Where does the Congress stand on healthcare reform? Who knows?
Nancy Pelosi is the leader of the House of Representatives. She has a commanding edge of Democrats over Regressives. One would think that would give her more leeway than Senator Reid. She should be able to at least make a stab at formulating a rational reform plan. See, you thought you understood politics.
Salvador Dali may have understood what his art represented. Or, maybe not. Either way it isn’t always clear to every observer. I find we are in the same situation with regard to what Congress means. It is also fairly certain that Senor Dali had a firmer grasp of what he intended than does Congress.
Below are excerpts from Speaker Pelosi’s recent press conference. I removed those parts not related to healthcare. My comments have been interspersed at appropriate points to highlight errors, confusion and inanities in Nancy’s answers.
I should note that Chris Weigant sent me the transcript and suggested that I compose a post based on it. Chris is one of the few bloggers left on Huffington Post. He is also one of those special friends from the Internet that I someday hope to meet.
PELOSI: Health care reform will be part of how we address reducing the deficit. This and the point that real reform can make our industries more competitive are two points that need to be given far more emphasis.
Health care reform is entitlement reform, as the President so clearly states.
With that, I would be pleased to take any questions.
QUESTION: On health care, Madam Speaker?
PELOSI: Yes, ma’am.
QUESTION: There are bipartisan discussions in the Senate about an idea, looking at creating a privately run cooperative instead of a public option. I am just wondering what you think of the concept. And given the concerns among some of your moderate members about a public option, is this something you might be open to?
Co-op proposals are a sham put forward by the insurance corporations and their toadies. They are intended to be too small to be a problem for private plans. They cannot be made actuarially viable. It is an attempt to substitute uncompetitive plans for public options.
PELOSI: Not instead of a public option, no. In our Caucus, I think Members have been — I know that Members have been very clear about what their concerns might be about a public option. And I agree it should be actuarially sound, it should be administratively self sufficient. It should be a real competitor with the private sector and not have an unfair advantage. When you say the words “public option,” if that is the term of art we will be using, you have to say right next to it “level playing field.” But in our House, there is strong support for a public option, and great respect for the concerns that have been raised within our Caucus. And we will address them.
More shams. The complete inanities of a supposed “level playing field” and the overwhelming problems with all of the public options being floated in Congress are addressed in my last post, It Ain’t No Game.
QUESTION: Madam Speaker, on health care, given what you just described is going to be very complicated for people to understand, and given the experience that the Clinton health plan had, and then that we had with Medicare part D, with public worries and anxieties and confusion, what strategy are you going to follow to explain this massive bill to people? Because health care is people’s most — one of their most basic worries in life.
This is just one more reason to go to a single-payer system. Make it simple. Medicare should be expanded into Medicare-For-All. It has been around for more than 40 years. People generally find the concept understandable.
PELOSI: It sure is. It is a personal worry in terms of their health and well being. It is also an economic issue for them as well. And I always say everybody in the country is an expert on his or her health care and how to be able to afford it.
A comment such as this is patently untrue and is mere pandering.
We have our overarching message of affordability, accessibility, and quality that the President has put forth. In that framework, we will have the initiatives to help us meet those goals and are deeply rooted in those values.
This sounds good but you would be well-advised to take it with as much faith as politicians commonly deserve.
Right now, the bill is being considered, and I can only speak to the House. The three committees are working in unison, practically, with a unified staff. They will have something on the table in a week or two. Hopefully, most of it will already be scored, because at some point we have to know how much each element of it costs to see what we can afford and then how we pay for it. Because it will be paid for. And that challenge for us is to relate what we are doing here to the lives of the American people and how this makes a difference to them.
A single-payer system has such great cost advantages that it essentially pays for itself, even as it provides coverage for all of those presently uninsured and under-insured. It means that funding sources must be juggled. Some of what is now termed premiums would be called taxes. The total amount of premiums and taxes could remain the same or, given several possible refinements, actually be less than what our system presently costs.
But we are very excited about it, whether it is about prevention and wellness, which is the important part of it, investments in scientific research, that we can have personalized, customized care for all Americans, with investments in technology so that we have a common record for all people to be on it, whether it is investments in community health centers to reach out to achieve this, as many people being involved as possible, because that is hard, and community health centers will enable us to do that. Whether it is having the resources to have sufficient health care providers at every step of the way.
We will be able to explain the bill to the American people once it is — a mark comes forward, and then Congress will work its will, people will make suggestions (Except that suggestions of a single-payer system will continue to be ignored), and we will have a product that will meet the President’s values, meet the needs of the American people, be paid for, and make America healthier.
QUESTION: Madam Speaker, on health care and the public plan or government plan, whatever you want to call it, is it your belief that this is central, you know, an essential element of health care reform? Can you have effective health care reform without a public or government plan?
PELOSI: Well, let me say at the health summit the President was asked this question by Senator Grassley. You may have heard him. He said, “Don’t you think that having a public health plan is unfair in terms of competition with the private plans?” The President said, “I think a public option is a way to keep the private sector honest.” But, and we want to achieve what I just said, accessibility, quality, and affordability so that all Americans have access to quality health care. He then said if you have another way to do that, put it on the table. And that is where we are.
The majority of the President’s supporters, and many who continue to call themselves Republicans, are not being allowed to put single-payer on the table. So, that is where we really are, or aren’t.
Everything should be on the table. (Should be, but isn’t.) From our perspective here, though, there is strong support for a public option right from the start.
There is a problem in that public option is often thought to mean single-payer. They are not the same. The confusion is intentional.
And there is also full support for having it be a real competitor, not something that has an overwhelming advantage. Of course it is not for profit and it doesn’t advertise. So it doesn’t have some of the overhead that the private sector has.
Remember, to be a real competitor would require a public option to be priced artificially high in order not to significantly undercut private plans. This is to require those with a public plan to subsidize the private plans and the profits of the leeches that have put us in the position of desperately needing reform.
Already just the thought of having a public option has sort of eliminated words from the health insurance glossary of precondition, portability. Everybody seems to be subscribing to the idea that we shouldn’t have a precondition in order to get eliminating you for health insurance.
Eliminating denials due to preconditions is essential but will cause present private plans to become even more expensive.
So this is what we have come to do. Our three chairmen have asked that Chairman Dingell be the author of this bill. Every year since he has been here he has been the author of universal health care. Before that his father was. When he was a young Member of Congress in the ‘60s, he gaveled Medicare. He gaveled down (?) the Medicare bill. Very few Republican votes, by the way, on Medicare. Very few Republican votes.
So we have heard the same concerns before. But it is a pretty — as I say, this is the life work for many Members of Congress, and it certainly is the responsibility for all of us. This will happen. We told the President we would have a bill by the end of July, that it would be paid for, and that is the course of action we are on. And I commend our three chairmen, Chairman Rangel, Chairman Waxman, and Chairman George Miller , for working together, eliminating any turf challenges that occurred in the mid- or early ‘90s, 1993 or 1994, and to facilitate this improvement in the lives of the American people.
Thank you all very much.
One may think that much of what she says sounds good. Those are known as platitudes. They are also the reason for the confusion. Those platitudes must come face-to-face with the realities of the proposals to which the Congress and the President are limiting themselves, and us. They want reform without harming the health insurance and drug corporations. One or the other. Choose. We can’t have both.
For those naive enough to think that the corporations that caused this mess need to be guaranteed continued existence and unconscionable profits, email me with a list of all of those countries with a national health system who are conducting a national debate about swapping their system for one like ours.
















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I agree, Crawford, that confusion over terms used in this discussion is intentional and designed to allow the politicians to continue to support the insurance and drug companies while calling it reform. Could you spell out what “public option” and “single payer” mean and the potential differences?
I probably need to devote a complete post to addressing you question. Very briefly, think of Medicare-For-All as single-payer.
The putative reason for a public option is as a standard with which to keep the private plans honest. This would require that the public option be such that the private plans could competitive.
Given the economies of scale, lack of profit motive, lack of need for marketing, lack of obscene executive incomes, et al. that is impossible without artificially increasing the price of the public option.
Our ridiculous attachment to maintaining a private presence makes no sense. This market is structured in such a way that a “free market” cannot exist. This takes away any real reference or deference to a “capitalist” system. That is nothing more than a myth based on a complete ignorance of economics.
The only real value of a public option is to satisfy the unrealistic desire to maintain a “capitalist” healthcare system that doesn’t exist and to maintain the profits of those who own our politicians.
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