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Krystal Ball’s New Video

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PHOTOS: Jefferson-Jackson Dinner

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About 1000 Virginia Democrats gathered in the Richmond Convention Center for a now-springtime Jefferson-Jackson dinner.

On the Passage of Health Care Reform

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Cross posted on Blue Commonwealth

The House of Representatives has just taken the historic step of passing comprehensive health care reform. I want to congratulate President Barack Obama and the members of our Virginia Congressional delegation who voted for the bill: Democratic Congressmen Jim Moran, Bobby Scott, Gerry Connolly, and Tom Perriello. Their strength and leadership has helped to preserve a better tomorrow for all Virginians. Joining these gentlemen in voting “yea” as your Congressman from the 10th District is the only way I could feel prouder to be a Virginia Democrat. The bill passed tonight will extend affordable coverage, fix our broken healthcare system, and lay the groundwork for long-term cost cutting.  

By extending affordable coverage to 30,000,000 uninsured Americans we will bump the number of Americans with health insurance to 95%. No longer will parents have to make the gut wrenching decision of choosing between healthcare for themselves and healthcare for their kids because coverage was just too expensive for the whole family. No longer will people be stuck in dead-end jobs due to pre-existing conditions. No longer will small businesses and individuals pay more than big companies for healthcare. No longer will insurance companies cancel health coverage after a severe illness occurs.

Health care reform will have a positive impact on small businesses. I have spoken with small business owners all over the 10th District who tell me that the passage of this bill means they will be able to extend coverage to their employees. For-profit health insurance companies will no longer stifle the small business owner who is trying to compete in today’s challenging marketplace.

Finally, this bill takes the important step of cutting overall heath care costs. The United States currently spends 16% of our GDP on healthcare. That is twice the percentage of many of our global competitors. This bill lays the groundwork for cutting costs.

It is important to remember that today’s passage is an important and long overdue step-but the job is not done. We will need to constantly monitor our health care system to make sure these reforms actually produce their desired affects. If they do not, I will tell you immediately. When I am elected to Congress, I will work with my neighbors and colleagues on continuing to improve our health care system. We must continue to cut costs and work on effective implementation.  

200,000 March for Immigration Reform

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Not too bad, 200,000 people are reported at today’s “March for America” in support of comprehensive immigration reform. In comparison, the Washington, DC Fire Department estimated 60,000-70,000 people attended Glenn Beck’s “9/12” March last year.  In other words, it appears that 3 times as many people marched for comprehensive immigration reform today than for…well, whatever it was Glenn Beck told them to march for (actually, against) last year.

UPDATE: According to Change.org, “it’s just been reported that local Fox News is counting immigration reform supporters in the national mall at half a million!”

House of Representatives Debates, Votes on Health Care Reform Legislation [UPDATES]

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According to TPM, the schedule for today’s historic health care reform votes in the U.S. House of Representatives.

1 pm: House convenes

~5-6 pm: Vote on the “self-executing” rule

~8 pm: Vote on reconciliation bill

~9 pm: Vote on Senate bill

You can watch all this, plus whatever commotion in the galleries goes on before the police haul the protestors out of there, live on CSPAN.

In other news related to this debate: at least a few Republicans are denouncing the racist and homophobic slurs from anti-health-care-reform protestors yesterday; Rick Boucher reportedly “has decided his vote — but isn’t telling anyone what it is;” and Rep. Bart Stupak’s vote remains in question. Stay tuned…

UPDATE 4:08 pm: TPM reports, “The White House has just released the final text of the executive order which is the basis of the aforementioned agreement with the Stupak group.”  That should clinch it, but I’ll believe it when the votes are actually counted.

UPDATE 7:08 pm: The Hill reports, “House Democrats have approved the rule for debate on the healthcare bill, moving them one step closer toward a final vote on the legislation. The rule was passed 224-206, with 28 Democrats voting against the measure. All Republicans cast “no” votes. A procedural vote on the rules passed by a similar count, 228-202.” Here is the roll call vote on the 224-206 vote, showing Glenn Nye and Rick Boucher voting “nay.” Not good.

UPDATE 7:12 pm: Minority Leader Boehner tells Republicans to “‘behave like grown-ups’ if the healthcare bill is passed by the House on Sunday.”

UPDATE 8:07 pm: Summary of Republican debating points=”socialism….blah blah…government takeover…blah blah…oh yeah socialism…blah blah.”

UPDATE 8:23 pm: Rich Anthony tweets, “As we stand on the verge of passing historic Health Care Reform, I am proud of my fellow Democrats and I urge them to continue to improve the bill until we have true universal health care. Heath Care is a right of all Americans.”

UPDATE 9:24 pm: Former Bush 43 economic speechwriter David Frum says this is “Waterloo” for someone – the Republicans. “Conservatives and Republicans today suffered their most crushing legislative defeat since the 1960s. It’s hard to exaggerate the magnitude of the disaster.”

UPDATE 9:57 pm: While we’re waiting for history to be made, here’s Ted Kennedy on why “now is the time for health care reform.” This one’s for you, Teddy!



UPDATE 10:17 pm: John Boehner is unhinged. Great credit goes to Nancy Pelosi for her leadership on this issue. Shortly, the House votes and America becomes a better, stronger nation.

UPDATE 10:32 pm: House now voting on “Motion to Concur in the Senate Amendments to H.R. 3590 – Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.”

UPDATE 10:47 pm: H.R. 3590 just passed, 219-212 history is made! 🙂 [The roll call vote is here.

UPDATE 11:04 pm: House now voting on “Motion to Recommit H.R. 4872.”  

UPDATE 11:08 pm: House rejects the Motion to Recommit H.R. 4872.

UPDATE 11:20 pm: Last but not least, the House will vote on “Final Passage of H.R. 4872 – Reconciliation Act of 2010.”

UPDATE Monday morning: Tom Perriello issues a statement that says, in part…(see after the “flip”)

For more than a century, our leaders have promised affordable universal healthcare to all Americans. Today we delivered that result in a way that our local hospitals say will improve quality and reduce costs for patients. Middle-class families will save $1,000 to $2,000 per year, and small business owners will see the cost of covering their workers drop. This bill will help our rural hospitals and clinics keep their doors open, improve health care for over 400,000 local residents, reduce the federal deficit, and provide coverage to 48,000 more individuals in the 5th district alone — more than the population of Danville.

At the end of the day, this decision for me came down to whether working families would see savings at the kitchen table. They will. I asked whether seniors will see the Medicare Trust Fund extended and the cost of prescription drugs drop. They will. As I have heard from our major hospitals that endorsed the bill, this legislation will improve health care and bring down costs for Virginians.



UPDATE: Jim Moran says…

Today we will define who we are – as Americans, and as Democrats or Republicans.

No Republican will vote for this bill because they say they want a smaller government, lower taxes, and less spending.

Democrats, on the other hand, believe that America’s government can be fiscally responsible and play an essential role in helping America achieve its true greatness.

We can see America is a lesser nation when we have to pay twice what other countries citizens’ pay for health care, but we live shorter and less healthy lives; when millions of America’s families lose their homes and life savings because a loved one gets seriously sick.

We know that we can reduce the suffering of our people, while lengthening and bettering their lives.

As with Social Security and Medicare and Civil Rights legislation, it is now time for another change. That’s why we chose public service and why we, as Democrats, will pass this bill today.

UPDATE: Gerry Connolly says…

Tonight, the Congress made history by sending to the President landmark legislation that will better the lives of tens of millions of American families and tens of thousands of families in Northern Virginia.

After more than a year’s work, we have fulfilled a promise I made to my constituents.  This is not a new concept or a new process.  For more than 100 years, since the presidency of Teddy Roosevelt, Democratic and Republican presidents and Congresses have attempted to enact meaningful health care reform in this country.  Tonight, we succeeded.

The Passage of this reform legislation will stop insurance company abuses, rein in health care costs for families and small businesses, strengthen and guarantee the solvency of Medicare for our seniors, reduce the deficit by $1.2 trillion, retain access to doctors and health plans, and expand quality health care to more than 30 million Americans.

This legislation rivals the passage of the Social Security and Medicare laws in terms of how it will improve the lives of all Americans and for future generations.  For 30 million Americans who lack health insurance and for the 14,000 Americans who lose their health insurance each day, this was a life-changing, and sometimes lifesaving, vote.

Tonight the U.S. House of Representatives put principle above politics.  This was not an easy vote, but it was the right vote for the 11th Congressional District of Virginia and our nation.

Yes We Can: Improve Health Care For All Americans

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Hopefully, today will be an historic day in American history. This afternoon, the House of Representatives will vote on health care reform legislation that is years in the making, and decades overdue. Assuming it passes, which right now looks likely, this country’s health care system will not change as much as many of us had hoped – for starters, it will remain a “healthcare for profit” system – but nonetheless will be a major step forward both in terms of quality and quantity of coverage.  When President Obama signs this bill into law, as soon as tonight, it will mark not the end, but the middle of a long journey.  In years to come, we will continue the journey towards high-quality, affordable health care for all Americans, health care that can’t be taken away if you lose your job or are told you have a “pre-existing condition” or whatever.

For now, though, we’re talking about an important step forward, one that many people thought was impossible. Fortunately, it looks like we proved them wrong. We also proved that the power of “yes we can” is greater – albeit just barely – than the power of “no we can’t.”  

Yes we can: improve health care for all Americans.

Tea Partiers Love Their Public Options!

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The Green Miles was down on the National Mall yesterday, visiting the Tidal Basin (no cherry blossoms yet), the Hirshhorn Museum & Sculpture Garden, and the National Museum of the American Indian. It was a great day — beautiful weather, good company, and lots of people in “Tyranny Response Team” t-shirts to make fun of!

#TeaParty crowd entering Big Govt-funded Am Indian Museum on TwitpicYes, someone really had that shirt — navy blue with yellow letters in ATF style, the first of many Big Government ironies that went right over their heads:

  • We first saw a few Tea Partiers taking the Metro, a public option funded by tax dollars
  • They were swarming those socialist museums of the Smithsonian (functionally & legally a body of the federal government), where the public’s option of free entry is subsidized by tax dollars
  • And finally, despite private enterprises like McDonald’s just a block away, Tea Partiers were enjoying lunch at the public option of the American Indian Museum’s cafeteria

While the Tea Party’s offensive antics are rightfully getting plenty of attention, I walked away with a different impression: Is this all there is?  

This is the movement that terrified into inaction Senate Democrats last summer & House Democrats in January?

I haven’t seen any estimates of crowd size, but when we walked by at 5pm, there only about a thousand people at the Capitol. I’ve seen crowds that were younger & more diverse at Crosby, Stills & Nash concerts.

It’s hard to make a good crowd estimate exactly because it was so disorganized. There was a small group relaxing in the sun a few blocks away at the American Indian Museum at the same time the larger group was chanting outside the Capitol. There were a few Tea Partiers on our Metro ride in at 11:30am, yet there were a few getting on & off Metro when we headed back to Arlington at 5pm. When were they supposed to be there? Impossible to tell.

The crowd’s messaging couldn’t have been worse. While today’s progressives spend countless hours honing a message to appeal to moderate, independent voters (patients bill of rights on steroids!), the crowd on the Hill proudly flaunted the worst of hateful, I’ve-got-mine-so-screw-you teabaggery. Again, the experiences of Rep. Frank & Lewis tell the story, but that was far from an isolated incident. One sign compared House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to a prostitute — and it was carried by a woman. Sad.

The bottom line is that yesterday’s event makes the Tea Party look less like a movement and more like a one-time burst of anger that’s already dissipating. This should be the Tea Party’s shining moment, scaring moderate Democrats away from supporting the most important progressive legislation in more than a generation. Instead, the small crowd was only able to make headlines with its hatred.

Once dealt the blow of health insurance reform’s passage — likely followed by clean energy & climate legislation and financial reform — will the Tea Party be able to hold together? In what form?

Is Any Illness Covered by Insurance?

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(I originally posted this at Daily Kos, where it is on Recommended list. The issues are national, but also local.  And keep in mind that our Governor and legislature will be fighting the legislation.  As I promote this I note that Caucus Chair John Larson announced on ABC that the Dems now have the votes.   – promoted by teacherken)

“Chronic means a medical condition which has at least one of the following characteristics: has no known cure; is likely to recur; requires palliative treatment; needs prolonged monitoring/ treatment; is permanent; requires specialist training/rehabilitation; is caused by changes to the body that cannot be reversed.”

That is the definition received via email by Nicholas Kristof from Sophie Walker, the group head of claims for Interglobal, a health insurance company based in London.  Kristof was, as he describes in his column this morning, calling to understand why a family he knew, who thought they had a coverage limit of $1.7 million, was cut off from further benefits because of a “chronic condition” for which the benefits were capped at $85,000.  

When he further asked what serious disease the company did not consider chronic the chief executive responded that because he was “disappointed”  at the “tone” of Kristof’s inquiry it would have no further response to his questions.

So the question of our common title still stands, for this company, Is Any Illness Covered by Insurance?

The couple in question is American, currently living in Hong Kong.  Before relocating they sought out a policy that would provide them coverage.  The premium cost for the wife and two children seemed reasonable, $4,500/year (the husband was covered through his job).  The world of these former neighbors of the Kristofs collapsed when the wife was discovered with late-stage stomach cancer.  The stomach was removed, Jan (her name) was received chemotherapy, but it was discovered that her cancer had spread to her intestines.  And the company informed the family that their costs were no longer covered after $85,000.  

Kristof reminds us how preposterous tour current system is:  

we rely on insurance companies whose business model is based on accepting premiums from healthy people and devising ways to exclude from coverage those who most desperately need medical care.

He says bluntly that those who say emergency care is always available rings hollows to a woman with stomach cancer, and simply is not a sustainable way of providing health care to the 75 million Americans who are either un- or under-insured.

Let me stop right there.  Several points that need to be discussed.

1.   Resorting to emergency room care is expensive.  Yes, you cannot legally be denied treatment in a certified emergency room, even if you lack insurance.  But the hospital recovers those costs by passing them on as overhead in charges to those who are insured.  That raises the cost to the rest of us.  And simply put, conditions are treatable for far less outside of emergency rooms if we do not wait until they are crises.  I do not know of a better illustration of the old saw of being penny wise and pound foolish.

2.  Note that figure of 75 million.   We currently hear about the 30-40 million who are uninsured.  But that understates the crisis.  Being underinsured is as critical, and is a major reason why so many personal bankruptcies are filed by those who have medical insurance but find in a crisis it does not sufficiently cover their bills.  If you are underinsured you may still postpone receiving medical care that is not fully covered, have it blossom into a major situation, and then in bankruptcy there are further disruptions and additional expenses for legal fees and the like.   And if the bankruptcy successfully discharges the obligation for the one filing (in part or in whole) that “loss” is passed on to the rest of us in higher fees (including the legal fees) in what we are charged in our insurance premiums.

Kristof has a number of powerful statements in this piece, reminding us, for example, that It’s in the interest of insurance companies to exclude people who are sick, while it’s in our national interest to see them covered..  He quotes a landmark study from the Institute of Medicine which says bluntly “The absence of health insurance is hazardous to your health.”   He tells us that in Kentucky women without insurance have cancers detected later than those who do, and that those without are 44 percent more likely to die of breast cancer.

I will be 64 in about 2 months.  Thus it caught my attention that

for American adults ages 55 to 64, lack of insurance is “third on a list of leading causes of death for this age group, behind only heart disease and cancer.”

  I have insurance through my employment, so I do not face that risk.  But I am a teacher.  And across the nation teachers are receiving layoff notices as states and local governments scramble to balance their budgets.  When those teachers –  and other government employees – are laid off, they also lose their health insurance coverage.  

For some reason, reading this column reminded me of an episode of Law and Order.  It involved an insurance company in Europe selling life insurance policies to Jews knowing that they would not be able to collect.  It was a kind of fraud.  I do not remember if one was required to be able to produce a death certificate to collect, and in a sense that is irrelevant.  If a legal system allows a company to sell what purports to be a kind of insurance but also allows it to word the policy such that an ordinary person has no way of knowing that s/he will not be able to collect on what seems like a covered claim, if that is not fraud, the law should be changed so that it is defined as fraud.  Operating in such a fashion is immoral, and cruel.  

And perhaps this is the difference between those who advocate for a pure market system and those who understand the need for government regulation and even intervention.  Adam Smith’s model of pure free market capitalism requires perfect knowledge by all participants.  Unless you have expertise in medicine, law, and similar fields, attempting to find appropriate and affordable insurance leaves you vulnerable to companies like InterGlobal, willing to purport to insure you but equally willing to find any excuse to deny your claim.

The health insurance reform that will, hopefully, pass the House later today, is only a first step in needed reform.  

Only a first step, because ultimately we need to step back and understand an important principle.  From the standpoint of a for-profit entity, it makes all the sense in the world to look for reasons to deny claims.  Putting an unlimited profit motive upon something as important as health care is immoral, and dangerous.  It is dangerous because it leads to people not being covered –  such as undocumented aliens, for example.  That is equivalent to leaving a section of the population not inoculated against a highly infectious disease, increasing the chances of an epidemic outbreak.

Immoral.  Also financially irresponsible.  As noted about the costs of emergency rooms.  We will pay those direct costs in our own insurance.  Unless we are then going to be “financially responsible” and begin to deny emergency room coverage to the uninsured.  After all, that would be a logical reducto ad absurdum of a mindset that says none of this should be the business of the government, that in some cases would go so far as to be willing to abandon public education completely, or at least refuse to provide the assistance necessary to educate children in poor communities, or with disabilities, or who need language assistance, OR WHO ARE UNDOCUMENTED ALIENS –  so far we allow the last to be educated in public schools, but we are willing to deny them health insurance.  We do not YET deny them access to emergency rooms, so again we are penny wise and pound foolish.

This is not the topic about which I expected to write today.  This is Bach Day, the 325th anniversary of the birth of one of mankind’s greatest geniuses, Johann Sebastian Bach.  I would love to have had my focus on his music.

Yet in reading Kristof I felt this was more important.  Perhaps by the time I post this, it will already be covered in the Pundit Roundup at Daily Kos.  If so, great.

That does not free me from the responsibility to discuss the issues it raised for me.  

Today we will, from all evidence, take a major step towards fixing our broken health care system.  It will be major, but only one step on a much longer journey.  

I used Kristof’s title as my own:  Is Any Illness Covered by Insurance?    In fact, if ANY illness is NOT covered by insurance, at least to ameliorate the suffering, then we have an insufficient system.

We should never have to ask the question of the title.  In fact, we should not even have to ask Is my illness covered by insurance?  

We all feel the effects – at least financially – of those for whom the answer to the last question is NO, even if they have paid a policy.  And if we turn away, if we do not fix the system, we will have no right to complain when at some point insurance for us or someone close to us is terminated, perhaps by loss of job, perhaps because of rescission, or – even worse – we are told that despite years of paying premiums the answer to the last question is NO, that this illness/condition is not covered, we are on our own.

Happy Bach Day.  Let’s pass the bill today.  And then let’s fix it.  Let’s understand that we cannot afford, financially or morally, to do anything less.

Peace.

Nye To Vote Nay On Health Care Bill

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Glenn Nye’s statement (see after the “flip”) that he will vote “no” on health care reform is not surprising, but it’s extremely disappointing nonetheless. I strongly disagree with Glenn Nye on the merits of his decision as well as on the politics.

On the merits, or lack thereof, I simply don’t buy the arguments Nye is making here. For instance, does Nye really think that Jim Webb would have voted for this bill if it endangered Tricare?  Nope, didn’t think so. As far as the “cost of the bill” is concerned, the CBO has already settled that issue – the Senate bill “will reduce the deficit by $130 billion over the first ten years and possibly $1.2 trillion over the next ten years.”  Finally, on the last point (children’s hospitals), I discussed that here:

…Nye claims the House healthcare bill would cut “funding” for children’s hospitals, yet the fact is that most of the cuts for hospitals are from a reduction in federal reimbursements for emergency care, which will be made up by individuals who would become insured under this legislation. In other words, the bill represents a cut in federal funding, but not necessarily a cut in the hospital’s total revenues or profits. What’s more, the hospital industry association agreed to this tradeoff, as part of its $155 billion deal with the White House. Was Glenn Nye against that deal? Did he speak out against it at the time? If not, why not?

In sum, none of Rep. Nye’s “arguments” against health care reform make any sense at all.  But what about the politics? Obviously, Nye is calculating that progressives and “base” Democrats will be pissed (although I believe he’s underestimating how pissed), but that they ultimately will “suck it up” and vote for him anyway. Nye is also clearly calculating that he will pick up support from independents who hate this bill. With regard to the “base,” comments like this one – Del. Lionell Spruill declaring, “If Glenn Nye is not for it, I will not be there to support him. He owes the president that vote, as far as I’m concerned.” – illustrate the scope of Nye’s problem. I’m not sure how he solves that by election day. With regard to independents, I’m sure that a percentage of them will be assuaged by Nye’s opposition to health care reform, but my guess is that a lot more of them – particularly the “Tea Partiers” – will vote for Republican Scott Rigell regardless. We’ll see, but I tend to believe that, when given the choice between a real Republican and a “Republican lite,” independents will vote for the real Republican.

P.S. I think this comment at Daily Kos neatly sums it all up: “So he is choosing CERTAIN defeat…rather than standing up for Americans, voting on the right side of history and taking his chances on the courage of his convictions. Coward.”

Nye’s statement after the “flip.”

Washington, DC – Citing potential problems for TRICARE recipients, the cost of the bill, and cuts to children’s hospitals, Congressman Glenn Nye announced this evening that he will vote against adopting the health care proposal under consideration in the House of Representatives.

“Over the past year, I have spoken with countless small business owners, families, medical professionals, and average citizens across Virginia’s 2nd District, and it became very clear that this bill was not the right solution for Virginia’s health care challenges,” said Congressman Nye. “There were many strong points in this bill that I would have been happy to support individually, but the package as a whole had serious problems.”

The original version of legislation in the House had specifically exempted TRICARE from being affected. However, when the final bill language was released on Thursday afternoon, it was revealed that neither the Senate bill nor the reconciliation package contained an exemption for TRICARE.

“Our military families need to be able to count on their health care benefits, and I am not willing to risk negative consequences for our military personnel and their families, particularly at a time when our troops are serving overseas in harm’s way,” said Nye.

Nye also expressed concerns about the potential for severe cuts to children’s hospitals, including the Children’s Hospital of the King’s Daughters (CHKD) in Norfolk. The House version of the health care legislation, which Nye opposed last November, would have resulted in a $10 billion annual cut in funding to children’s hospitals. Rather than addressing this problem, the final package actually increased the cuts to $16 billion.

“This bill did not fix the key flaws with the original health care bill, including devastating funding cuts for CHKD in Norfolk and I am not convinced it will effectively reduce the cost of health care for families and small businesses,” said Congressman Nye.

Despite his opposition to the legislation, Nye reiterated that he is committed to passing meaningful reforms of the health care system.

“There are commonsense steps that we can take right now to make a real difference for Americans: repealing the antitrust exemption for health insurance companies, creating a high-risk pool for people with preexisting conditions, establishing an exchange that allows families and small businesses to have more choices, and cracking down on fraud and abuse,” Nye said.

“I know there are some people who will be disappointed with my vote, but I believe that I have a firm duty to vote my conscience and represent the best interests of my district. As much as we need health care reform, we also have an obligation to enact responsible changes for the American people, and to restore their trust in government,” Nye concluded.