Nov
12
2009

The fight for health care continues

The following is a message from Healthcare-NOW, a leader in the fight for single-payer healthcare, embodied  in H.R.676, legislation supported by millions of Americans.   HCN’s message highlights behind the scenes actions that derailed H.R. 676, the most beneficial health care system for our nation. 

 

Dear Healthcare-NOW! Supporter:

On Saturday, November 7, 2009, the House passed H.R. 3962, the Affordable Health Care for America Act, to much celebration by the Democratic party. Healthcare-NOW!’s view, however, is that the House bill is a gift to the insurance industry at the further expense of the people of this nation.

The bill’s advocates claim it will cover an additional 36 million people, subsidize the cost of insurance for families up to 400% above the poverty level, increase Medicaid coverage to 150% above the poverty level, close the Medicare donut hole by 2019, place a surcharge on individuals making more than $500,000 and couples making more than $1,000,000, will end rescissions and pre-existing conditions.

What the Democrats fail to mention is the bill leaves millions of people uninsured, allows medical bankruptcies to persist, criminalizes and fines the uninsured, increases the number of underinsured, does nothing to contain the sky rocketing costs, blocks women from their reproductive rights, transfers massive public funds to private insurance companies strengthening their control over care, protects pharmaceutical companies’ superprofits at patient expense, fails to reclaim the 31% of waste in our system, expands Medicaid without regard to the state budget crises, discriminates based on immigration status and age, and sets up several levels of care covering less for those without the ability to pay. Those who have coverage will increasingly find care unaffordable and will go without. The whole system will inevitably fail from being fiscally unsustainable.

So is the House bill better than nothing?

“I don’t think so,” writes Marcia Angell, M.D., former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine. “It simply throws more money into a dysfunctional and unsustainable system, with only a few improvements at the edges, and it augments the central role of the investor-owned insurance industry. The danger is that as costs continue to rise and coverage becomes less comprehensive, people will conclude that we’ve tried health reform and it didn’t work. But the real problem will be that we didn’t really try it. I would rather see us do nothing now, and have a better chance of trying again later and then doing it right.”

Given that the bill does nothing to contain or reduce rising costs or end the private health insurance industry’s dominance, we hoped that the Progressive Caucus would stand strong. But they did not. All but two of H.R. 676’s cosponsors voted for H.R. 3962 — Rep. Eric Massa [D-NY] and Rep. Kucinich [D-OH].

Rep. Massa stated, “At the highest level, this bill will enshrine in law the monopolistic powers of the private health insurance industry, period. There’s really no other way to look at it.”

Despite telling single-payer advocates that Congressman Weiner’s single-payer amendment could not go to vote because it would open the floodgates for regressive amendments on abortion and immigrant access, the Democratic leadership allowed votes on both. Prior to the vote on H.R. 3962, the Stupak Amendment passed that will prevent women receiving tax subsidies from using their own money to purchase private insurance that covers abortion and in many cases will prevent low-income women from accessing abortion entirely.

The House of Representatives has dealt the worst blow to women’s fundamental right to self-determination in order to buy a few votes for reform of the profit-driven health insurance industry,” writes Terry O’Neill, President of National Organization for Women. “We must protect the rights we fought for in Roe v. Wade. We cannot and will not support a health care bill that strips millions of women of their existing access to abortion.”

Healthcare-NOW! fought to win a fair and open debate on healthcare reform including the merits of a single-payer system. This has not yet happened, but the advocacy for this system has greatly impacted the debate in meaningful ways.

We need to continue to build the grassroots movement for single-payer, not-for-profit, national healthcare. We look forward to much brain-storming at our upcoming national strategy conference in St. Louis this weekend, and the opportunity to move forward with renewed energy, creative ideas, and resolve.

Meanwhile, we have the opportunity NOW to continue to support the Sanders’ Single-Payer Amendment to be introduced in the U.S. Senate, Congressman Kucinich’s efforts to get the state single-payer amendment back in when the House and Senate bills are reconciled, and the efforts of the Mobilization for Health Care for All.

Thanks for all that you do,
Healthcare-NOW! National Staff

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Nov
12
2009

Waxman to Weiner: Pelosi Will Allow Single-Payer Full House Vote! The phones rang off the hook with reminders

On July 31, 2009, Speaker Pelosi made a promise.  Promises are not ordinarily made to be broken — particularly when 45 million Americans’ lives depend on it. 

 Watch the video and see why so many advocates phoned Speaker Pelosi to remind her of a commitment made in July.

 House Speaker Nancy Pelosi promised Congressman Anthony Weiner (D-NY) to allow debate and a vote in the full House of Representatives on the Weiner Single Payer Amendment.

The Weiner Amendment would substitute the single payer language of HR 676 for the language of the proposed House Bill (H.R. 3962).  This would be the first and only time that the full House would have an opportunity to debate and vote on single payer.

House Energy & Commerce Committee Chairman Henry Waxman publicly relayed Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s promise to allow Weiner to bring his single payer amendment to the House Floor.  Pelosi, through Waxman, asked Weiner and the six co-sponsors to withdraw the amendment in Committee in return for being able to offer it in the full House.  You can see Waxman making the promise on behalf of Pelosi here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H0fA2DfwFn4

Advocates urged to call Speaker Pelosi’s Washington, DC office (202) 225-4965, asking her to keep her promise to Representative Weiner and allow him to offer his Single Payer Amendment, did so.

They also called Rep. Henry Waxman’s Washington, DC office (202) 225-3976 to ask him to urge the Speaker to honor her promise which he publicly conveyed to Rep. Weiner.

And they called Rules Committee Chair Rep. Louise Slaughter, (202) 225-3615, asking her to report the health reform bill to the floor of the House with a Rule that PERMITS consideration of the Weiner Amendment.

Advocates nationwide called their Representative in Washington, DC  (202) 224-3121, asking that he/she contact the Speaker’s Office to urge her to honor her promise on the Weiner Amendment.

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Nov
02
2009

Mobilize for Health Care

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Dear Friend,

Today the Mobilization continued to spread across America and our movement showed again that we will not rest until health care is a right for all. In Louisville, seven of the many supporters who occupied the Humana lobby yesterday spent the whole night in the office and only emerged late this morning to tell their story to waiting press and supporters. (Check our website for press coverage and video.) Their sit-in lasted more than 24 hours and set a new standard of determination for our campaign. As the old song says, “We who believe in freedom cannot rest until it comes.” The right to health care is a freedom that we believe in, and as we move forward now we will have to follow the lead of the Louisville 7 and prepare to occupy the insurance company offices we enter for as long it takes to force them to make a decision – accept our demands or have us arrested. 

We are also inspired today by the incredible dedication of Dr. Margaret Flowers, who was arrested at the CareFirst office in Baltimore yesterday despite the risk of a 6 month jail sentence for violating her probation for a previous arrest. Margaret was released from jail in the very early morning today despite her best efforts to remain in police custody until CareFirst CEO Chet Burrell agreed to a public meeting with her. However, her courageous leadership has inspired another person to follow in her footsteps already! 

In Philadelphia today, 13 people were arrested while blocking the doors to the Blue Cross Blue Shield office there after company staff refused to meet with them. As we send this out, all 13 of those arrested in Philadelphia are still in custody. And Judy Esber, a 24 year-old union organizer among them, has decided that she will take the torch from Margaret and Sam and try to stay in jail to build our movement as well. Judy has told us that she is going to remain in jail until 100 new people have committed to sit in and risk arrest at our website! In particular (but not exclusively!), she hopes to inspire more young people to join our fight. If you haven’t yet committed to sit in or you’ve been on the fence, please honor Judy’s call to action and sign up today. And forward this email to others who might be inspired to step up. 

Thank you so much to everyone who donated to support Margaret! Please donate today so we know we can pay any necessary bail to get Judy out of jail when she decides to consent to be released. Every little bit helps. Messages of support for Judy at our Facebook page are a great contribution as well. She can’t – and we can’t – do this without you. 

Over 200 people have risked arrest in 20 cities in our campaign so far, and 132 of them have been to jail. 13 are still in jail right now, and 1 of them is committed to stay in until 100 more of us rise to meet the challenge of this moment. It’s amazing that we’ve come this far so fast, but our work is just beginning. To finally win Medicare for All, hundreds and perhaps thousands more of us will need to step up to put our bodies between the insurance companies and our democracy. We’re making an impact, we can’t rest now. 

Thanks for everything you do - 

Kevin, Katie, Kai, Lacy, Julia, and the Mobilization team 

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