Weak, Weak, Weak

The president and the Democrats can not and must not settle for a lesser bill. But some members of Congress are floating the idea:

The consensus measure would be less ambitious than the bills approved last year. It would extend insurance coverage to perhaps 12 million to 15 million people — and provide political cover to Democrats, who said they could not simply drop the issue after spending so much time and effort on it.

Unacceptable. Now is the time to fight back — not to concede.

More details:

–Insurers could not deny coverage to children under the age of 19 on account of pre-existing medical conditions.

–Insurers would have to offer policyholders an opportunity to continue coverage for children through age 25 or 26.

–The federal government would offer financial incentives to states to expand Medicaid to cover childless adults and parents.

–The federal government would offer grants to states to establish regulated markets known as insurance exchanges, where consumers and small businesses could buy coverage.

–The federal government would offer tax credits to small businesses to help them defray the cost of providing health benefits to workers.

–If a health plan provided care through a network of doctors and hospitals, it could not charge patients more for going outside the network in an emergency. Co-payments for emergency care would have to be the same, regardless of whether a hospital was in the insurer’s network of preferred providers.

No sir. I don’t like it. And it’s not because of the specific “reforms.” Out of the present context, they might be okay. It’s the fact that the Democrats would gladly settle for such a weakened compromise, given what’s already happened. To the House progressives: is this “consensus” crap on a stick somehow better than the Senate bill? Dumb question. I’m asking lawmakers who think no bill at all is better than the Senate bill. Both options are weak.

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  • eve

    Paul Krugman:So, House Democrats have a choice: do they pass the Senate bill, or do they go back to the drawing board and spend several months cobbling together a plan that’s worse in almost every dimension, generating thousands of stories about hapless Democrats — and almost surely find that Senate Republicans block the new plan, too.

  • eve

    And because the Republicans are so much “better” at messaging (because they lie):A new Gallup poll finds that by a 55% to 39% margin, Americans say President Obama and Congress should now suspend work on the health care bill and consider alternatives rather than trying to pass the current version.

  • Irish Girl

    The news just gets worse and worse. WTF happened to leadership and testicular fortitude! Congress needs to Cowboy Up…..grrrrrrr

  • eljefejeff

    Why can’t we just prohibit insurance companies from dropping sick people, mandate everyone have insurance, and allow everyone to buy into Medicare? I know republicans would oppose this as well as some democrats but just put it out there, pass with reconciliation if possible….no reasonable person should oppose that.And why does it have to go through a thousand committees first? They did the Patriot Act literally overnight.

  • Irish Girl

    @eljefejeff exactly! When its taking away our rights, like the Patriot Act, they can get it done quickly and easily. When its giving us something for our hard paid tax dollars, its just impossible to accomplish.

  • J

    @jeff, Irish: I think only one of those thing (Medicare expansion) could be covered under reconciliation. But it’s possible none of them could. I’m not entirely clear on what is covered by the budget and what isn’t, but I don’t think anything having to do with the insurance industry is.

  • 24hourjack

    first of all…we already have a “lesser bill”.a very,very lesser bill.but more importantly…am i crazy or hasnt approval for the bill consistently dipped as it has become less and less progressive.months back,when most americans believed the pub. option would be included,this bill has a much higher approval.the closer they’ve moved towards the unicorn of “center politics”,the less popular it has become.