Re-start would mean no start at all
Kevin Drum speaks sense to those (I'm looking at you, Howard Dean), who think that since the Health care bill does not achieve all that we'd like it to, specifically a weakened public option, that Congress should start over.
UPDATE: Nate Silver is also speaking sense to those that would kill the bill.
UPDATE 2: As for Dean, he may be implementing his diabolical plan to get the bill passed by fooling the Liebermans of the world into thinking he hates it. My brain hurts.
If healthcare reform dies this year, it dies for a good long time. Say what you will about the Democratic leadership, but Harry Reid, Barack Obama, Rahm Emanuel, Nancy Pelosi, and Steny Hoyer all know this perfectly well. So do John Boehner and Mitch McConnell. (Boy do they know it.) But if it passes, here's what we get:This is not the "collapse of health care reform," as Dean so hysterically puts it. There's still a great deal of heavy lifting to do, especially if they hold firm to getting it out of the Senate by Christmas. Let's get this thing done and stop carping about.
* Insurers have to take all comers. They can't turn you down for a preexisting condition or cut you off after you get sick.
* Community rating. Within a few broad classes, everyone gets charged the same amount for insurance.
* Individual mandate. I know a lot of liberals hate this, but how is it different from a tax? And its purpose is sound: it keeps the insurance pool broad and insurance rates down.
* A significant expansion of Medicaid.
* Subsidies for low and middle income workers that keeps premium costs under 10% of income.
* Limits on ER charges to low-income uninsured emergency patients.
* Caps on out-of-pocket expenses.
* A broad range of cost-containment measures.
* A dedicated revenue stream to support all this.
What's more, for the first time we get a national commitment to providing healthcare coverage for everyone. It won't be universal to start, unfortunately, but it's going to be a lot easier to get there once the marker is laid down. That's how every other country has done it, and that's how we did it with Social Security and Medicare, both of which had big gaps in coverage when they were first passed.
But if we don't pass it, we don't get any of this. Not now, and not for a long time. Instead of being actual liberals, we'll just be playing ones on TV.
UPDATE: Nate Silver is also speaking sense to those that would kill the bill.
UPDATE 2: As for Dean, he may be implementing his diabolical plan to get the bill passed by fooling the Liebermans of the world into thinking he hates it. My brain hurts.
Labels: health care, progressive politics
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