After the election. Part 1

GOP game plan: Now, the midterm elections are over. Let the harm to the nation begin.

What a difference a few days make. Very quick run-down here, on some key issues, before and after November 4.

Circuit Judge Jeffrey Sutton before the Senate

On gay marriage:

Opposing a national trend and many better-qualified judges on the bench, two rightwing judges ban gay marriage in four states. In case you had not noticed, the cases were filed in 2012; argued in 2013; proceeded in 2014. The opinion was announced after our midterm elections. More on the decision here. It was written by George W. Bush appointee Jeffrey Sutton, joined by Bush appointee Deborah Cook. A quick glance at their ideological track record tells the story.

One other thing these two Circuit Court judges have in common is that neither received Senate confirmation, after being nominated to the court by GWBush, until a post-9/11 Republican Senate, presided over by Vice President Dick Cheney, was in position.

So, to all the depressed-turnout voters who just sat out the midterm election in Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, and Tennessee who have now lost another round: bear in mind that whom you elect to Congress matters, in off-years as well as in presidential election years.

Senator Mitch McConnell, appearing in public

On the Affordable Care Act:

Speaking of coming out, House Speaker John Boehner and probable Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell have now exposed themselves in the Wall Street Journal. Yes, Virginia, McConnell is going to try to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

Contrary to what McConnell said on Fox News television a week before the election, he’s going after Obamacare.

I suppose the only real question is why Roll Call covered for McConnell, giving further play (and credibility) to his falsehoods on television:

Updated 9:35 p.m. | Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell says Republicans won’t be able to repeal Obamacare [sic] anytime [sic] soon.

Tempering the expectations of conservatives a week before the elections that could install him as the first Republican majority leader in eight years, the Kentucky Republican said in a Fox News interview Tuesday a repeal of the health care law simply wasn’t in the cards for now.

He wasn’t telling Fox News anything that close observers of the Senate and the budget process didn’t already know, but it serves as a reminder of the limitations Republicans should expect even if they net six or seven seats, given the obvious reality that President Barack Obama is still in the White House.”

Actually, that is not a real question. It is a rhetorical question; Roll Call is pro-GOP, not nonpartisan.

Anyway, to all of the voters in Kentucky who sat out the election figuring that at least McConnell would be smart enough not to try to destroy every attempt at health insurance reform: you just lost another one.

I told you so.

This is what you get when you rely for ‘analysis’ on paid shills or media-outlet groupthink, whether at Roll Call or in the big-city daily newspapers or on NBC.

The problem goes back a few years. With the amnesia typical of political coverage, few media outlets recall (or reveal) the political temper dominant in the news media only ten years ago. So simple, so forgotten: A candidate who mentioned that people ought to be paid a day’s wage for a day’s work was laughed out of town, or ignored. (Who could win with an argument like that?) It was largely Barack Obama who up-ended that political worldview, somewhat as J. K. Rowling up-ended the conventional wisdom that ‘young people don’t read’, and (much earlier) Dr. Seuss up-ended the notion that children’s books had to be eye-glazingly dull.

There are some small enclaves in the national political press who will never forgive him. Sorry, but some people are more threatened by merit than supportive of it. When times are tight, those individuals tend to get worse, not better.

Note to human beings: the ‘smart money’ is usually wrong, at least when the smart money comprises a small number of under-qualified and over-promoted individuals in a declining profession–whose decline was brought about largely by their own misdirection of resources.

I say this with love.

Once again, dear friends: when, between c. 1980 and 2006, did you ever see insurance industry problems/abuses/outright fraud discussed with clarity and focus in national political coverage?

 

More later.

 

 

Today begins the open enrollment period for health insurance

Affordable Care Act sign-up begins today

October 1, 2013: Today begins the open enrollment period for health insurance.

Under the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, people who do not have insurance (or Medicare), or who want to switch their insurance coverage, can begin signing up for individual or family coverage.

As we know by now, this move into the 21st century has been stridently opposed–

  1. by people who hate insurance companies and hate the idea of having to buy insurance,
  2. by well-funded lobbyists working for billionaire reactionaries, for the insurance industry, for the tobacco companies, etc.,
  3. and by people who already have some version of insurance coverage, or think they have, and hate the idea that other people might gain some.

 

Benign image

As to these three groups,

I have some gut sympathy for the first bunch. Full disclosure: I have worked stints in insurance companies myself, working among nice people–who typically get employer-provided benefits, too, by the way. But decades of seeing insurance company abuses go unreported tends to undermine one’s faith in unfettered market forces. It doesn’t help that the media outlets thus underreporting are often cross-invested with the insurance industry.

The second bunch are being paid. (End of story.)

The third group is the saddest. In this group, people motivated by race are–as we say–disproportionately represented. The third group also includes a significant number of sad people who are themselves on Medicare or other public assistance, but who are eager to believe that fellow citizens are getting away with something. Remember Matt Taibi’s you-are-there piece in Rolling Stone? A Sarah-Palin-led rally looks like a Medicare convention. I have seen and heard the same thing closer to home.

Ironically, people in all of these groups would themselves have benefited from a reasoned approach to underwriting health care expenses–a single-payer plan. But the major party that represents groups 2 and 3 opposed every such move. It has also opposed almost every move for health and wellness, from lowering the speed limit on highways to limiting access to military-grade weapons of deadly force to reining in the tobacco companies to limiting use of herbicides and pesticides in food growing to limiting deadly emissions in the air to limiting groundwater contamination. Et cetera. The opposition to the Affordable Care Act should be viewed through this prism. Opposition is not a bright-line rejection of ‘government intrusion’. Many individual opponents of the ACA themselves receive public assistance, red states are the biggest drawers of federal funding, and no corporatized industries reject government assistance.

GOP Congress members keep their health coverage

Back to the Affordable Care Act. Some useful links:

For Maryland, go to Maryland Health Connection. Or call 1-855-642-8572. Every plan on the Maryland Health Connection (the Maryland Health Benefits Exchange) includes preventive services.

For Texas, go to http://www.tdi.texas.gov/consumer/cpmhealthcare.html.

Note: The ACA is lowering health care rates for Texans. Gov. Rick Perry is doing his utmost to violate both the letter and the spirit of the health care law, even though Texas has the highest proportion of uninsured people in the nation, including uninsured children.

As the Texas web site states,

“Texas has indicated that it will not create a state-based health insurance marketplace (formerly called the exchange). See the letter from Governor Perry dated November 2012.”

For local workshops in San Antonio Oct. 3 and in Houston Oct. 10, go here.

Texas hearts

Here in summary are some key provisions of the new law:

  • The customer can no longer be denied coverage because of chronic illness or pre-existing condition
  • The customer can include children on the insurance plan until they reach the age of 26
  • There is no annual limit on care (cap on coverage paid by the company, per year)
  • There is no lifetime limit on care (cap on coverage paid by company over lifetime)
  • The insurance becomes effective Jan. 1, 2014, if purchased (in Maryland) by Dec. 18, 2013
  • ‘Navigators’ or assisters are available to help people sign up for coverage
  • For adults at 138 percent to 400 percent of the federal poverty line, tax credits are available through the state health exchanges to help pay for premiums
  • Private coverage is purchased, in most states, through insurance exchanges
  • Some private insurance agents are signing up with the exchanges
  • Medicaid coverage varies by state

Speaking of Medicaid, here is another feature of the Affordable Care Act: the asset base limit got thrown out. In other words, Americans are no longer required to drain or lose everything they have ever earned or saved, over their lifetimes, to become destitute, to become eligible for Medicaid. In states that are not shrinking Medicaid by opposing the new law, Medicaid eligibility will be determined by income.

Anti-Medicaid plotting in red states?

Back to Maryland, and Medicaid:

  • Medicaid in Maryland is expanding to cover adults under age 65, up to 138 percent of the federal poverty line (about $32,500 per year for a family of four, or $15,856 for an individual)
  • Eligibility for Medicaid in Maryland will be based on the federal modified gross income
  • There is no ‘means test’; income verification is provided through IRS returns, Social Security data, and other federal and state data
  • According to the Maryland Health Connection, “Eligibility will be determined in real time in most cases.”
  • Young adults who have aged out of foster care will be eligible for Medicaid up to age 26

Stay tuned.