FireDogLake: “I hope [the Democrats] enjoy their Pyrrhic victory because they just burned the base.”

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

Pyrrhic : achieved at excessive cost <a Pyrrhic victory>; also : costly to the point of negating or outweighing expected benefits

So all I really wanted for Christmas was a Karl Rove of our own who would make all of our Obama wishes come true, even if he had to kick Evan Bayh’s mushy skull in to accomplish them. Someone who, I had hoped, would make Joe Lieberman’s life something akin to a hemorrhoidectomy gone horribly terribly wrong.

Such is not the case:

The White House wants Reid to hand Joe Lieberman the farm.

An aide briefed on discussions with the White House says that there would be no story if Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel hadn’t interceded. The aide confirmed an account, reported by Huffington Post, that Emanuel visited Reid personally, telling him to cut a deal with Lieberman.

Then the aide provided more detail.

Emanuel didn’t just leave it to Reid to find a solution. Emanuel specifically suggested Reid give Lieberman the concessions he seeks on issues like the Medicare buy-in and triggers.

“It was all about ‘do what you’ve got to do to get it done. Drop whatever you’ve got to drop to get it done,” the aide said. All of Emanuel’s prescriptions, the source said, were aimed at appeasing Lieberman–not twisting his arm.

If Rahm Emanuel is all he was supposed to be, we can safely assume that the Obama White House either never gave a shit about health care reform, or they managed health care reform so horrifically and incompetently that they are now willing to settle for a “win”, no matter how meager.

I hope they enjoy their Pyrrhic victory because they just burned the base.

Joan Walsh: Is It Time to Abandon the Public Option?

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

[Answer: Yes! -Ed.]

Influential liberals have begun arguing a funny kind of liberal Catch-22: The health insurance “public option” is already so diluted, it’s no longer worth fighting for. Got it? Because liberal Dems got played by conservative Dems, they should forfeit the entire game.

Crazy as it sounds, it might also be true.

American Prospect co-editor (and Clinton administration health policy advisor) Paul Starr kicked off this line of reasoning in the New York Times Nov. 28. “Liberals should be prepared to give up what is now a mere symbol for changes in the bill that would deliver affordable insurance more effectively and quickly to the millions of Americans who desperately need it,” Starr wrote. Starr’s preferred changes included moving up the bill’s start date from 2014 to asap — which is practically and politically smart — and establishing federal “regulatory authority to prevent insurers from engaging in abusive practices and subverting the new rules” that prevent discrimination based on age and preexisting conditions. Those were great ideas but they should have come along with a public option, not instead of one.

But now that a so-called Gang of 10 — five liberal Senate Dems, five conservative Senate Dems — has begun meeting to seek a public option compromise, the argument for substance over (public option) symbol is getting real traction. Two “compromise” proposals have been floated: Letting Americans as young as 55 buy into Medicare, and ditching the public option for a proposal to let individuals use their own money, or federal subsidies, to buy into the federal workers’ plans administered by the Office of Personnel Management — the same plans offered to Congress and the president.

Letting older but still Medicare-ineligible people buy into the popular public plan for seniors seems like a clear win. (Although Democrats seem to know how to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory, so without details, it’s hard to say that conclusively..) People aged 54 to 65 are the hardest hit by our current system — they’re most likely to be denied care or dropped by insurance carriers for health troubles, all while also being hit hard by layoffs. Plus, adding a big chunk of “younger” folks to Medicare seems like a way to stabilize Medicare as well as — assuming the experiment is successful — gradually make a case for “Medicare for all.” [more...]

Michael Moore’s Action Plan: 15 Things Every American Can Do RIGHT NOW

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

Friends,

It’s the #1 question I’m constantly asked after people see my movie: “OK — so NOW what can I DO?!”

You want something to do? Well, you’ve come to the right place! ‘Cause I got 15 things you and I can do right now to fight back and try to fix this very broken system.

Here they are:

AfterDowningStreet: Obama Begins To Target Entitlements

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

Meeting with the Washington Post’s editorial staff on January 16, President-elect Obama pledged to reform entitlements  saying the process would begin straightaway by convening a “fiscal responsibility summit” before delivering his first budget to Congress.

“What we have done is kicked this can down the road. We are now at the end of the road and are not in a position to kick it any further,” he said. “We have to signal seriousness in this by making sure some of the hard decisions are made under my watch, not someone else’s.”

Key, he said, is reigning in entitlement costs by making “very difficult choices and….sacrifice(s)….Social Security, we can solve. The big problem is Medicare (and, of course, Medicaid covering 60 million in 2005), which (are) unsustainable.”

Blue Dog Public Option Opponent Mike Ross Suggests Offering Medicare to All Uninsured

Friday, October 16th, 2009

“I — speaking only on behalf of myself — suggested one possible idea could be that instead of creating an entirely new government bureaucracy to administer a public option, Medicare could be offered as a choice to compete alongside private insurers for those Americans eligible to enter the national health insurance exchange, but at a reimbursement rate much greater than current Medicare rates,” Ross said in a statement given to the Hill. He’s reportedly been working behind the scenes, suggesting that idea in meetings with his fellow House Democrats this week.

(Isn’t that single-payer health care? – Ed.)

Read entire article here…