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Progressive Dems Push for House Vote on Single-Payer Health Care
The Congressional Progressive Caucus is pressing Democratic leaders to allow a vote on the House floor on a measure that would allow individual states to adopt a single-payer health care system.
"This could end up being one of the most important developments to come out of the bill," Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio), the sponsor of the amendment, told the Huffington Post Monday night.
A vote on the bill isn't guaranteed, but progressive Democrats are working behind the scenes to make sure the House either pushes it through or puts representatives on record against it.
"If it doesn't stay in the bill, I think it's something that you can count on a lot of us asking that we have a stand-alone vote on," said Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D-Calif.), co-chair of the progressive caucus.
"Progressives have already given up what we really want. We want the single payer and by-golly we deserve to vote on it for our states," she said. Kucinich's single-payer option measure recently passed the full Education and Labor Committee.
The impetus for the bill stems from the fact that the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) could allow insurance companies or other stakeholders to sue a state that enacted single-payer health care. Kucinich's measure would give states the freedom to enact a single-payer program without the threat of legal action.
Any chance that the Republican Party, which traditionally backs states' rights, could sympathize with the Kucinich amendment?
"On our side you mean?" asked Rep. Mike Pence (R-Ind.), a leading conservative voice. "No."
States' rights?
"No," said Pence. The vote would pit two competing principles against each other - states' rights and opposition to public health care. The latter wins.
"We believe that the cure for what ails health care in America is more competition, not putting government at the state or national level on the pathway to socialized medicine," he said.
Kucinich said he is "cautiously optimistic." He added that the measure is designed as a backup plan in case health care reform passes but fails in its objective of providing universal access to affordable care.
"There's been a very strong response to this once it passed the Education and Labor Committee," he said. "I would compare it to a lifeboat that saves health care if this plan somehow doesn't work and saves the right of a state to be able to protect the health care of its own residents."
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19 Comments so far
Show AllThat's not really a smile on Baucus' face. He's being tickled by all the wads of $100 bills that have been stuffed down his drawers.
Is it not amazing how coming up with the money for Wall Street and the felonious bankers is never a problem through threats of economic meltdown and martial law? BUT, providing Americans who have put their lives on the line in endless wars with the simple necessity of economically feasible health care is almost impossible. Remove the blood and money thirsty insurance life suckers and you have solved the problem. Ask your rep or senator why you cannot have the same health care they have. What can they answer?
The meme that's become commonplace, "why can't we have the same health care our reps and senators have?" is getting awful tiresome. What they have is the same type of privatized health insurance that everyone else has, it's just subsidized by the taxpayers. Yes, it's "gold-plated", giving better coverage than a lot of us poor slobs have, but it still funnels money into the coffers of private insurance, the same ones who skim off 30% for profit, obscene executive pay, advertising, bad investments, putting their names on skyscrapers and stadiums; the same ones who pay an army of peons in cubicles to deny or cancel peoples's care.
If we want to improve the system, we have to demand a single payer system, where employers aren't responsible for health insurance for their employees, where you don't lose your coverage when you lose your job or work part-time, and where insurance vampires aren't driving people to bankruptcy.
Delete.
hamster July 28th, 2009 10:26 am The premiums the CONgresspeople pay seem to be based on their income/status (have not downloaded the entire pdf since I am on dial-up) Tne reps pay $300/mo and the senators, $600/mo. And they have options for premium services. Do you know the insurance companies involved and that they are making obscene profits? They could well be, I just do not know this for a fact. Apparently the taxpayer pays 75% of these premiums. If we had a single payer system similar to this, with the stipulations you mention in your final paragraph, what would be the objection IF the companies were making a fair and not obscene profit?
And it's subsidized by the tax payers in the same way a grocery worker's insurance is subsidized by your food pruchases.
I deleted my post, which was commenting on another story. That story was removed from commondreams, and the comments to it were moved to this story. What's up with that?
Baucus stinks!
Would one of you please explain to me why Americans keep hanging on to hope and belief and keep getting stabbed in the back.
Do one or both things:
1) take that Dem card and burn it and register as an Independent. Get serious about a third party
2) take your accounts out of their big "piggy' bank, starting with Bank of America.
Start draining their biggest resources AWAY from them.
Stop counting on your voice and start using their own weapons against them.
I'll get serious about a third party when they get serious.
I am Glad we have a few progressive dems in Congress like Dennis and Fiengold and others in the progressive caucus.
We need more and until third parties get serious instead of splitting their votes, I will keep my option of voting for the most progressive in the primaries.
Register however you want.
Been there, done that, but it's not enough. I've been a registered Green since 1992 and have my $ (what there is of it) in a local credit union but, somehow, this hasn't changed the world.
I agree 100% that progressives should do everything possible to drain the power from the cesspool called Washington, DC.
One thing we should all be doing is calling our Congressional "representatives" and demanding that they support the option of states of establishing their own single payer systems.
Canada's single payer system started in the province of Saskatewan. (See http://www.thenation.com/blogs/thebeat/452493/a_real_win_for_single_payer_advocates)
Here in California, the Democratic legislature has actually passed single payer legislation twice, only to have it terminated by the "gubernator". If activists were pushing for single payer in every state, the insurance industry would have to spend 50 times the money they're spending now to try to kill it. And, just as in Canada, one successful example could light a wildfire that would spread to the rest of the country.
I am ready with a match to burn my lifelong affiliation with the Democratic Party, but not as an Independent. Independent implies that I have no allegiance. Call me a Progressive, and I'll answer to that quicker than I will Democrat. I think it's time for all progressives in that caucus to form their own Progressive Party. I think it would start out with millions of members. They have a caucus, they need to split and form a formal Party, people like me will have a home.
Here is a pretty current list of House Members who are in the Congressional Progressive Caucus:
Arizona
Ed Pastor (AZ-4, Phoenix)
Raúl Grijalva (AZ-7, Tucson) - Co-Chair
California
Lynn Woolsey (CA-6, Santa Rosa) - Co-Chair
George Miller (CA-7, Richmond) - Chairman, House Education and Labor Committee
Barbara Lee (CA-9, Oakland) - Chairwoman, Congressional Black Caucus
Pete Stark (CA-13, Fremont)
Michael Honda (CA-15, San Jose)
Sam Farr (CA-17, Monterey)
Henry Waxman (CA-30, Los Angeles) - Chairman, House Energy and Commerce Committee
Xavier Becerra (CA-31, Los Angeles)
Judy Chu (CA-32, El Monte)
Diane Watson (CA-33, Los Angeles)
Lucille Roybal-Allard (CA-34, Los Angeles)
Maxine Waters (CA-35, Inglewood)
Laura Richardson (CA-37, Long Beach)
Linda Sanchez (CA-39, Lakewood)
Bob Filner (CA-51, San Diego) - Chairman, House Veterans Affairs Committee
Colorado
Jared Polis (CO-02, Boulder)
Connecticut
Rosa DeLauro (CT-3, New Haven)
Florida
Corrine Brown (FL-3, Jacksonville)
Alan Grayson (FL-8, Orlando)
Robert Wexler (FL-19, Boca Raton)
Alcee Hastings (FL-23, Fort Lauderdale)
Georgia
Hank Johnson (GA-4, Lithonia)
John Lewis (GA-5, Atlanta)
Hawaii
Neil Abercrombie (HI-1, Honolulu)
Mazie Hirono (HI-2, Honolulu)
Illinois
Bobby Rush (IL-1, Chicago)
Jesse Jackson, Jr. (IL-2, Chicago Heights)
Luis Gutierrez (IL-4, Chicago)
Danny Davis (IL-7, Chicago)
Jan Schakowsky (IL-9, Chicago)
Phil Hare (IL-17, Rock Island)
Indiana
André Carson (IN-7, Indianapolis)
Iowa
Dave Loebsack (IA-2, Cedar Rapids)
Maine
Chellie Pingree (ME-1, North Haven)
Maryland
Donna Edwards (MD-4, Fort Washington)
Elijah Cummings (MD-7, Baltimore)
Massachusetts
John Olver (MA-1, Amherst)
Jim McGovern (MA-3, Worcester)
Barney Frank (MA-4, Newton) - Chairman, House Financial Services Committee
John Tierney (MA-6, Salem)
Ed Markey (MA-7, Malden)
Mike Capuano (MA-8, Boston)
Michigan
Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (MI-13, Detroit)
John Conyers (MI-14, Detroit) - Chairman, House Judiciary Committee
Minnesota
Keith Ellison (MN-5, Minneapolis)
Mississippi
Bennie Thompson (MS-2, Bolton) - Chairman, House Homeland Security Committee
Missouri
William Lacy Clay, Jr. (MO-1, St. Louis)
Emanuel Cleaver (MO-5, Kansas City)
New Jersey
Donald Payne (NJ-10, Newark)
Frank Pallone (NJ-06)
New Mexico
Ben R. Luján (NM-3, Santa Fe)
New York
Jerry Nadler (NY-8, Manhattan)
Yvette Clarke (NY-11, Brooklyn)
Nydia Velazquez (NY-12, Brooklyn) - Chairwoman, House Small Business Committee
Carolyn Maloney (NY-14, Manhattan)
Charles Rangel (NY-15, Harlem) - Chairman, House Ways and Means Committee
Jose Serrano (NY-16, Bronx)
John Hall (NY-19, Dover Plains)
Maurice Hinchey (NY-22, Saugerties)
Louise Slaughter (NY-28, Rochester) - Chairwoman, House Rules Committee
Eric Massa (NY-29, Corning)
North Carolina
Mel Watt (NC-12, Charlotte)
Ohio
Marcy Kaptur (OH-9, Toledo)
Dennis Kucinich (OH-10, Cleveland)
Marcia Fudge (OH-11, Warrensville Heights)
Oregon
Earl Blumenauer (OR-3, Portland)
Peter DeFazio (OR-4, Eugene)
Pennsylvania
Bob Brady (PA-1, Philadelphia) - Chairman, House Administration Committee
Chaka Fattah (PA-2, Philadelphia)
Tennessee
Steve Cohen (TN-9, Memphis)
Texas
Sheila Jackson-Lee (TX-18, Houston)
Eddie Bernice Johnson (TX-30, Dallas)
Virginia
Jim Moran (VA-8, Alexandria)
Vermont
Peter Welch (VT-At Large)
Washington
Jim McDermott (WA-7, Seattle)
Wisconsin
Tammy Baldwin (WI-2, Madison)
Gwen Moore (WI-4, Milwaukee)
Non-voting
Donna M. Christensen (Virgin Islands)
Eleanor Holmes Norton (District of Columbia)
Unfortunately, for any of these people to be here now, they had the backing of the Democratic Party which they would lose if they formed their own party, and they possibly wouldn't be reelected, partly because of people like me who vote a straight ticket normally. That might change in 2010 and beyond.
There are too many names of non-progressives on that list (Waxman, Rangel, Frank, etc.) for this group to claim to be meaningful with regard to progressive issues.
q
Or better yet, don't even register as a democrat. I've been a green ever since I turned 18 and voted Green in every election. Or Peace & Freedom party.
Call Kucinich's office and demand he change to a Green.
http://www.kickthemallout.com/
So, this is a bill to decriminalize single payer systems at the state level? How pathetic.
How about a bill that gets to the root of the problem and criminalizes campaign bribery, better known as lobbying, "contributions", perks, gifts and revolving doors?
And another bill that bans political ads?
At least we have Obama to protect us.
not.
I keep reading that 67% of America prefers Single Payer Health Care. What about this fact doesn't Congress get? I wouldn't want any represntative in my area to show up during their 'break' after voting against it. But, with the money they have just 'socked' away I doubt it any of them will be 'vacationing' locally. They will all be vacationing in the Alps keeping close check on their bank accounts.