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BLOGS AND OPINION


  • Still Seething by Leslie Boyd, lettersfromtheleft.com | September 20, 2012

    The more I think about it, the madder I get. There’s my friend, Lynn, who worked in human services all her life for low pay. She’s on Medicare now and she gets Social Security. She’s not on the dole and she’s not looking for a handout. Then there’s my friend, Mike, who was injured in service to his country, and the woman he would love to marry. She has diabetes and would lose her health care if she married him. These are some of the people Mitt Romney isn’t interested in. All three of these people are better Americans than Mitt will ever be. Then there’s my son, Mike. He worked hard and paid taxes until he got sick. My son was not a bum. He was not lazy. He was terminally ill and still couldn’t get what he needed, even though he had paid into the system for 15 years. read more »

  • Still Seething by Leslie Boyd, | September 20, 2012

    The more I think about it, the madder I get. There’s my friend, Lynn, who worked in human services all her life for low pay. She’s on Medicare now and she gets Social Security. She’s not on the dole and she’s not looking for a handout. Then there’s my friend, Mike, who was injured in service to his country, and the woman he would love to marry. She has diabetes and would lose her health care if she married him. These are some of the people Mitt Romney isn’t interested in. All three of these people are better Americans than Mitt will ever be. Then there’s my son, Mike. He worked hard and paid taxes until he got sick. He didn’t have health coverage because a birth defect is a pre-existing condition, and because of that, he couldn’t get the screening tests he needed. read more »

  • What Romney Left Behind by Paul Waldman, prospect.org | September 18, 2012

    One of the common misconceptions about the presidential candidate version of Mitt Romney is that he disavowed his greatest achievement in public office, health care reform, in an attempt to appeal to his party's base. The truth is that he never actually disavowed it or said it was a failure or a mistake. What he did was tell primary voters that Romneycare was really nothing at all like Obamacare, and anyway Romneycare shouldn't be tried in any other state. His comments were utterly unconvincing, but since they were always accompanied by a thunderous denunciation of Obamacare, Republican voters were assuaged enough to let it slide. Which means that had he wanted to, Romney probably could have entered the general election making a positive case on health care beyond "Repeal Obamacare!" Instead, his entire case for competence is that he got really rich in private equity, and his entire case for compassion is that his wife seems nice. read more »

  • Thank You, Paul Ryan by Robert Kuttner, Huffington Post | September 17, 2012

    Two years ago, the Democrats handed the Republicans their two crown jewels -- Social Security and Medicare. By targeting Medicare for budget "savings" that could be used to finance what the Republicans called Obamacare, the White House gave the GOP ammunition to contend that the Democrats were taking benefits away from seniors. Now, however, Republicans have given Social Security and Medicare back to the Democrats (where they belong.) Polls show that Medicare is no longer a winner for the Republicans, and the Democrats have embraced the term, "Obamacare" as positive label. The reason, of course, is Paul Ryan. read more »

  • Progressive Breakfast by Isaiah J. Poole, OurFuture.org | September 14, 2012

    On the menu this morning MORNING MESSAGE: So Who Is It That Cares About The Deficit Anyway? Fed's Economic Booster Shot The Middle-Class Struggle For Survival Chicago Teacher Strike Update Breakfast Sides read more »

  • Progressive Breakfast by Isaiah J. Poole, OurFuture.org | September 12, 2012

    MORNING MESSAGE: When It Comes to the DoJ and Wall Street, Don't Call It "Justice" read more »

  • No There There by James Kwak, baselinescenario.com | September 11, 2012

    On the one hand, over in Romney headquarters, they can take heart from the fact that the economy continues to sputter, as evidenced by the latest jobs report. On the other hand, as the election draws near, people will only ask more questions about what President Romney would actually do. For months now, the campaign has whispered one thing to the base (e.g., “severely conservative”) while being purposefully vague to everyone else, hoping that independents will assume he is still the moderate who introduced universal health care to Massachusetts. Now that strategy is breaking down. Exhibit A is Sunday’s comical back-and-forth-and-forth-and-back on the Affordable Care Act. But the more important Exhibit B is the Romney “tax plan.” read more »

  • Progressive Breakfast by Terrance Heath, OurFuture.org | September 11, 2012

    On the menu this morning: MORNING MESSAGE: Deficit Rorschach Test: The Presidents, the Editors, and the Truth More Romney Tax Problems Dithering on Obamacare Chicago Teachers Strike GOP Polling Panic Breakfast Sides read more »

  • Progressive Breakfast by Isaiah J. Poole, OurFuture.org | September 7, 2012

    On the menu this morning MORNING MESSAGE: Obama's Claim For A New Mandate The Message And The Movement Unemployment Report Signals Reclaim The Solar Power Investment Mandate read more »

  • Bill Clinton: Wonk-In-Chief by Ezra Klein, The Washington Post | September 6, 2012

    “People ask me all the time how we delivered four surplus budgets,” former President Bill Clinton said on Wednesday night. “What new ideas did we bring? I always give a one-word answer: arithmetic.” That’s also the one-word answer to what Clinton brought to his convention speech. To a degree unusual in political rhetoric, this was a 48-minute speech about arithmetic. About math. About budgets. In that way, Clinton’s speech fit neatly into the emergent Democratic strategy to be, in this election, the party of policy. To be sure, they don’t have much of a choice. The difference between the Democratic and Republican tickets right now is the Democrats are stuck with thousands of pages of policy while the Republicans have made a strategic decision to avoid having much policy at all. read more »

The Latest

NEWS HEADLINES

  • Health Care Reform: States Ramp Up War on Obamacare, time.com | July 6, 2010

    Of all the hot-mike incidents in recent memory, the one involving a candidate for the post of Georgia insurance commissioner probably isn't going to break any YouTube records. But to understand the state-level ground war raging over the new Affordable Care Act, this unguarded moment of accidental honesty is as instructive as any.

  • 'High-Risk' Pool Medical Insurance Program Set to Begin , Los Angeles Times | July 1, 2010

    The Obama administration and some state governments will begin accepting applications Thursday for new insurance programs designed to cover people who have been denied insurance because they have preexisting medical conditions. more »

  • GOP Sen. Bob Bennett Says His Own Party Is Short On Policy Ideas (VIDEO) , Huffington Post | July 1, 2010

    Sen. Bob Bennett (R-Utah) took aim at his own party's policy ideas when he took to the podium to speak before a group of moderate Republicans on Wednesday. more »

  • Governors Ramp up Lobbying for Federal Medicaid Dollars, stateline.org | July 1, 2010

    As Congress continues to squabble over whether to provide additional Medicaid dollars to cash-strapped states, a dozen governors used the July 1 state budget deadline to make their case for the money. Their argument: Without $25 billion in additional aid, states’ fiscal health and the nation’s fragile economic recovery could be in jeopardy. more »

  • Rubio Breaks With Pledge To Repeal Health Law, Says He Will Retain Popular Parts Of The Bill , wonkroom.thinkprogress.org | June 25, 2010

    Florida senatorial candidate Marco Rubio, once a strong advocate for repealing the entire health care law and replacing it with “real reforms,” is now telling reporters that he would not repeal the law’s pre-existing conditions exclusions and the provisions that allow children to stay on their parents’ policies until age 26. From National Review’s Jim Geraghty:

  • Obama Warns Health Insurers on Rate Hikes, blog.aflcio.org | June 23, 2010

    Health insurance companies should not use the new heath care reform law as an “opportunity to enact unjustifiable rate increases,” President Obama warned today at a White House ceremony marking the 90-day anniversary of signing the landmark bill, which he termed “a true patient’s bill of rights.”

  • White House Releases 'Patient Bill of Rights', The Washington Post | June 23, 2010

    President Barack Obama unveiled a package of consumer benefits Tuesday to build support for his health care overhaul within a divided nation and warned Republicans about trying to repeal his landmark law. "We're not going back," said a defiant president.

  • Senate Talks on Tax Package Focuses on Medicaid Payments to States, thehill.com | June 23, 2010

    The two parties have wrangled over the bill for over eight weeks, with Republicans balking at the cost of the package. The Senate failed to move forward on a version of the bill last week that cost $118 billion and added approximately $60 billion to the deficit.

  • As Law Takes Effect, Obama Gives Insurers a Warning, The New York Times | June 22, 2010

    President Obama, whose vilification of insurers helped push a landmark health care overhaul through Congress, plans to sternly warn industry executives at a White House meeting on Tuesday against imposing hefty rate increases in anticipation of tightening regulation under the new law, administration officials said Monday.

  • Obama to Announce Details on Health-Law Enforcement, USA Today | June 22, 2010

    President Obama is revealing details of how the government will enforce the health overhaul law, an announcement expected to focus on how insurance companies must treat consumers.