Kennedy Medicare for All Act

We had tragic news today.  We only have a short period time left in the presence of Ted Kennedy.  However, Teddy is not gone yet...and I say we push, like never before, to give Teddy what he has sought for years - Health Care for All.  Year after Year Teddy has proposed the Kennedy Medicare for All Act...which extends Medicare to all.  

As Kennedy is getting the best coverage possible in Boston...many many Americans with similar outlooks are being deemed unable to receive insurance or being dropped from their insurance.  I'm positive that fact is not lost on Teddy.  Congress goes on Memorial Day recess next week, and we should take the summer to push through this legislation.

When Teddy returns to the Senate, and he will, even if it is a short return.  I imagine this is what he will stand for.  

Lets cut out the Eulogies and Back-Looking Tributes and Fight.  Teddy is reportedly "walking the floor, antsy, and driving the nurses crazy, wanting to get out."  Lets push, lets fight, and lets do it with Teddy!  People will say we are using this moment for political ends...this right, we are, for politically right ends.  Teddy has brought so much to our nation through politics, and I refuse to let that be it.  We can do this.  We have the numbers.  We have the popular backing.  And we have Teddy.

This was a hearing only two weeks ago - We Can Do This!



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Re: Kennedy Medicare for All Act (none / 0)

Stupendously good idea.


by mady on Tue May 20, 2008 at 02:56:38 PM EST

Re: Kennedy Medicare for All Act (none / 0)

Thanks - I really believe is we all sound up the volume on this we can do it... We may loose Teddy but it will mean so much to so many in our country who don't have Health Care.


Matthew25Network.com
by cardboard 1 on Tue May 20, 2008 at 02:58:23 PM EST
[ Parent ]

The only way to do that is to elect HRC (none / 0)

Obama won't give health care to all.


by CoyoteCreek on Tue May 20, 2008 at 03:01:28 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: The only way to do that is to elect HRC (none / 0)

This diary didn't mention Obama...we can do this this Summer.  Bush cannot veto a Kennedy Health Care Bill.  Kennedy is bigger than Bush.


Matthew25Network.com
by cardboard 1 on Tue May 20, 2008 at 03:02:43 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: The only way to do that is to elect HRC (none / 0)

Neither Obama or Clinton support this kind of single-payer universal health care.  It's not a campaign issue, but the point of this is maybe right now we have a shot at it.


by mady on Tue May 20, 2008 at 03:04:22 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: The only way to do that is to elect HRC (none / 0)

I'm sure that they both actually support it, but with the current climate in Washington saying so would be suicide.  Things will be different after January...


No politician ever lost an election because he underestimated the intelligence of the American public. - PT Barnum, paraphrased...
by jarhead5536 on Tue May 20, 2008 at 03:13:03 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: The only way to do that is to elect HRC (none / 0)

Your are right, I think they do both support it.  What I meant is that the current plans they both propose that are compromises to that, are not single payer.  Would love to see this proposed now though.


by mady on Tue May 20, 2008 at 03:19:12 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: The only way to do that is to elect HRC (none / 0)

Dare to dream, mady.  Harry and Louise are going to look like pikers compared to what the insurance industry and big Pharma would throw at UHC without us doing the proper prep work.  An overwhelming avalanche of public support for UHC will be required, along with 60+ in the Senate and 290+ in the House to withstand the hundreds of billions in negative advertising, minority filibusters, primarying of our seats and God knows what else from the folks on the other side, who will be literally fighting for their existence.  They understand that true UHC means the elimination of the insurance industry and socializing (dirty word in some parts but single payer by definition) of pharmaceutical research/producation along with the entire health care delivery structure.

Both Barack and Hillary offer a pathway to get there while allowing the time to build the necessary coaltion.  Hillary's plan is just a little more direct.


No politician ever lost an election because he underestimated the intelligence of the American public. - PT Barnum, paraphrased...
by jarhead5536 on Tue May 20, 2008 at 03:50:36 PM EST
[ Parent ]

single payer=national health insurance (none / 0)

   not necessarily national health care. The insurance companies are the parasites; the health care providers are providing necessary services.
   We need public, not-for-profit health insurance, but having independent providers of services is probably a good thing (and more feasible politically). The providers of health care will compete with eachother on the basis of quality of service and success of treatment.
by Zack from the SFV on Tue May 20, 2008 at 05:02:38 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Obama's 'plan' is NOT 'universal health care' AND (none / 0)

it has a tremendous weakness in this:

http://www.economist.com/research/Econom ics/alphabetic.cfm?LETTER=A

Adverse selection

When you do business with people you would be better off avoiding. This is one of two main sorts of market failure often associated with insurance. The other is moral hazard. Adverse selection can be a problem when there is asymmetric information between the seller of insurance and the buyer; in particular, insurance will often not be profitable when buyers have better information about their risk of claiming than does the seller. Ideally, insurance premiums should be set according to the risk of a randomly selected person in the insured slice of the population (55-year-old male smokers, say). In practice, this means the average risk of that group. When there is adverse selection, people who know they have a higher risk of claiming than the average of the group will buy the insurance, whereas those who have a below-average risk may decide it is too expensive to be worth buying. In this case, premiums set according to the average risk will not be sufficient to cover the claims that eventually arise, because among the people who have bought the policy more will have above-average risk than below-average risk. Putting up the premium will not solve this problem, for as the premium rises the insurance policy will become unattractive to more of the people who know they have a lower risk of claiming. One way to reduce adverse selection is to make the purchase of insurance compulsory, so that those for whom insurance priced for average risk is unattractive are not able to opt out.

Mandatory and priced by age only. With subsidies for costs that exceed 5-10% of a person or family's income.

THAT WOULD GET COSTS DOWN BECAUSE THE GOVERNMENT IS A TOUGH BARGAINER.


Universal healthcare IS a core Democratic value
Without a REAL committment to it, we WON'T win in November.
by architek on Tue May 20, 2008 at 07:15:48 PM EST
[ Parent ]

HR 676 - The National Health Insurance Bill (none / 0)

This would be a GOOD option.

http://www.pnhp.org/publications/the_nat ional_health_insurance_bill_hr_676.php


Universal healthcare IS a core Democratic value
Without a REAL committment to it, we WON'T win in November.
by architek on Tue May 20, 2008 at 08:28:54 PM EST
[ Parent ]

We'll do our best (2.00 / 1)

Obama has said that his health care reform is the first thing that he'll focus on after being elected.

It is not a perfect measure, but what a lot of people don't understand is that things don't change that quickly in this country if they involve big money.  

Obama supports Universal Health Care.  Kennedy wouldn't have endorsed him if he didn't.  Hopefully if we can get some reform in the short term, we can make people (and the obstructionists in the insurance and medical lobbies) believe that the long-term UHC solution can work.


In this avalanche, the pebbles get to vote.
by Dracomicron on Tue May 20, 2008 at 03:18:42 PM EST

Re: We'll do our best (none / 0)

The one thing that can counter money is a large focusing event... I think Ted Kennedy provides this, and his living advocacy much like Elizabeth Edwards, really speaks volumes.  I really think we can raise the volume enough to do this, and a single-payer system, in the short-term.


Matthew25Network.com
by cardboard 1 on Tue May 20, 2008 at 03:23:11 PM EST
[ Parent ]

I can't say that I'm optimistic (none / 0)

I hope you're right, though.

People get sick all the time, even important people, and still nothing is done.

Then again, nobody tugs on an American's heartstrings like a Kennedy.


In this avalanche, the pebbles get to vote.
by Dracomicron on Tue May 20, 2008 at 03:29:41 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: I can't say that I'm optimistic (none / 0)

>Obama has said that his health care reform is the first thing that he'll focus on after being elected.

Can you give me a reference for this? I want to see exactly what he said, bluntly, this is the most lied about issue in this race.

Understandable because literally trillions of dollars are riding on it.

I beleive very strongly that Obama is AGAINST universal healthcare.

Every indication is that he is strongly against it but he hides that in dense language that only insurance geeks understand.


Universal healthcare IS a core Democratic value
Without a REAL committment to it, we WON'T win in November.
by architek on Tue May 20, 2008 at 07:19:22 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Obama is not in favor of this plan (none / 0)

Kennedy compromised on candidates for what ever reason.  If this was important to him he would NOT be supporting Obama.
I think a more fitting tribute would be to re-inforce NCLB, a union busting bit of legislation both Obama and Kennedy can get behind.
For Obama it now becomes: Faith, hope and CHANGE! And the greatest of these is Change!
by TeresaInPa on Tue May 20, 2008 at 03:22:40 PM EST

Re: Obama is not in favor of this plan (none / 0)

I don't think Kennedy Compromised... not even sure what the means...This diary is not about Obama at all.

Kennedy's issue of top concern, for some time, has been health care.  I think that is extremely well documented.


Matthew25Network.com
by cardboard 1 on Tue May 20, 2008 at 03:25:07 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Obama is not in favor of this plan (none / 0)

I think you are in the wrong diary.  That was really ugly, petty, and vicious.


by mady on Tue May 20, 2008 at 03:26:16 PM EST
[ Parent ]


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