Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Yes, Virginia, There Is Health Care Reform, or, What Would Jesus Repeal?

Health insurance reform has passed Congress and been signed into law by President Obama, ushering in the most sweeping overhaul of health care in over a generation. So what happens now? I think it is instructive to look at two questions. First, Republicans are loudly clamoring for repeal. Can it happen? Second, what parts of this law are so egregiously un-American and unconstitutional that they would merit immediate repeal lest the Nation fall by sundown?

Republicans are already banging the drum to repeal the new health insurance reform law. Reps. Steve King (R-IA) and Michele Bachmann (R-MN) have introduced one-page bills to repeal the entire Act. Six senators and forty-six representatives have already signed the Club for Growth’s repeal pledge, along with almost 200 congressional candidates. Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney is even calling for repeal – an interesting pivot from signing a very similar law when governor of Massachusetts. But is this real, or just bluster?

Firstly, it will not happen before 2011 in this Congress, because if you don’t have the votes to stop something from becoming law, then you don’t have the votes to repeal it. Secondly, after such a battle to pass the law, any partial or full repeal would be vetoed by President Obama, and Republicans and lack the votes to override a veto. Gaining enough votes in Congress to override a veto before the end of Obama’s first term would require Republicans to pick up 25 Democratic seats in the Senate plus Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-CT), or 26 seats without him. As there are only 16 Democrats up for re-election in the Senate in 2011, this is an impossible feat. Further, Republicans would have to win over at least 113 seats in the House in 2011, a number not approached since the Republicans lost 100 seats in the 1932 election at the end of the disastrous Hoover administration.

But now that it is clear why repeal won’t happen, let us humor Republicans for the moment and imagine that it could. Just what parts of this bill are so socialist, Marxist, communist, or any other -ist that they pose a threat to freedom, democracy, apple pie, baseball, and the future of America?

  • Alabama’s PACT (Pre-pay a Child’s Tuition) college funding program is on the verge of collapse. The jobless rate for college-age veterans is over 21%, and for other college-age adults is 16.6%. Many young adults are still living at home or depending on their families as they try to pay for college or find a job. Does Rep. Parker Griffith (R-AL 05) want to repeal the right to keep their children on their family insurance until they turn 26 for the thousands of middle class families in his district – many of whom rely on the Defense Department for their livelihoods?
  • Nearly 15% of the residents of northwestern North Carolina are “lacking the resources to meet the basic needs for healthy living; having insufficient income to provide the food, shelter and clothing needed to preserve health.” Many of them rely on the help of six community health care centers that care for the poor and medically underserved. Does Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-NC 05) want to repeal the nearly $8 million in federal assistance for community health centers?
  • More than one-fifth of the residents of Florida’s 16th district are Medicare beneficiaries. Currently, these 171,000 seniors and other Medicare-eligible residents are responsible for $4,550 in true out-of-pocket prescription drug expenses before catastrophic coverage kicks in. Does Rep. Thomas Rooney (R-FL 16) want to repeal the elimination of the Medicare Part D doughnut hole over the next decade, costing the seniors of his district millions of dollars out of pocket, and forcing them to continue to decide between medicine, food, and other necessities?
  • Millions of Americans are uninsured and have pre-existing conditions like cancer and heart disease, including 16,000 residents of northwest Texas. For-profit insurance giants will not provide coverage to these citizens because there isn’t any money to be made in caring for them. As a result, some of these uninsured adults and children cannot get the care they need, and they die. Does Rep. Randy “Baby Killer” Neugebauer (R-TX 19) want to repeal guaranteed coverage for individuals with pre-existing conditions, or does he want private for-profit insurers to continue to have the right to deny care, allowing uninsured individuals, including babies, to die?
  • More than half a million residents of Minnesota’s 6th district are insured through their employers or have purchased their own insurance. While this district has one of the highest rates of insurance in the country, its citizens are still subject to lifetime coverage limits, rescissions, rejections for pre-existing conditions, and wasteful private insurer spending. Does Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN 6) want to repeal prohibitions on annual and lifetime coverage limits, and prohibitions on rescissions when policy holders get sick and need their insurance the most, and prohibitions on denials for pre-existing conditions, and limits on company administrative spending and profits?
  • Hundreds of thousands of families face financial ruin every year, having to file for bankruptcy because of uncovered health care costs. Part of this is due to policies of for-profit insurers, raising premiums by a third or more annually, and dropping policyholders when they get sick. Around 1,700 of these bankruptcies were in Nevada’s 2nd district, comprising most of the state outside of Clark County. Does Rep. Dean Heller (R-NV 2) want to repeal caps on annual out of pocket costs for those insured in exchanges or through private business, and bans on annual and lifetime limits?
  • New deficit hawks who have suddenly seen the light now that Iraq is occupied and George Bush is out of office – Republicans like Texas’ Jeb Hensarling (R-TX 5) – are beside themselves with glee at the political points to be scored from Obama’s deficit spending. They never mind the fact that the spending is necessitated by the circumstances of the country created by eight years under Bush. So if he really cares about the deficit, does Rep. Hensarling want to repeal health insurance reform that helps millions, improves lives, keeps families together and healthy, while reducing the deficit by $130 billion in the next ten years, and by over a trillion dollars in the next twenty years (depending on GDP growth)?

So which of these will it be?