A funny thing happened on the way to reform
In medicine, the Golden Hour is the short window of time in which to save a patient or, at least, to apply treatment for the best possible outcome. The Golden Hour of health care reform is upon us. What you and I do now--within the next two weeks--will either jumpstart meaningful reform this year or see it die on the operating table.
It took a recent visit to my own Missouri senator, Claire McCaskill, to convince me that reform is already on life support. When I and other constituents met with her during the regular Thursday morning "Coffee with Claire" meeting in her Senate office, McCaskill made clear she was committed to only one position on health care reform: lowering public expectations.
I returned Friday to St. Louis from a grassroots lobbying and rally trip to Washington, D.C. I had tagged along with a group of others traveling by bus (one from the 9th circle of hell, but that's another story).
Chomping at the bit for McCaskill to finish her opening pitch, I led the questioning by asking if she would vote for final health care legislation even if it did not include a government-run public option. I did not take notes, so I will paraphrase her answer. She said there were many proposals out there and that the Finance Committee was working on a bipartisan compromise that held promise--referring to Sen. Max Baucus's attempt to craft a bill bereft of a government-run public option.
I have to call her lily-livered response an injury to the 75 percent of Americans polled who want, at bare minimum, a real public option.
Next, I asked McCaskill about health coverage for all Americans. She said that would be an expensive proposition, citing a "$3 trillion" price tag that, if I'm not wrong, is twice what either the CBO or OMB scored as the likely cost of any current proposal. She said there was hope that Congress could "make progress" by extending coverage to "some" of the uninsured.
McCaskill's weak-kneed response added insult to injury. And then, in an unprovoked and utterly spineless moment of honesty, she pulled the sheet over the corpse of reform: It might not even be possible to pass a bill this year. "We might need to wait a few more years" for a better Congress, she said.
Representatives of SEIU and others puzzled over the import of McCaskill's apparent abandonment of principle. Did she really just say what we heard her say? they asked each other.
Yes, she had. A vote that many observers were counting as a shoe-in had just made the Senate passage of health care reform more problematic.
I am curious to know how many insurance industry dollars McCaskill has received for her campaign coffers. But the question I want most to ask her is this: "Who do you think your replacement will be in 2010?"
It took a recent visit to my own Missouri senator, Claire McCaskill, to convince me that reform is already on life support. When I and other constituents met with her during the regular Thursday morning "Coffee with Claire" meeting in her Senate office, McCaskill made clear she was committed to only one position on health care reform: lowering public expectations.
I returned Friday to St. Louis from a grassroots lobbying and rally trip to Washington, D.C. I had tagged along with a group of others traveling by bus (one from the 9th circle of hell, but that's another story).
Chomping at the bit for McCaskill to finish her opening pitch, I led the questioning by asking if she would vote for final health care legislation even if it did not include a government-run public option. I did not take notes, so I will paraphrase her answer. She said there were many proposals out there and that the Finance Committee was working on a bipartisan compromise that held promise--referring to Sen. Max Baucus's attempt to craft a bill bereft of a government-run public option.
I have to call her lily-livered response an injury to the 75 percent of Americans polled who want, at bare minimum, a real public option.
Next, I asked McCaskill about health coverage for all Americans. She said that would be an expensive proposition, citing a "$3 trillion" price tag that, if I'm not wrong, is twice what either the CBO or OMB scored as the likely cost of any current proposal. She said there was hope that Congress could "make progress" by extending coverage to "some" of the uninsured.
McCaskill's weak-kneed response added insult to injury. And then, in an unprovoked and utterly spineless moment of honesty, she pulled the sheet over the corpse of reform: It might not even be possible to pass a bill this year. "We might need to wait a few more years" for a better Congress, she said.
Representatives of SEIU and others puzzled over the import of McCaskill's apparent abandonment of principle. Did she really just say what we heard her say? they asked each other.
Yes, she had. A vote that many observers were counting as a shoe-in had just made the Senate passage of health care reform more problematic.
I am curious to know how many insurance industry dollars McCaskill has received for her campaign coffers. But the question I want most to ask her is this: "Who do you think your replacement will be in 2010?"
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P.S. McCaskill also thinks the House climate bill is too ambitious and needs to be retooled to accommodate some special interests doing business in Missouri.
Again, another story. But I am becoming increasingly unhappy with Sen. McCaskill.
June 29, 2009 7:16 PM | Reply | Permalink
Two things:
1. She is also lobbying for more F-18's (I think that's the right fighter) even though the Pentagon doesn't want them because they are built by Boeing.
2. Her husband grew very rich running nursing homes that often clean up on health insurance and medicare. He's a big Republican and they have never forgiven him for helping to bankroll her statewide ambitions. So don't expect her to be leading the way on healthcare reform. After all, she's got all the insurance she needs.
June 30, 2009 12:26 AM | Reply | Permalink
F-22'S
June 30, 2009 9:55 AM | Reply | Permalink
On her website she says it is the F/A 18.
June 30, 2009 3:06 PM | Reply | Permalink
Sorry,I just assumed f22's, they were the ones Gates didn't want.
June 30, 2009 3:11 PM | Reply | Permalink
When is up for reelection in 2010? If so, any chance she'll have a primary chanllenger?
June 30, 2009 2:37 PM | Reply | Permalink
Oh I am pretty sure the link you need is at TPMGary's as far as contributions go.
Keep up the good work. Cable TV anyway, is giving me the distinct impression that this pressure is working...
June 29, 2009 7:19 PM | Reply | Permalink
"She said there was hope that Congress could "make progress" by extending coverage to "some" of the uninsured."
Hell is too fine a place for them. Did the Senator tell you who have been designated the triaged Americans? Could the Blue Dogs please tell us which Americans they have designated to die without healthcare?
It's one thing to have a private system with the old conservative idea of let us all be responsible for ourselves. But now, Democrats are going to write a big, fat, health REFORM bill and in doing so they take on responsibility whether they want it or not (and believe me they do not!). They will now be accountable. They will have REFORMED our healthcare. They will have REFORMED our healthcare and they will have done so by deliberately excluding tens of millions of Americans from their REFORM. So I figure that since they are now accountable they can just be accountable for all the deaths of the people who DIE WITHOUT HEATHCARE under the REFORMED system of EXCLUDING TENS OF MILLIONS OF AMERICANS FROM HEALTHCARE.
Please tell me what is the point of this farce? They want to tax our health benefits and still leave tens of millions of Americans without healthcare?
I hope the Republicans run with this and laugh their heads off through the next election cycles because taxing health benefits without a guarantee that you might ever receive the care is not just absurd it is mad.
June 29, 2009 8:05 PM | Reply | Permalink
I'm very, very disappointed, Ripper. I thought McCaskill was one of the good guys...who the hell are we supposed to vote for if the dems are just as rotten as the repubs?
June 29, 2009 9:18 PM | Reply | Permalink
Vote for new examples of both in the primaries, depending on where you live. The progressive grassroots must become party agnostic and show up for every single election, dragging two or three people who never vote in primaries or at all.
June 30, 2009 8:40 AM | Reply | Permalink
Stilli, I agree with Jason. We need to throw out as many incumbents as possible in 2010. Especially, incumbent Senators. That may not change the game only the names of the players, but I can't think of a better way to get their attention.
June 30, 2009 9:41 AM | Reply | Permalink
Exactly. As long as the "voters" are an unleashed and vague threat, these clowns will continue to do whatever the hell they want. At a certain point, We The People are responsible for letting them get away with this shit.
June 30, 2009 12:34 PM | Reply | Permalink
It's incredibly frustrating...somehow I thought that given the chance the dems would clean house....turns out they are as bigga weenies as the repubs. So much for switching parties...
June 30, 2009 8:48 PM | Reply | Permalink
That's why I think we need all progressives to go regional. Vote in every primary, bring other people with you, and vote republican if you have to in order to off-set incumbent power. Or vote democratic if that is the power center where you live. As long as "they" can keep dividing us into quarreling knots of idiots locked into meaningless party identity, we'll never change this system we've allow to come into being.
July 1, 2009 6:07 AM | Reply | Permalink
Excuse me? How big a majority do the D's need? A better Congress? What a joke she is. She expects people to buy this crap? Seriously?
June 29, 2009 9:22 PM | Reply | Permalink
At least she's helped us by identifying herself as one of the ones we need to replace.
June 29, 2009 10:03 PM | Reply | Permalink
Yep bluebell, they are making it easier in that regard. Maybe someone should start compiling a list...so far the ones I know of for sure are McCaskill, Hagen and Feinstein. Did I miss anyone?
June 29, 2009 10:32 PM | Reply | Permalink
Here's a place to start. Top 20 recipients of healthcare sector campaign funds: McCain, Kerry, Specter, Baucus, Rangel, McConnel, Harken, Hatch, Pallone, Barton, Kennedy, Brown, Hoyer, Lieberman, Grassley, Burr, Alexander, Blunt, Kyl. Cross reference the pdf of donations against the voting record if a public option ever makes it to the floor of house or senate.
June 29, 2009 11:28 PM | Reply | Permalink
Thanks for the link Miguel...the usual list of suspects.
June 29, 2009 11:41 PM | Reply | Permalink
McCaskill said the Dems need 60 votes in the Senate. I've been hearing 51. Anyone want to flesh this out some more?
June 29, 2009 11:29 PM | Reply | Permalink
She is taking the 'it has to be bi-partisan if we are going to pass this' dodge Ripper. The 60 votes is a filibuster proof majority and indicates that there was republican support and not being able to get to that number, with that thinking in mind, can be used as an excuse why it wasn't passed. Actually 50 is the magic number seeing a democrat, Vice President Biden, would be the tie breaking vote in that case. But the second number would be enough to pass it if the procedural rules the Senate has about the way they handle debate and voting on proposed legislation were changed. Which happens on a regular basis.
June 29, 2009 11:39 PM | Reply | Permalink
The whole 60 vote thing is a red herring. They just drag that out to make people think they can't pass bills due to Republican opposition when the truth is it is just an excuse because the Democrats themselves are not actually for the positions they campaigned on. Prime example being health care for all.
June 30, 2009 12:28 AM | Reply | Permalink
One of Claire Mcaskill's top contributors is the American hospital association--the lobby for hospitals.
"We might need to wait for a better congress" essentially means we need to wait for better senators.
How many people without health insurance will die waiting for better senators?
While waiting for better senators, how many people with health insurance will lose it because they've been diagnosed with 1 of over 1400 conditions that trigger rescission?
If the U.S., one of the richest nations in the world can't afford to give its citizens what every other country in the industrialized world can give its citizens, maybe it's time to cut back on the 700 or so military bases we have scattered around the planet.
June 30, 2009 12:15 AM | Reply | Permalink
This is seriously starting to depress me. I am appalled and ashamed to think our Congress has come to this. It really is time to hit the streets.
Thanks, Ripper for doing this -- first, for going, and also for writing about it. I feel terrible.
June 30, 2009 1:19 PM | Reply | Permalink
They've been there for decades. We are just starting to understand the systemic nature of the rot.
June 30, 2009 1:38 PM | Reply | Permalink
Jason, I think you're right about that.
June 30, 2009 3:42 PM | Reply | Permalink
Thanks for the account of this meeting. I just called her office and asked the question I have asked three times before: Does McCaskill support the public option. Today, I finally got an answer, an unequivocal yes. I asked the staffer if she had said McCaskill said we might not get a bill this year, and he said he didn't know if she'd said that. I told him I was happy to hear her position on the public option but that we absolutely need to get a bill passed this year.
Take it for what it's worth.
June 30, 2009 3:09 PM | Reply | Permalink
Well, part of the grand con game they are trying to orchestrate here is a bait and switch on the public option and everything else in the bill. They were supposedly aiming for universal coverage. They're backing off that. People are going to assume that Democrats are going to deliver that but they won't. Obama was against taxing health benefits. They're backing off that. Wait till people figure out they want to tax their health benefits making employers more likely to stop offering them and that they still have no guarantee of healthcare. They will have an obligation to buy a policy they cannot afford and maybe they'll get some pretense of a public option.
The problem here is that they don't want to fund it. They need the general revenue for all the wars they want to fight and all the bailouts for billionaires. Those don't have to have a specific revenue source. Hell no we can fight worthless wars till hell freezes over and they are all totally free. And we can bailout every financial crook in the country and that is totally free. But sick kids? Heck, we can't have those kids stealing money from the general fund, we have to find a revenue neutral source for them.
June 30, 2009 5:55 PM | Reply | Permalink
"The problem here is that they don't want to fund it."
Maybe they don't want to. Maybe they want to but can't because the last decade of leadership completely bankrupted the U.S. government in more ways than you and I will ever know.
I don't know what choice Obama was really given in terms of continuing to bail out Wall Street. Just how deep did U.S. obligations to financial institutions around the world go?
Would it have been worse if we didn't bail out the automobile industry?
And the wars? They just keep expanding. Always more troops, more weapons, more private contractors, more funding of certain unnamed militias around the world. Billions to Pakistan, Afghanistan, Israel, Iraq, you name it. My opinion is that we don't have to be in the middle east at all.
At least some money is going toward making America a viable competitor in the electric car industry. Ford, Nissan and Tesla will be getting a total of about $8 billion in loans to help fund the development of advanced technology fuel-efficient vehicles. Ford will get $5.9 billion of those funds, while Nissan will get $1.6 billion and Tesla will get $465 million.
I think single payer would save more than it costs. It's not just spending. It's investing in the long term future of our country.
But private industry has such a stranglehold on our democracy, it might take a long time to wiggle free.
I'd like it to happen tomorrow.
The best we can do is put pressure on members of the congress to do the right thing--if they don't, elect those that will.
June 30, 2009 7:51 PM | Reply | Permalink
Don't bet on it, Thomas. I got McCaskill's view straight from her own mouth. And it depends on the meanings of "support" and of "public option."
June 30, 2009 6:50 PM | Reply | Permalink
Who in 2010? I'll drink, ummmm... charge up my maxed-out credit card to that. Always an extra $50 to defeat a coward.
July 1, 2009 7:37 PM | Reply | Permalink