pay packages and he is also supportive of a resolution authority to unwind failing firms. But by living in this fantasy world in which Goldman's success is due solely to its financial prowess, Blankfein is insulting the millions of American taxpayers who supported his company -- and the rest of Wall Street -- and are now facing a grim forecast of rising unemployment and declining wages while Goldman and others congratulate themselves for earning enormous profits and record bonuses.
 


THINK FAST

President Obama will be at Fort Hood today, speaking at a memorial service for the men and women who died in last week's shooting. Around "3,000 spectators, as well as the families of the 12 soldiers and one civilian killed, are expected to attend." Vice President Biden will be at Fort Lewis, WA to "speak at the memorial ceremony for seven Stryker brigade soldiers" who were killed in Afghanistan two weeks ago.

Fort Hood shooter Maj. Nidal M. Hasan gave a presentation on Islam in 2007 to mental health staff members, in which he said "it's getting harder and harder for Muslims in the service to morally justify being in a military that seems constantly engaged against fellow Muslims." Hasan also reportedly corresponded with a radical cleric in Yemen.

In a recent interview, RNC Chairman Michael Steele said that white Republicans are afraid of him. "I mean I've been in the room and they've been scared of me," he said. "I'm like, 'I'm on your side.'" Steele has previously claimed he would reach out to black voters by offering them fried chicken and potato salad.

In a 13-page strategy memo circulated to his colleagues, House Republican Conference Chairman Mike Pence (R-IN) says Republicans need to hammer "Pelosi Health Care" over the upcoming recess. Pence instructs his members how to talk about "Speaker Pelosi's 1,990 page bill."

Sen. Chris Dodd (D-CT) will unveil his Senate Banking Committee's draft legislation on financial regulation reform today. Dodd is expected to call for centralizing bank supervision into one agency, a proposal that is at odds with the administration.

The Wall Street Journal reports that U.S. border arrests declined dramatically this year. Border apprehensions dropped to 555,041 in fiscal year 2009, down from 723,825 in fiscal year 2008.

President Obama will send Special Envoy Stephen W. Bosworth to North Korea for "the first direct talks with the government there in more than a year." Bosworth will "focus solely on resuming the six-nation talks to end North Korea's nuclear program."

President Clinton will attend the Senate Democrats' weekly luncheon today to address the caucus about health care reform. In a notice that went out to the caucus, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) "requested that all Democratic Senators attend" Clinton's "presentation on Health Care."

And finally: Not even his son's wedding could keep Rep. Steve King (R-IA) from Saturday's vote on health care legislation. King said that his family fully supported his decision. "As I said, the best thing that I could give them would be to preserve the freedom that I was born into and be able to pass that along to any children that they will be blessed with," explained King.



BLOG WATCH

Six progressive suggestions for better health care reform.

Does the media give Islam a pass?

The disturbing resurgence and emboldening of neo-Nazis.

A post-mortem of Maine's Question 1.

The Senate Finance Committee's lobbyist witness line-up.

Does Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-UT) want health care reform to cover voodoo?

Dick Armey's ugly view of people with pre-existing conditions.

Veteran Middle East correspondent Patrick Coburn says we should leave Afghanistan to the Afghans.

 

DAILY GRILL

"Big news today, America. We went to sleep Saturday night and woke up Sunday morning $1.2 trillion further in debt. That's if the Congressional Budget Office is right and the government program actually costs what they tell you it will cost. The giant health care bill -- here it is -- passed the House over the weekend."
-- Fox News host Eric Bolling, 11/09/09

VERSUS

"[The House health care bill] would yield a net reduction in federal budget deficits of $109 billion over the 2010-2019 period."
-- The Congressional Budget Office, 11/06/09

 


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