Topic: "Not Fair" to Subject Congress to Obamacare | |
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Democrat: "Not Fair" to Subject Congress to Obamacare just like everyone else.
When the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (“Obamacare”) was being debated, proponents were accused of saddling Americans with inferior and expensive health care while keeping generous coverage for themselves at taxpayer expense. To rebut that allegation and build confidence in the bill, a provision was added mandating that members of Congress – and their staff members – get there coverage through the new exchange system the bill set up. Now that the time to sign up for exchange coverage is nearing, a Democratic member, Rep. John Larson (D-CT), is saying that “this is simply not fair” – as key staff members head for the exits to avoid Obamacare. What? Obamacare disproportionally hurts those with lower incomes? It may come as a surprise, but it shouldn’t. We’ve known this since before the legislation even passed. More to the point, why did Rep. Larson vote to impose on the country a health coverage system that “is simply not fair”? |
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If they retire, they get to keep the Tax Payer entitlement health coverage they have.
I say, cut 'em. Make 'em pay they fair share. |
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Democrat: "Not Fair" to Subject Congress to Obamacare just like everyone else. When the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (“Obamacare”) was being debated, proponents were accused of saddling Americans with inferior and expensive health care while keeping generous coverage for themselves at taxpayer expense. To rebut that allegation and build confidence in the bill, a provision was added mandating that members of Congress – and their staff members – get there coverage through the new exchange system the bill set up. Now that the time to sign up for exchange coverage is nearing, a Democratic member, Rep. John Larson (D-CT), is saying that “this is simply not fair” – as key staff members head for the exits to avoid Obamacare. What? Obamacare disproportionally hurts those with lower incomes? It may come as a surprise, but it shouldn’t. We’ve known this since before the legislation even passed. More to the point, why did Rep. Larson vote to impose on the country a health coverage system that “is simply not fair”? Screw you politicians! You'll pay up or we the people will have your chairs! It was you stupid soabs who passed Obamacare into law without even knowing what was in it! Stupid! Obamacare will not become law! It will fall! The US Government can't afford to set it up and we the people don't want your green eggs and ham from uncle sam I am! |
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why didn't they crap their Pants when Obamacare was up for vote?
Hope Pelosi likes those new Rules! Bet she wished she had never heard of or Read that Abomination! Seems the Chicken are coming home to roost! |
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The European way is the way forward. France has a first class healthcare system and of course The UK has a second to none system. Universal health care for all is the only way..
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The European way is the way forward. France has a first class healthcare system and of course The UK has a second to none system. Universal health care for all is the only way.. [/quo yes we do have good healthcare system but with its prob but one would thought US would have healthcare system that was fair and all had use of all pay into rich pay more towards faire system |
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Edited by
Conrad_73
on
Fri 06/14/13 06:40 AM
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The European way is the way forward. France has a first class healthcare system and of course The UK has a second to none system. Universal health care for all is the only way.. Running out of Funds,same way Owawa-Care will! |
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Its not running out funds its not even been cut id rather pay into system that all are treated with same medical attention than few getting the best medical attention what fair id rather pay into system that treats all equal no matter what you earnings are or what money you have in bank
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Its not running out funds its not even been cut id rather pay into system that all are treated with same medical attention than few getting the best medical attention what fair id rather pay into system that treats all equal no matter what you earnings are or what money you have in bank
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Its not running out funds its not even been cut id rather pay into system that all are treated with same medical attention than few getting the best medical attention what fair id rather pay into system that treats all equal no matter what you earnings are or what money you have in bank |
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The European way is the way forward. France has a first class healthcare system and of course The UK has a second to none system. Universal health care for all is the only way.. Running out of Funds,same way Owawa-Care will! |
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Edited by
Conrad_73
on
Sun 06/16/13 11:14 AM
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The European way is the way forward. France has a first class healthcare system and of course The UK has a second to none system. Universal health care for all is the only way.. Running out of Funds,same way Owawa-Care will! They are hiding it from those Government Thieves! What makes you believe that are entitled to even a Penny of someone else's Money? |
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The European way is the way forward. France has a first class healthcare system and of course The UK has a second to none system. Universal health care for all is the only way.. Running out of Funds,same way Owawa-Care will! They are hiding it from those Government Thieves! What makes you believe that are entitled to even a Penny of someone else's Money? Sadly we have billions if not trillions to spy apon ourselves yet nothing for the poor, mentally ill, senile, etc etc. Your arguments are not reality based, come to reality Mr Conrad we will welcome you. |
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Edited by
Conrad_73
on
Sun 06/16/13 11:50 AM
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The European way is the way forward. France has a first class healthcare system and of course The UK has a second to none system. Universal health care for all is the only way.. Running out of Funds,same way Owawa-Care will! They are hiding it from those Government Thieves! What makes you believe that are entitled to even a Penny of someone else's Money? Sadly we have billions if not trillions to spy apon ourselves yet nothing for the poor, mentally ill, senile, etc etc. Your arguments are not reality based, come to reality Mr Conrad we will welcome you. Yep,Taxes! Money of which you do not know where it goes! The difference between death & taxes is that death doesn't get worse every time congress meets." Will Rogers So,you think it unfair if Congress and Senate have to do with Obamacare like every other American? |
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http://www.forbes.com/sites/theapothecary/2013/04/25/congress-fearing-brain-drain-seeks-to-opt-out-of-participating-in-obamacares-exchanges/
Congress, Fearing 'Brain Drain,' Seeks to Opt Out of Participating in Obamacare's Exchanges Avik Roy Sen. Chuck Grassley (R., Iowa) authored the Obamacare amendment requiring that members of Congress and their staff participate in the law's insurance exchanges. (Photo credit: Wikipedia) As Obamacare was winding its way through the Senate in 2009, Sen. Chuck Grassley (R., Iowa) slipped in an amendment requiring that members of Congress, and their staff, enroll in Obamacare’s health insurance exchanges. The idea was simple: that if Congress was going to impose Obamacare upon the country, it should have to experience what it is imposing firsthand. But now, word comes that Congress is quietly seeking to rescind that provision of the law, because members fear that staffers who face higher insurance costs will leave the Hill. The news has sparked outrage from the right and left. Here’s the back story, and why this debate is crucial to the future of market-based health reform. Sen. Grassley’s original idea was to require all federal employees to enroll in the exchanges, instead of in the Federal Employee Health Benefits Program, where most gain coverage today. Indeed, a previous Senate Finance Committee amendment proposed putting members and staffers on Medicaid. But “fierce opposition from federal employee unions” sank Grassley’s effort, and he had to water his amendment down to only apply to Congress and congressional staff. Staffers grumble about being stuck on the exchanges Ever since Obamacare became law, this has been a source of grumbling among the congressional staffers I talk to. One aspect of the Grassley amendment is that it originally appeared to exempt staffers who worked for congressional committees, and congressional leadership, because those staffers didn’t work for specific Members of Congress. (My understanding is that the Office of Personnel Management has since clarified the regulations to include all staff, including committee and leadership.) There are a couple of legitimate issues for Congress to resolve with this provision, formally known as Section 1312(d)(3)(D) of the Affordable Care Act. First: Will staffers have to buy insurance on the exchanges for themselves with after-tax money, or will the government be able to contribute to these costs with a pre-tax contribution? Second: In the past, the government’s sponsorship of health benefits for members and staffers counted toward retiree benefits. If these individuals are placed on the exchange, will their pensions will be affected? According to the Congressional Research Service, Congress’ in-house think tank, the government can indeed contribute to members’ and staffers’ premium costs. “While it does not appear that the contribution must be similar to the contribution provided under FEHBP,” CRS writes in a 2010 report, “it seems the section may provide the authority for the federal government to make a contribution to the health insurance premiums of Members of Congress and congressional staff. Under FEHBP…the government’s share of premiums is set at 72% of the weighted average premium of all plans in the program, not to exceed 75% of any given plan’s premium.” So Congress should have the authority to fund a comparable portion of the premiums as they do today. Staffers are waiting for a ruling from the Office of Personnel Management on precisely this point. A bipartisan deal to rescind the provision? According to John Bresnahan and Jake Sherman of Politico, however, Congress is seeking to wipe out these provisions and put members and staffers back onto FEHBP. “Several proposals have been submitted to the Office of Personnel Management,” they write. “One proposal exempts lawmakers and aides; the other exempts aides alone.” What’s surprising about the effort to revive the exemption is that it appears to be bipartisan. According to the Politico reporters, talks to change the provision involve both Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D., Nev.) and House Speaker John Boehner (R., Ohio). “Everyone has to hold hands on this and jump, or nothing is going to get done,” one source told the reporters. Several of their sources worried about a “brain drain” that would drive talented staffers off the Hill. One subtle point needs to be made: Large employers in the private sector are not required to put their employees onto the Obamacare exchanges. Given that Congress is a large employer, this isn’t, in the purest technical sense, about subjecting Congress to the same laws it imposes on other large employers. But it is about subjecting Congress to the laws it imposes on those who will have to buy insurance on the exchanges: individuals who don’t get coverage through their employers, and small businesses. Exchanges are crucial to the future of health reform While I have many friends who work for Congress, and I wish them well, it is absolutely a good thing that members and staffers are enrolled on the exchange. It is vital for these individuals to experience, first-hand, how Obamacare’s costly mandates and regulations will drive up the price of health insurance. Staffers will, in particular, be affected by Obamacare’s “community rating” provision, which jacks up the cost of insurance for young people. (Most Hill staffers are in their twenties and early thirties.) If anything, even more federal employees should be required to enroll in the exchanges, especially those at the White House and the Department of Health and Human Services who are writing thousands of pages of exchange regulations. (Indeed, a bill has been proposed that would extend exchange coverage to the President, Vice President, and political appointees.) It’s critical that those who design our laws get to experience them for themselves. I might also throw in the good folks at the Congressional Budget Office, who will get a better sense of how these regulations affect exchange costs and subsidies. This may seem like a lot of inside baseball. But it’s actually a critical issue. If Obamacare can’t be repealed—and it is my view that repeal is highly unlikely—then the future of market-based health reform goes through the exchanges. Getting private insurance exchanges right is important, if we want to use them to reform Medicare, Medicaid, and our other health-care entitlements. And the best way to make sure that we get the exchanges right is to make sure that the people who write the laws are also living under them. UPDATE 1: Sherman and Bresnahan report that House Speaker John Boehner says that this snafu is “Democrats’ problem to solve.” “The fact that Democratic leaders want to opt themselves out of the Obamacare exchanges shows that Sen. Baucus isn’t the only one who realizes the president’s health care law is a ‘train wreck,’” said Boehner spokesman Michael Steel. “The speaker would like to see resolution of this problem, along with the other nightmares created by Washington Democrats’ health law, which is why he supports full repeal,” Steel added. “In the meantime, it is Democrats’ problem to solve. He will not sneak any language into bills to solve it for them — and the Democratic leadership knows that.” UPDATE 2: Harry Reid, in a carefully-worded statement, says there will be “no legislative fix” to exempt members and staffers. That leaves open the possibility for OPM to provide a back-door exemption: Senator Reid is committed to ensuring that all members of Congress and Congressional staff experience the benefits of the Affordable Care Act in exactly the same way as every other American. He believes that this is the effect of the legislation as written, and that therefore no legislative fix is necessary. There are not now, have never been, nor will there ever be any discussions about exempting members of Congress or Congressional staff from Affordable Care Act provisions that apply to any employees of any other public or private employer offering health care. UPDATE 3: Chris Jacobs of the Galen Institute offers historical context, and suggests that state legislators who vote to expand Medicaid should be required to enroll in the program: The Twitterverse exploded with outrage today, following last night’s Politico story indicating that congressional leadership have engaged in secret conversations attempting to craft an Obamacare waiver for Members of Congress and/or their staffs. As with the rest of Obamacare, the problem lies in the botched way the legislation was enacted — drafted in secret, then rammed through Congress on a party-line vote. Harry Reid drafted this particular section of the bill behind closed doors; Senator Grassley later offered an amendment clarifying the provisions, but Democrats defeated it three years ago. (Text of the Grassley amendment available here; my summary of the amendment here; Senate floor vote here). So there’s one important principle at play: Having rammed the bill through while claiming that reading the bill was a waste of time, because we had to act “real fast” and didn’t have two lawyers over two days to understand the legislation, Democrats now want to exempt themselves from the mess they created. As we’ve said before, you break it, you own it. But there’s another important principle as well regarding Members’ health coverage, and the ongoing state-level debate regarding Obamacare’s expansion of Medicaid: How many state legislators who want to expand Medicaid for others want to go on Medicaid themselves? We know the answer to this question at the federal level — Sen. LeMieux offered a “Medicaid for Members” amendment in March 2010, which received not a single vote from Senate Democrats. (Text of the amendment here; my summary here; Senate floor vote here.) In 2009, Rep. Henry Waxman publicly admitted that “it is highly unlikely that you are going to find millionaires who would like to go on Medicaid.” In other words, Medicaid provides such inferior coverage that millionaires — and wealthy Members of Congress — wouldn’t dream of enrolling in it themselves, but have no qualms about putting low-income individuals on this “insurance.” So to the original story: The root problem is not that Congress drafted the law sloppily — although that did happen in spades. The problem is that not enough individuals have been exposed to Obamacare’s underlying flaws. Because it’s easy to see how requiring federal and state representatives to go on Medicaid themselves would make many legislators much less enthusiastic about expanding “coverage” under Obamacare. UPDATE 4: Ezra Klein says that Harry Reid has to hope that OPM gets him out of this jam: If OPM doesn’t rule as Reid expects, I’ll be surprised to see this get fixed, at least quickly. Republicans view any chaos around Obamacare as a win for them. As of today, they’re telling me that that even extends to chaos caused by a Republican senator’s amendment that mainly effects their health insurance. I don’t think they’ll hold out long on that if it turns out they actually have to shoulder the full cost of their premiums. But it will be tough to preemptively back down too. |
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The European way is the way forward. France has a first class healthcare system and of course The UK has a second to none system. Universal health care for all is the only way.. Running out of Funds,same way Owawa-Care will! They are hiding it from those Government Thieves! What makes you believe that are entitled to even a Penny of someone else's Money? Sadly we have billions if not trillions to spy apon ourselves yet nothing for the poor, mentally ill, senile, etc etc. Your arguments are not reality based, come to reality Mr Conrad we will welcome you. Yep,Taxes! Money of which you do not know where it goes! The difference between death & taxes is that death doesn't get worse every time congress meets." Will Rogers So,you think it unfair if Congress and Senate have to do with Obamacare like every other American? I know where it goes! It goes to the IRS' next dance party! Those soabs! |
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Edited by
Conrad_73
on
Sun 06/16/13 03:04 PM
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The European way is the way forward. France has a first class healthcare system and of course The UK has a second to none system. Universal health care for all is the only way.. Running out of Funds,same way Owawa-Care will! They are hiding it from those Government Thieves! What makes you believe that are entitled to even a Penny of someone else's Money? Sadly we have billions if not trillions to spy apon ourselves yet nothing for the poor, mentally ill, senile, etc etc. Your arguments are not reality based, come to reality Mr Conrad we will welcome you. Even to the extent of taxing Expatriates living outside,and making a living outside the US! You have a Mad Max World now as we speak! |
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The European way is the way forward. France has a first class healthcare system and of course The UK has a second to none system. Universal health care for all is the only way.. First, you talk about a first-class health care system. Then, you mention universal health care. Well, which is it? The two don't go together. |
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Edited by
Toodygirl5
on
Sun 06/16/13 04:08 PM
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The European way is the way forward. France has a first class healthcare system and of course The UK has a second to none system. Universal health care for all is the only way.. yes we do have good healthcare system but with its prob but one would thought US would have healthcare system that was fair and all had use of all pay into rich pay more towards faire system
Yes, healthcare should be fair, everyone gets the best there is. |
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The European way is the way forward. France has a first class healthcare system and of course The UK has a second to none system. Universal health care for all is the only way.. yes we do have good healthcare system but with its prob but one would thought US would have healthcare system that was fair and all had use of all pay into rich pay more towards faire system
Yes, healthcare should be fair, everyone gets the best there is. Define fair. |
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