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Anonymous
Anonymous asked in Politics & GovernmentPolitics · 1 decade ago

Health Care Reform Update (a must read): please what are your opinions on the content of the article?

http://www.reuters.com/article/politicsNews/idUSTR...

"U.S. Senate panel backs health insurance requirement

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. Senate panel considering a sweeping healthcare overhaul upheld a requirement on Thursday that individuals purchase health insurance and rejected a proposal that could have scuttled an $80 billion White House deal with drugmakers.

On their third day of debate, members of the Senate Finance Committee made slow progress on hundreds of amendments to the healthcare bill, the last of five measures pending in Congress on President Barack Obama's top domestic priority.

The Democratic-controlled panel defeated on a largely party-line vote a Republican proposal to let individuals opt out of the bill's requirement that everyone have health insurance. The plan would offer subsidies on a sliding scale to help people buy it.

Republicans said the issue was a matter of personal freedom and questioned the constitutionality of forcing people to purchase insurance.

"The individual mandate in this bill is un-American. It may even be unconstitutional," said Republican Senator Jim Bunning, the amendment's sponsor.

Democrats said the requirement was vital to the success of the overhaul, which aims for a dramatic reduction in the number of uninsured people living in the United States. "The system won't work if this passes," Baucus said of the amendment.

The panel's bill, which committee staff said would cost about $900 billion over 10 years, mirrors Obama's proposals to rein in costs, increase insurance competition and regulation and expand coverage to the uninsured.

PUBLIC OPTION VOTES PLANNED

The Baucus proposal does not include a government-run insurance plan -- the "public option" -- that is included in the other four bills in Congress, and two Democratic senators said they would seek votes on the issue on Friday.

Democratic Senators John Rockefeller and Charles Schumer said they would bring up public option amendments in order to kick off a discussion on the approach, which is backed by President Barack Obama as a way to create competition but opposed by critics who fear it will hurt the private insurance industry.

"This is the starting point," Schumer told reporters about the debate on a public option, which was included in the four other bills in Congress.

He said the public option would have a hard time passing the more conservative Senate Finance Committee but had strong support in the full Senate and House of Representatives.

In one of the few votes this week that was not mostly party-line, the panel backed an agreement the White House and Baucus struck with drugmakers earlier this year that required the industry to contribute $80 billion to the overhaul.

An amendment by Democratic Senator Bill Nelson would have cost the industry an extra $106 billion by forcing drugmakers to pay the government a rebate on prescriptions for low-income people who are eligible for both the Medicaid insurance program for the poor and the Medicare program for the elderly.

The additional money raised under the amendment would have been used in part to close a gap in prescription drug coverage for some Medicare recipients.

"Did the pharmaceutical company come to the table in the agreement with the White House with enough? There are a number of us who feel that is not the case," Nelson said.

Baucus and two other Democratic senators -- Tom Carper and Robert Menendez -- joined committee Republicans in voting against the amendment.

"This may well undermine our ability to pass comprehensive healthcare reform through this committee and in this Congress," Carper said.

Democrats on the panel also defeated two Republican amendments that would have blocked the bill's cuts in Medicare Advantage, which augments the government's Medicare insurance program for the elderly with private insurance.

The reform bill would cut $123 billion in government subsidies to the Advantage plan, which Republicans say could force insurance companies out of the market and change or eliminate the benefits for many of the program's 10 million participants.

Democrats say the changes to Medicare would increase benefits and participation over 10 years and shore up Medicare's trust fund.

The debate has focused heavily so far on Medicare and other programs for the elderly, who as a group are more likely to vote and who polls show are among the most concerned about Obama's healthcare plans.

What caught my attention the most was democrats not letting people opt out of the program.

Questions:

What catches your attention, what are your thoughts on the article?

7 Answers

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  • 1 decade ago
    Favorite Answer

    Personally, I think that the plans Obama has which does allow people to opt out of the government option are great.

    I am amazed that so many Americans are not aware about Obama’s healthcare plans. During the election, he campaigned for these changes stating that he felt it was unfair to have a system where insurance companies try to escape paying claims.

    Remember, he was elected to bring in these changes, elected by the American people who want healthcare reform. And he discussed his plans in debates with McCain, and he still won the election.

    First of all, too many people do not know that Obama wants to make insurance more available to all. His system is similar to that which works in Holland, Taiwain and Switzerland. It works there and private healthcare companies provide most the insurance to the people there.

    FACT - the USA spends more on healthcare PER PERSON than any other nation on the planet.

    FACT – insurance companies admit that they push up costs, buy politicians and do not pay out for many claims when they should.

    FACT - the US has higher death rates for kids aged under five than western European countries with universal health coverage.

    That means that a dead American four year old would have had a better chance of life if they were born in Canada, France, the Netherlands, Cuba, Switzerland, Germany, Japan etc, all of which have universal health coverage. And no western European nation with universal healthcare has moved away from it.

    Remember, I back my facts up with evidence. Those who say they are wrong tend not to. If they are wrong, e-mail me with proof and let me know.

  • Noah H
    Lv 7
    1 decade ago

    I'm not certain how much more obvious this can be. The GOP is stooging for the HEALTH INSURANCE industry. If they can't kill ANY kind of bill with dumb @ss 'extras' they'll only go for something that will funnel billions of dollars into the pockets private insurers. The ONLY real solution is to institute a single payer non-profit public plan that covers everyone paid out of income derived from taxes. Everyone pays, nobody pays too much. Business gets relieved from kicking in for every employee...just a moderate tax per large employer and a small tax per small employer and a zero tax for the really small employers. Folks who make over 110 thousand a year now in wages get a 7 1/2% tax break because they stop paying into Social Security and Medicare. Bogus....they should keep paying. Fair, unfair, it doesn't matter. Life's not fair. The health insurance mafia has robbed us long enough. Everyone should pay, but nobody should pay too much. We all pay for our bloated 800 billion a year military...do you hear anyone kvetch about that? Hardly anyone....but ask for a few bucks per for HEALTH INSURANCE and suddenly it's the end of the world as we know it. If the GOP wanted to work this out it would be done...all they're doing is trying to hold back history with nonsense about 'socialism' and how the 'government' is going to kill granny and baby Trig. This entire nasty business makes me want to hurl!

  • 1 decade ago

    I have to agree, the no op out clause seems to go against the Constitution and our american belief of freedom of Choice!

    The other thing that stands out is the cutting of medical benefits to our elderly. seems The democrats really don't care about our working class or our elderly!

  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago

    What catches my attention first:

    Pass a bill with unconstitutional provisions for the good of the plan. "The ends justify the means."

    Boy the Dems sure hammered at Bush on that ideology when it came to the controversial 'torture' crap.

    But its ok now.

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  • 1 decade ago

    I don't like nothing about it.....including earlier amendments to give congress time to read before voting it also got thrown out. They will force it through before the next elections, otherwise they know it's dead.

  • 1 decade ago

    The proponents of this legislation want to put the meat to the old people. I don't see how you can come up with another conclusion.

  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago

    I read this before. Not many people are going to read this entire article on here. But I was pleased, because it is showing that health care reform is moving forward.

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