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Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Health Care Reform: It's Dead, Baby

It looks like all we're going to be left with is mandatory policies at ever-increasing prices for crappy coverage that will be cancelled if you get sick. Sounds suspiciously like the Republican plan.

Here's a pointed commentary by Ezra Klein, who's been dogging this closely. It gives a good idea of the degree to which kabuki rules the Senate:

The next was to cut a deal with Olympia Snowe. But Snowe had made it clear that part of any compromise with her was a deceleration in the bill's momentum. "The more they try to drive this process in an unrealistic timeframe, the more reluctant I become about whether or not this can be doable in this timeframe that we're talking about," Snowe told reporters. "There's always January."

That left Joe Lieberman. And Lieberman's price for signing onto the bill was the destruction of the public option and, unexpectedly, the Medicare buy-in provision. There would be no triggers, no opt-outs, no compromises. Lieberman swung the axe and cut his deal cleanly, killing not only the public option, but anything that looked even remotely like it. Some on the Hill remain worried that Lieberman will discover new points of contention in the coming days, as they believe he had signaled that he wouldn't filibuster the Medicare buy-in. They worry whether his word is good. But assuming it is, he can provide the 60th vote Reid needs to move the bill by the end of next week, and keep health-care reform on some sort of schedule.


And so, in order to cut a deal with Lieberman, they cut the "reform" out of "health-care reform." This is basically TARP for the insurance industry, as nearly as I can make out, except they've cut out the middle-man: instead of using our tax money to line the pockets of insurance executives, they -- meaning the president and the Senate Democrats -- are forcing us to do it directly from our own pockets. I guess all the tax money has to go to the bankers.

Joe Sudbay at AmericaBlog has a take on this from Darcy Burner of ProgressiveCongress.org:

The first rule of medicine is, "Do no harm." The post-Joe Lieberman version of the Senate healthcare bill fails that basic criterion. Unless Democratic leadership steps up to fix this misguided proposal, our only recourse will be to kill it.

The fundamental failing of the newest Senate proposal is that it requires individuals to purchase health insurance, but does nothing to rein in what insurance companies charge. There is nothing to stop spiraling health costs from eating up an ever-increasing percentage of our national productivity.

The House bill has two major cost-control mechanisms: the public option and the 85% medical-loss ratio requirement. The Senate bill is on track to have neither, and nothing new to replace them. The Senate bill is a recipe for national disaster. If it's that bill or nothing, I prefer nothing.


Sudbays' comment:

The House can still use its power to fix the bill. But, that would require the use of power, something liberals aren't so good at.

Sounds like something I would say.

McJoan at DailyKos does a riff off Ezra Klein:

By now, you're probably used to hearing about the $900 billion health-care bill. But what about the 150,000-life health-care bill?

Oddly, that label hasn't made its way into the conversation. But it is, if anything, a conservative estimate. The Institute of Medicine developed a detailed methodology for projecting the lives lost due to lack of insurance. The original paper estimated that 18,000 lives were lost in 2000, and the Urban Institute updated that analysis with data for 2006, yielding an estimate of 22,000 lives. As for 150,000, well, that's almost certainly too low. That's just the 2006 number across 10 years, which is the time frame we generally use for health care, with a third of the lives saved lopped off, as we're not going to cover all of the uninsured. But since the population of the uninsured grows every year, and so does the death toll, it would surely be higher. So call it the 150,000-plus-life health-care plan.


At this point, the assistance to the people who need it most is the critical moral and policy decision. Would it be a band-aid? Yes, but even a band-aid can staunch bleeding, and right now that's what we desperately need. The insurance reforms matter a great deal, too, and can be passed through regular process. It will be a lot harder for Senators to stand up and vote to allow insurance companies to continue to deny coverage to the American people.


"Insurance" has become another way for rich people to get richer, and nothing more. That's what the Senate Democrats have decided not to disturb, thanks to Joe Lieberman -- and others -- anyone who does any reading on this will detect the fine hand of Rahm Emanuel acting for Barack Obama:

Politico reported Monday morning that the White House had pressed Reid to cut the deal after Lieberman (I-Conn) insisted the Senate drop a provision, which Lieberman himself has long favored, to allow those 55-64 to buy in to Medicare. Lieberman is threatening to join a Republican filibuster of the bill if the provision isn't dropped.

The White House denied the report. "The report is inaccurate. The White House is not pushing Senator Reid in any direction. We are working hand in hand with the Senate Leadership to work through the various issues and pass health reform as soon as possible," White House spokesman Dan Pfeiffer wrote in an e-mail to the Plum Line.

The report, however, according to the two sources, was entirely accurate. "We're long past time for these kinds of games," one source said. White House spokesman Reid Cherlin stuck to the denial: "Our statement is true," he said.


How said is it that when the White House makes a denial in something like this, you automatically figure they're lying. It couldn't be because of past history now, could it?

Anyway, the whole thing is making me sick. Can the Democrats honestly think they're going to go to the country with a "health coverage reform" plan that amounts to nothing more than a giveaway to the insurance industry and win in 2010? John Aravosis points out what's missing.

It's not about the votes, people. It's about leadership. The current occupant of the White House doesn't like to fight, and the leadership in Congress has never been as good at their jobs, at marshaling their own party, as the Republicans were when they were in the majority. The President is supposed to rally the country, effectively putting pressure on opposition members of Congress to sit down and shut up. And the congressional leadership is supposed to rally its members to hold the line, and get the 51 votes necessary for passing legislation in a climate where the minority is too afraid to use the filibuster. When you have a President who is constitutionally, or intellectually, unable to stand for anything, and a congressional leadership that, rather than disciplining its own members and forging ahead with its own agenda, cedes legislative authority to a president who refuses to lead, you have a recipe for exactly what happened last night. Weakness, chaos, and failure.

I weep for the future.

3 comments:

Piet said...

It confounds me that the Democrats in the Senate have not yet stripped Lieberman of every bit of power and influence they have allowed him to accumulate within that body. For him to retain the chairmanship of anything at all under the Democrats is emblematic of their absolute spinelessness. I have written more letters to my Senators and my Representative in the last eight months than in the previous eight years, and not one has been founded in anything but shocked outrage at the way they have wasted their electoral advantage. I don't think Lieberman (as you say: I-Aetna) should even be allowed to caucus with the Dems; they should banish him to the Republican side where at least he would not be privy to Democratic strategy discussions. I am ashamed for him, for his complete lack of integrity, although I know he isn't ashamed for himself.

Hunter said...

Aravosis points out in his post that the Republicans never had more than 55 senators under Bush and managed to do pretty much as they pleased -- Bush's agenda went through Congress without a hitch.

I think that in itself speaks to the quality of the leadership displayed by the Obama and Reid.

The necessity for a 60-vote majority is bullshit.

finefroghair said...

Remember our government is a reflection of ourselves, we supposedly elected this worthless rabble. Look in the mirror and what do you see, a country of petty and trivial pursuits and endless adherence to failed policies. We are no more a democracy than Iran. Quiz your fellow Americans and what do you discover most are complete imbeciles and not by accident the powers that be like us that way. Health care reform is a myth any reform is pie in the sky more troops in Afganistan please. This country has been subverted by the dispicable corporations that control the world. Example why would this country bailout a multi-national corporation? GM has more factories outside the US than in yet we felt obligated to save their sorry ass. Our president is truly a disappointment on so many levels even more than Bush. At least with the Republicans you knew what to expect they are a known quantity, while Obama's duplicity is just plain heart breaking. I should cry but instead I choose to laugh the hilarity of the ignorant tea baggers defies explanation how can anybody be so opposed to their own interests. Failure is not only an option it appears to be our only course.