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DEMOCRATIC
SOCIALISTS
OF
AMERICA
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June 8,
2009
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NEWS FROM DSA |
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Take Action on Health Care
The battle for
universal health care legislation is at a critical point. In the House of
Representatives, draft legislation will be made public next week and hearings
are intended to start the week of June 22, concluding in early July. House
committees will begin writing legislation the week of July 13, and the House
leadership intends to put legislation before the full chamber for floor
consideration the week of July 27. A Senate schedule is not available, but is
expected to be very similar, with the leadership of both branches of Congress
wanting a national health care bill passed by the August recess. Reconciliation
of the House and Senate versions of the health care bill will be taken up
when Congress reconvenes after Labor Day.
The rhetorical battle over the issues will
be similar in both the Senate and the House. Given that the House is more
liberal, we expect the strongest bill to emerge in the House, yet we dare not
ignore any aspect of this legislative struggle.
The Senate battle likely will get more
media coverage because of the high-profile leaders associated with contrasting
versions of health care reform. Senate Finance Committee chair Max Baucus
(D-Montana) is pushing an insurance industry friendly approach. Sen. Ted Kennedy
is pushing a more liberal bill containing a public option intended to be
competitive with private, for-profit insurers Proponents of the single-payer
approach that DSA favors have been excluded from the Senate
process.
DSA's National Political Committee met
this past weekend and approved the following
statement:
On
the Struggle for Universal Health Care
DSA reaffirms its support for single-payer health
insurance as the most just, cost-effective and rational method for creating a
universal health-care system in the United States. In the House of
Representatives, John Conyers has introduced H.R.676, the Expanded and
Improved Medicare for All Act. This bill has 77 co-sponsors. In
the Senate, Bernie Sanders has introduced S.703, the American Health
Security Act of 2009, his bill has not yet attracted co-sponsors.
These two pieces of legislation take different approaches to universal health
insurance, but both take for-profit insurance companies out of the picture. DSA
asks our locals to contact their senators and representatives, and encourage
them to co-sponsor these bills if they have not already done so.
DSA notes with dismay that the current discussions
and hearings in Congress relating to national health insurance have excluded
single-payer health insurance from the discussion. The plans under
discussion presume a large role for the existing insurance industry; possibly,
in competition with a Medicare-like public option. We strongly support single
payer over these other alternatives. In particular, we feel it is vitally
important to include supporters of single payer in the discussion around all
possible plans, and condemn the exclusion of these voices in both President
Obama?s Health Care Summit and in the hearings of the Senate Finance
Committee. Particularly, in the discussions of the public options, the
ideas and experience of health-care professionals committed to the single-payer
approach would provide essential input.
Even taking the above into account, the
current political situation provides the best opportunity for serious
health-care reform in a generation. We do not accept the position that unless we
get everything we want, we are willing to see that opportunity disappear.
We do believe, however, that the insurance industry is powerful enough that the
current political dynamic could result in a ?health care reform? that is, in
fact, worse than nothing at all, because it would create a public plan that
is designed to fail.
Therefore, even while we do everything we can to
ensure that single payer gets a fair hearing, we must state our minimum
requirements for possible alternatives to single-payer health insurance.
Our minimum position is that any plan must include a strong
public-provision component, one that can compete with the private
insurance options. In evaluating proposed plans, the devil is,
unfortunately, in the details. Among the criteria to be considered:
Short of these provisions, whatever comes out of
Congress will not be real reform. Health care is a human right and must be
available to all without economic barriers.
DSA recognizes that there is strong support for a
single-payer plan in several states. In fact, California would have a
single-payer system today if Senate Bill 840 had not been vetoed by Gov.
Schwarzenegger. Therefore, DSA insists on an
opt-out provision from any national plan that would allow individual
states to set up their own single-player plans and to use Medicare, Medicaid and
similar federal funds allocated within the state in that state plan.
In summary, DSA asks our locals and activists to
engage in the following activities in support of health-care
reform:
National
healthcare has been a key demand of the American left since before the New Deal.
None of us can afford to let this moment pass without taking some action to
support universal health care coverage. I urge every DSA member to take
action and press like-minded friends and associates to take action. Included in
this message are links to the members of the Senate Finance Committee. Please
take the time to send them a message. I have also included a link to the House of Representatives so that you can
contact your own congressional district representative,
too.
Email
campaigns are important, but don't limit yourself to that. Look for an
opportunity to write a letter to the editor or to urge other organizations with
which you work to join in this fight. The last opportunity to pass
meaningful universal health care legislation failed in 1993. We cannot let
the insurance companies beat us again.
Here is the list of members of the Senate Finance Committee.
Just click on the senator's name to begin writing your message.
In solidarity,
Frank Llewellyn
National Director
P.S.With the help of DSA Vice-Chair Steve Max, we have developed
a short slide show on health care that makes the case for single-payer as well
as the public option. You can use it to review the arguments for our approach
and as a tool to convince others. Please help ensure that it is widely
distributed. To view the slide show click here.
P.P.S. Through an electronic glitch many of you received a message on
health care intended just for local DSA and YDS activists. Rest assured that I
am not calling everyone on this list, as much as I might want to, there are just
too many of you. My apologies for the extra email.
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Paid for by Democratic
Socialists of America, 75 Maiden Lane, Suite 505, New York, NY 10038.
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