Posts Tagged ‘individual mandate’

The U.S. Supreme Court Has Spoken. Now You Can Speak Up at the Summer Conference, July 7-8

June 28th, 2012

Organizing for Healthcare Justice in California, UCLA Westwood Campus

Our great friend and senior health policy mentor at Physicians for a National Health Program (pnhp.org), Dr. Don McCanne, said it best this morning after the Supreme Court ruling on the Affordable Care Act. We quote here the final parenthetical paragraph from today’s “Quote of the Day” email which Don published moments after the announcement:

(Yes, the Supreme Court ruled that the individual mandate survives as a tax, and that Medicaid is limited but not invalidated. But these decisions have been only a diversion, and thus are included here only as a parenthetical remark. The decisions were limited to an Act that merely tweaks the status quo, when what we need is a new act that rejects the status quo. The Supreme Court does not have the authority to bring us that act. Above all, we must guard against celebrating the fact that the Affordable Care Act was upheld, if that should mean that we would walk away from the reform that we desperately need.)

As we’ve said for years, true health care reform will only come “one state at a time”. You can help us chart the way for single payer success in California. One way is to register and join fellow California OneCare supporters and other coalition advocates at this 3rd Annual Conference at UCLA on July 7 and 8.

Please see the general topics below and click the links to get more information about this important event and to register conveniently on line. Cost is essentially what you can afford to pay.

Location: UCLA Ackerman Union – Grand Ballroom
•    REGISTRATION INFORMATION HERE
•    Download the PDF flyer
•    Saturday, July 7th @ 9am – 4pm
 Learn about the Campaign for a Healthy California and the Healthcare Justice Movement in California • Network with other advocates working to guarantee healthcare for all Californians • Develop skills through interactive workshops: -­‐ Labor & Medicare for All -­‐ Building a Coalition of Diverse Communities -­‐ Answering FAQs
•    Sunday, July 8th @ 9:30am – 4pm
 Gain necessary skills to build a successful movement in California • Strategize with other healthcare advocates from throughout California • Receive in-­‐depth training in key areas of organizing: -­‐ Talking to the Media -­‐ Legislative Advocacy -­‐ Organization & Outreach -­‐ Delivering Your Pitch

I hope to see you at the Conference!

Sincerely,

Andrew McGuire, Executive Director, California OneCare Campaign

THE CAMPAIGN FOR A HEALTHY CALIFORNIA Coalition Members: California Alliance for Retired Americans/ California Health Professional Student Alliance / California Nurses Association / The Progressive Caucus of California/Health Care For All – California/ Communication Workers of America-District 9 / Physicians for a National Health Program – California / California OneCare / Single Payer Now / Progressive Democrats of America / League of Women Voters of California / Green Party of California / Democracy For America

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Could Adverse SCOTUS Ruling on Obamacare Provide Opening for a Public Option?

June 19th, 2012

As Judgment Day for the Affordable Care Act draws closer – a ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court is expected in the next couple of weeks – legal observers, health experts and pundits are trying to predict what the fallout could be if the law is eviscerated or overturned. Undoing the ACA may not be that simple. Would the horrible consequences of suddenly snatching health care away from millions of Americans be enough to force Congress to open up Medicare to people under 65? Economist and former Clinton labor secretary Robert Reich thinks so.

Reich believes that if the individual mandate is struck down, health insurance companies, arguing that they’ll go bankrupt if they are forced to continue covering people with preexisting conditions, will clamor to get the requirement dropped. The problem for the insurance companies is that the preexisting condition requirement is one of the most popular parts of the ACA and Congress may be hesitant to get rid of it.

This opens the way to a political bargain. Insurers might be let off the hook, for example, only if they support allowing every American, including those with pre-existing conditions, to choose Medicare, or something very much like Medicare. In effect, what was known during the debate over the bill as the “public option.”

I hope Reich is correct, but it may be wishful thinking on his part. Right now, President Obama and the Democrats are still pinning their hopes on a positive ruling from SCOTUS and they don’t seem to be looking at a Plan B – at least, not publicly. And the Republicans seem content to do little or nothing. Some health insurers are even saying that they will voluntarily uphold some of the more popular provisions of the ACA (I don’t believe that for a second). The “sickcare” industry would rather maintain the status quo – and their ill-gotten profits – as long as possible than to see lawmakers open up Medicare. The insurers know that once Medicare is available to more people, the program will be in even more demand, hastening the health insurance industry’s demise. In the meantime, what will the reaction be from the public? Resignation and despair? Or will the sudden disappearance of what little healthcare safety net the ACA provides galvanize the public into demanding Medicare for all? I want to see the latter happen.

Some believe that if SCOTUS deals a death blow to the ACA, that that will spell the end of health reform. This is nonsense. Ignoring the healthcare crisis in this country won’t make it go away. It will get progressively worse. More American workers will see their health coverage dropped. Fewer employers will offer health coverage. Millions more Americans will go bankrupt. Even with the ACA in place, out-of-pocket medical costs continue to explode. Lawmakers can keep their heads in the sand for only so long. As the ranks of the uninsured and bankrupt expand to an ever larger proportion of the population, public outrage will grow. At that point, the din will be impossible to ignore.

Sylvia@CaliforniaOneCare.org

Could Repeal of the Affordable Care Act Propel America Toward Single Payer?

March 20th, 2012

On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court will begin hearing oral arguments over the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act. Many believe the outcome will be a watershed moment for health reform, and could even affect the November presidential race. Attorneys general from 26 states with Republican-controlled legislatures are suing the federal government to repeal the ACA. At issue is the individual mandate, the requirement that all Americans purchase private health insurance if they aren’t covered through an employer or eligible for Medicare or Medicaid. The opposing states argue that the mandate is an unconstitutional expansion of Congress’ power to regulate the economy. The Obama administration counters that the mandate is necessary to bring everyone into the system so as to prevent taxpayers from being burdened with the hospital costs of those who don’t have insurance. The mandate doesn’t go into effect until 2014, when the state health insurance exchanges are scheduled to start.

However, some single payer advocates, are siding with the ACA’s Republican opponents, arguing that the public shouldn’t be forced to buy private health insurance. Unlike GOP critics who want the ACA replaced with either vouchers or health savings accounts, single payer advocates instead want Medicare immediately expanded to all Americans. Fifty doctors and two non-profit groups – Single Payer Action and It’s Our Economy – have filed a friend-of-the-court brief in favor of striking down the individual mandate.

“It is not necessary to force Americans to buy private health insurance to achieve universal coverage,” said Russell Mokhiber of Single Payer Action. “There is a proven alternative that Congress didn’t seriously consider, and that alternative is a single payer national health insurance system.”

The national arm of the Green Party has also called for the justices to strike down the individual mandate.

“America needs real universal health care, not a direct public subsidy in the form of a health insurance mandate to sustain the private insurance industry,” said Barry Hermanson, Green candidate for Congress in California’s 12th District (San Francisco) (http://www.barryhermanson.org). “President Obama and Democrats in Congress could have introduced a Medicare For All bill, which would cover every American and drastically reduce medical costs by removing insurance companies from control over our health care. Instead they acted in the interests of insurance and other corporate lobbies. Even with the mandate, the ACA leaves 23 million Americans without coverage and many millions more with inadequate health care.”

If the Supreme Court overturns the individual mandate, thus crippling a key provision of the ACA, or strikes down the law entirely, could we see a renewed demand from the public to expand Medicare? Would the United States be forced to adopt single payer sooner rather than later? Single payer advocates who oppose the ACA certainly hope so. It’s possible that the public will give national health insurance another look, especially since Republican alternatives like vouchers and health savings accounts don’t lead to universal coverage and don’t control costs. The cost of health care will continue to spiral out of control. Thousands of people will continue to die prematurely. Thousands more will continue to go bankrupt. This much is clear: expanding Medicare to all doesn’t involve a mandate and threat of a fine. Membership is automatic. Should the ACA be repealed, the case for national health insurance will be stronger than ever and lawmakers will have to listen.

Sylvia@californiaonecare.org

John Nichols on replacing the mandate with Medicare for All

September 7th, 2011

Can We Have Health Reform Without an Individual Mandate? Yes, It’s Called ‘Medicare for All’

By John Nichols
The Nation, August 13, 2011

The individual mandate was always a bad idea. Instead of recognizing that healthcare is a right, the members of Congress and the Obama administration who cobbled together the healthcare reform plan created a mandate that maintains the abuses and the expenses of for-profit insurance companies — and actually rewards those insurance companies with a guarantee of federal money.

Those who think that the for-profit (or even not-for-profit) insurance industry has to control any healthcare reform initiative have every right to be upset with the 11th Circuit’s ruling — which almost certainly will send the case of the Obama healthcare plan to the US Supreme Court.
But those of us who have no desire to perpetuate the insurance industry can and should recognize that the proper — and entirely constitutional — reform is an expansion of Medicare to cover all Americans.

While Medicare is exceptionally popular, polling shows that the individual mandate is not — according to recent surveys, roughly 60 percent of Americans oppose it.

It also passes constitutional muster.

As former Labor Secretary Robert Reich notes: “[No] federal judge has struck down Social Security or Medicare as being an unconstitutional requirement that Americans buy something. Social Security and Medicare aren’t broccoli or asparagus. They’re as American as hot dogs and apple pie.”

“So if the individual mandate to buy private health insurance gets struck down by the Supreme Court or killed off by Congress,” says Reich, “I’d recommend President Obama immediately propose what he should have proposed in the beginning — universal health care based on Medicare for all, financed by payroll taxes.”

The insurance companies would, of course, scream.

But let them complain.

Americans don’t need mandates. They need healthcare.

And they have every right to ask, as activists with Physicians for a National Health Program have, that Medicare be expanded to cover all Americans — affordably, efficiently, capably and constitutionally.

http://www.thenation.com/blog/162765/can-we-have-health-reform-without-individual-mandate-yes-its-called-medicare-all

Comment:

By Don McCanne, MD

Americans overwhelmingly support Medicare, yet an unequivocal majority oppose a government requirement to purchase private health insurance. Why should we have to wait until we’re 65 to have Medicare, while in the interim being required to buy something we don’t want? Let the Supreme Court rule that the individual mandate is unconstitutional, and then maybe we can convince a newly elected Congress to pass the reform that we really need.

We are pleased that Washington correspondent John Nichols of The Nation has joined with Physicians for a National Health Program and the growing chorus of other enlightened voices who call for a vastly superior model of reform that actually would pass constitutional muster – an improved Medicare, expanded to include everyone.