LIAR!

President Obama Tells Bald-Faced Lie About Health Care Reform Cost Control

By: Jon Walker Tuesday December 15, 2009 1:03 pm

After exiting a meeting with the Senate Democratic caucus, President Obama approached the microphone and proceeded to tell a bald-faced lie about health care reform:

You talk to every health care economist out there, they will tell you that what ever ideas exist in terms of bending the cost curve and starting to reduce cost for families, businesses, and government, those elements are in this bill.

This statement is 100% false-and Obama knows that. This bill does not contain anywhere near most ideas for controlling health care costs. This bill does not even contain most of the cost-reducing ideas that were part of Obama’s health care plan during last year’s presidential campaign.

Mr. President, If you are going to cut secret deals that will force Americans to spend billions more on their prescription drugs, at least have the decency to not publicly lie about how your “health care reform” bill will do everything it can to reduce costs for American families. You know it is a lie, the PhRMA lobbyists you cut the secret deal with know it is a lie, health care reform experts knows it is a lie, and the American people should know it is a lie.

The Senate Bill Is Designed To Make Your Health Insurance Worse

By: Jon Walker Tuesday December 15, 2009 7:46 am

The sole defense of this massive corporate giveaway, formally known as the Senate health care reform bill, is that it would still do some “good,” helping millions of the uninsured. Unfortunately, the bill would dramatically worsen the quality of current insurance coverage for tens of millions Americans, thanks to the new excise tax on insurance plans. It is unlikely that any of the remaining “good” in this bill will outweigh the massive amount of harm.

Most of the “help” this bill will do is dubious at best. Help is being defined as giving insufficient subsides to Americans now forced by the government to buy extremely expensive, poorly regulated, junk insurance. Without banning annual limits and an extremely high out-of-pocket cap (which thanks to a massive loophole is not really capped at all), the insurance regulations are basically meaningless. Having this new, mandated “coverage” will not stop you from being bankrupted by accumulated medical debt should you get seriously ill. Insurance that does not protect you from financial ruin if you get sick makes a mockery of the entire concept health insurance.

The harm this bill will do thanks to the excise tax on employer-provided insurance benefits is enormous. The health care bill is designed with the goal of making millions of middle class Americans’ health insurance coverage much worse. That is not a bug, it is a feature.

Time To Hold Progressives In Congress To Their Promise

By: Jane Hamsher Tuesday December 15, 2009 9:58 am

Instead of a public option, what does the Senate bill contain?

  • A removal of the ban on annual limits that Reid slipped in at the last minute, in violation of the President’s promise in his September address to Congress
  • An exemption from anti-trust law for insurance companies that will reduce competition
  • Taxes that start up in January, but benefits that don’t start until 2014
  • No ability to negotiate for Medicare drug prices (you know, that thing the Democrats passed in the “first hundred days” in 2006 when it didn’t matter)
  • No cost controls, so health insurance premiums will continue to rise at a rate of $1000 a year
  • A tax on middle class insurance plans that is designed to cut back insurance benefits, reduce coverage, and increase co-pays and deductibles.

That reduction in your insurance benefits is a feature, not a bug – it’s how they’re going to “bend the cost curve.”

We Need $120,000 to Run a TV Ad in Nevada against Harry Reid

By: Michael Whitney Tuesday December 15, 2009 11:24 am

Just how bad will the bill be if Lieberman gets his way?

  1. Mandates every American buy expensive insurance from private companies without the choice of a public option
  2. Severely taxes middle class health care plans, rather than wealthy individuals
  3. Insurance premiums will increase in cost $1000 a year
  4. Increased health care costs
  5. Insurance companies will be exempt from anti-trust laws, inhibiting competition
  6. A sweet, sweet deal for PhRMA with no ability to negotiate for Medicare drug prices
  7. Monopolies granted on new biologic drugs so they will never become generics
  8. NO public option
  9. NO medicare expansion

For good measure, Reid slipped in an annual limit on benefits that insurance companies have to pay out, contrary to President Obama’s promise in September. And to top it all off, the IRS fines you if you won’t shell out money to insurance companies!

I don’t know about you, but if I wanted John McCain’s health care plan, I would’ve voted for John McCain. He would have let Lieberman write the health care bill, too.

Without A Public Option, The Individual Mandate Is Unacceptable For Moral, Political, And Policy Reasons

By: Jon Walker Tuesday December 15, 2009 10:38 am

The current Senate bill only creates a sham imitation of these systems. This bill completely fails to uphold the government’s end of this social contract, but would still force Americans to buy expensive, poorly regulated, junk insurance. Insurance policies would only be required to have an actuarial value of 60 percent, a shockingly low number. The insurance companies will not be banned from placing annual caps on benefits and there is a massive loophole to get around an already too high “limit” on out-of-pocket cost. The end result is that having this “insurance” will not prevent Americans from bankruptcy if the get sick, nullifying the entire logic behind universal health insurance. For moral, political, policy, and economic reasons, progressives must oppose any government mandate to buy insurance as long as the government refuses to pass laws ensuring that every American actually has access to decent, affordable health insurance.

The Senate bill does not ensure that Americans get value from the health insurance they would be forced to buy. Insurance companies are not mandated to be non-profits. It lacks a strong minimum medical loss ratio that would force insurance companies to spend the majority of the money they take in through premiums on actual health care. There are no serious price controls of any form put on the insurance companies. The bill lacks a strong third-party review of claims denials. The bill also lacks a central reimbursement negotiator to make sure that insurance companies are not overpaying providers and passing on the cost to their customers.

The health insurance Americans are forced to purchase will not be affordable. Middle class families (making 300%-400% of FPL) will only get subsidies sufficient to make the premiums for the second cheapest insurance at the low quality silver level (70% actuarial) cost 10% of their income. That is only premiums and does not count co-pays, deductibles, non-covered procedures and medications, etc. These plans will have an annual out-of-pocket limit $12,000. If a family actually had a medical emergency, their health care spending could eat up over a third of their income, or go over the annual cap on benefit payments. This is not quality insurance, and will not truly protect people from financial ruin if they get sick. The bill will also allow insurance companies to charge older Americans up to three times as much as younger Americans.

Don’t Forget About Ben Nelson, He Has Demands Too!

By: Jon Walker Tuesday December 15, 2009 3:45 pm

The only small consolation is that without the public option, strong risk adjustment mechanisms, sufficient tax credits, or tougher regulations, the exchanges will end up an awful place to buy insurance. I doubt anyone will use the exchanges unless they have no other choice. The failure of the rest of reform might end having the “benefit” of containing the poison from whatever anti-abortion langauge Nelson ends up getting added.

Kill the Senate Bill

By: Jane Hamsher Tuesday December 15, 2009 2:36 pm

When urging its passage today, President Obama said two things that are manifestly untrue.  He says that the bill fulfills all of the promises he made in his September speech before a joint session of Congress, but it doesn’t.

What the President said in September:

They will no longer be able to place some arbitrary cap on the amount of coverage you can receive in a given year or a lifetime.

But while nobody was looking, Harry Reid slipped in an “arbitrary cap on the amount of coverage you can receive in a given year”:

The President Obama also said that “what ever ideas exist in terms of bending the cost curve and starting to reduce cost for families, businesses, and government, those elements are in this bill.”  Not true either.

As we speak, Frank Lautenberg and Kay Hagan are destroying Byron Dorgan’s drug reimportation amendment by making a bunch of bullshit claims about drug safety.  The danger of transferring drugs from a CVS warehouse in Canada to a CVS store in the United States?  Zip.  But they’re pretending that everything is coming from Chinese counterfeiters to keep something that could save the government $19 billion and the public over $100 billion from passing so the White House deal  with PhRMA can be upheld.  The Dorgan amendment could have been a way of honestly bending the cost curve, something the President campaigned on.

Instead, the “bend” comes from taxing middle class insurance benefits, which makes them worse.

Don’t Blame Joe Lieberman, Blame Harry Reid

By: Jon Walker Tuesday December 15, 2009 12:39 pm

I would call this move of adding a public option pure theater, but it was, in fact, far more malicious. By adding the public option and dragging out debate until late December, Harry Reid made sure there would not be time to use reconciliation.

I understand why much of the progressive base is angry at Joe Lieberman for what he is doing to the Senate health care reform bill, but you should really be angry at the people who gave Lieberman his power. If Reid had gone with reconciliation, Joe Lieberman would not be writing the bill as we speak. This is what happens when the progressive base believes one of Reid’s worthless promises that he can handle things.

Obama To Tell Senate Democrats Being Unprincipled Spineless Wimps Is A Good Thing

By: Jon Walker Tuesday December 15, 2009 9:45 am

Obama might convince the Senate Democratic caucus that giving up all their principles to appease Joe Lieberman is a smart move. I don’t think he will ever convince the American people to vote en masse for a party that looks like it is made up of only unprincipled spineless wimps.

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  1. and sounds good while he’s lying to you…

  2. hee.

    Feingold cha ching.

    Liberals have blamed Lieberman, some publicly and many privately, for forcing Reid to drop the public option, which for many liberals had been a crucial piece of reform.

    But most Democratic senators have been careful not to criticize the lawmaker, whose support is necessary to reach the 60 votes Democrats need to pass the bill.

    Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wis.), among the most vocal supporters of the public option, said it would be unfair to blame Lieberman for its apparent demise. Feingold said that responsibility ultimately rests with President Barack Obama and he could have insisted on a higher standard for the legislation.

    “This bill appears to be legislation that the president wanted in the first place, so I don’t think focusing it on Lieberman really hits the truth,” said Feingold. “I think they could have been higher. I certainly think a stronger bill would have been better in every respect.”

    • TMC on December 16, 2009 at 16:40

    Senate healthcare bill advances with rejection of imported drugs

    Reporting from Washington – The path to enacting the first major healthcare overhaul in decades opened wider Tuesday, as the Senate voted down a divisive proposal for direct importation of prescription drugs, and President Obama rallied Democrats behind a decision to put aside one of liberals’ most cherished ideas — creating a government alternative to private medical insurance.

    The defeat of the drug importation proposal from a bipartisan group of lawmakers, which would have made it easier to import cheaper prescription drugs from Canada and Western Europe, was a crucial victory for Obama and the pharmaceutical industry.

    The politically charged amendment had held up the Senate for a week and threatened to derail the whole healthcare bill.

    Gotta hand it to Obama, he’s an even better Republican that Reagan.

  3. As was painfully predictable all along, the final bill will not have any form of public option, nor will it include the wildly popular expansion of Medicare coverage.  Obama supporters are eager to depict the White House as nothing more than a helpless victim in all of this — the President so deeply wanted a more progressive bill but was sadly thwarted in his noble efforts by those inhumane, corrupt Congressional “centrists.”  Right.  The evidence was overwhelming from the start that the White House was not only indifferent, but opposed, to the provisions most important to progressives.  The administration is getting the bill which they, more or less, wanted from the start — the one that is a huge boon to the health insurance and pharmaceutical industry.

    Money right here:

    Yet numerous Obama defenders — such as Matt Yglesias, Ezra Klein and Steve Benen — have been insisting that there is just nothing the White House could have done and all of this shows that our political system is tragically “ungovernable.”  After all, Congress is a separate branch of government, Obama doesn’t have a vote, and 60 votes are needed to do anything.  How is it his fault if centrist Senators won’t support what he wants to do?  Apparently, this is the type of conversation we’re to believe takes place in the Oval Office:

    The President:  I really want a public option and Medicare buy-in.  What can we do to get it?

    Rahm Emanuel:  Unfortunately, nothing.  We can just sit by and hope, but you’re not in Congress any more and you don’t have a vote.  They’re a separate branch of government and we have to respect that.

    The President:  So we have no role to play in what the Democratic Congress does?

    Emanuel:  No.  Members of Congress make up their own minds and there’s just nothing we can do to influence or pressure them.

    The President:  Gosh, that’s too bad.  Let’s just keep our fingers crossed and see what happens then.

    You have been played sucka!  

    • TMC on December 16, 2009 at 16:59

    We liberals made him do it. h/t Atrios

     Spiteful Joe

    I don’t think it is betraying any confidences to divulge that I received an email from Atrios about ten days ago or so where he suggested that we really ought not to show any enthusiasm for the Medicare Buy-In plan lest Joe Lieberman decide that he’s against it. I laughed at the idea because it had a ring of truth to it. Turns out, Atrios was right on the money.

       

    And [Lieberman] said he was particularly troubled by the overly enthusiastic reaction to the proposal by some liberals, including Representative Anthony Weiner, Democrat of New York, who champions a fully government-run health care system.

       “Congressman Weiner made a comment that Medicare-buy in is better than a public option, it’s the beginning of a road to single-payer,” Mr. Lieberman said. “Jacob Hacker, who’s a Yale professor who is actually the man who created the public option, said, ‘This is a dream. This is better than a public option. This is a giant step.'”

    It turns out that Lieberman just made up the part about Professor Hacker, but the Weiner part of it is accurate enough. Essentially, Lieberman heard that Dean and Weiner and a lot of the blogosphere were happy about a Medicare Buy-In proposal, which was something he himself has supported, and that was enough for him to spike the idea. Maybe we should find out how Lieberman likes to get to work and just go park our cars in the middle of those streets each morning. You know, just because we can.

    Mind you, it’s not that I like booman but I do think he has good idea about the traffic jam.

    • banger on December 16, 2009 at 17:33

    I’ve stated everywhere I can on this subject. No HCR is possible if the relevant data is not before us and at the center of the debate.

    Forget Congress it is the MSM that needs lobbying. If the average person found out the relevant facts and why our costs are so high compared to every other developed country we would have universal coverage in three months.

    • banger on December 16, 2009 at 17:50
    • dkmich on December 17, 2009 at 00:56
  4. involvement of the young people who worked so hard for him

    and would have been ready made to lead a new progressive movement. Ironically, it would have been much better for McCain to have won, because the movement in opposition would have grown and coalesced into a significant force in American politics.

    Obama has shattered the “hope” he used to get elected.

    It’s as if he killed two birds with one stone: Strenghtened the Corporate Hold on America, and crippled a growing liberal/progressive movement. The latter is something McCain could never have done. How f****d up is that??????????????????

    • B2Z on December 18, 2009 at 03:57

    If, for a moment, you take your “commune” hats off and think for yourself, you will see Obama for what he is:  a shallow, tankless, apparatchik, afraid to stand for anything unless it it a political “win.”  If he could prostitute Michelle and earn 20 points from independents, she would be in crystal-clear heels on “K” Street by midnight.

    The man is devoid of character.  

    Those of you who voted for him got boned.

    I actually agree with Chappaquidick Teddy and the other Dem’s – “…stand for something. STAND and fight for Health Care.  STAND AND FIGHT!” [ Congressional Record, 12 June 2009 ].

    Obama will not stand and fight because he is the mouthpeice for the K Street whores, the Banking industry, and anyone else who will give him 20 points in the polls.

    LEAVE the Dem’s and Repub’s and join the Libertarian Party.

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