
The Super Massive Black Hole at the Center of our Galaxy
Back on May 18, 2009, Perry Bacon Jr. participated as the Washington Post’s representative in their Post Politics Hour discussion. At one point during that discussion Mr. Bacon was asked about single-payer health coverage and this was his response:
Perry Bacon Jr.: The Post is not covering single-payer (like the rest of the media) because the President of the United States has repeatedly ruled it out as an option. I wrote recently about a meeting he had with some House Democrats who were pushing the issue and he again said no
So there you have it – our media corporations are censoring information crucial to the public discussion about health care reform simply because the government doesn’t support it.
Whether this censorship is self-censorship by our corporate controlled media or whether it’s due to government pressure is unknown. But the results are clear – rather than reporting all of the facts to the public, our establishment media is instead tailoring it’s reporting to support the president’s view on health care just like they’ve been tailoring their reporting to fit the president’s view that there should be no criminal prosecutions for torture.
Today the Washington Post continues their policy of not reporting about single-payer health care. Not only didn’t they mention single-payer health care in the Shailagh Murray/Ceci Connolly piece about Senator Max Baucus but because they didn’t, they out and out lied to their readers about what they call "the Baucus approach to health care reform."
For Baucus, Health Care is the Issue of a Lifetime
Legislation Could Define His Career, His Party.
The Washington Post says in the above headline that health care is the issue of a lifetime for Senator Baucus. That may be, but for average Americans, the health care reform debate is not about selfishly polishing our legacy or defining our career, it’s about getting quality, affordable health care where we are not at the mercy of the greedy health insurance industry. And unlike Mr. Baucus, for some Americans this truly is an issue of a lifetime – their lifetime- a lifetime that frequently gets cut short because of the greed of others. In view of the seriousness of this issue for so many average Americans it is especially galling to see the Post deliberately lie about and hide key facts in this article.
The majority of the Murray/Connolly article attempts to rehabilitate the well deserved, bad reputation that Democratic Senator, Max Baucus has earned for not supporting Democratic Party principles on high profile issues. Murray and Connolly actually go out of their way in their piece to give readers the impression that Senator Baucus is a western maverick who gets in trouble with his party only because he sticks to principle and a belief in bi-partisanship. They of course fail to tell the readers that Senator Baucus is a darling of the health care insurance and pharmaceutical industries and that he has received enormous amounts of campaign donations from these players because of his strong support for their agenda – you know something that readers might want to know about when deciding whether they should believe what he says about health care reform issues.
But leaving out relevant facts about Senator Baucus’ background is a small lie of omission compared with the blatant lie told by the Post about "the Baucus approach to health care reform." That lie is truly a whopper.
For more than a year, Baucus has schooled himself — and many on the committee — on the daunting complexities of the U.S. health-care system, a sector that represents one-sixth of the economy. His approach has been to pull together stakeholders and hold them as long as possible; no idea is ruled out, no policy change dismissed.
This statement by Murray and Connolly about the Baucus "approach" that was approved for publication by the Post is just factually false. In fact, it’s a bald-faced lie. Max Baucus ruled out the idea/policy change of a single-payer system for health care before the discussion even began. Not only did he rule out the idea but he and the rest of the Committee made sure that not one representative who supported the idea of single-payer, that incidentally the majority of the public supports, would even be allowed to sit on the panel of so called “stakeholders” who testified before the Committee.
But these groups had a seat at the table:
The insurance industry was at the table.
The Business Roundtable was at the table.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce was at the table.
Blue Cross Blue Shield was at the table.
The Hertiage Foundation was at the table
Corporate liberals like Andy Stern, Ron Pollack, and AARP were at the table.
Baucus and his Committee, like the Washington Post, were determined that the pubic would not even so much as hear about the idea of single-payer much less allow it to be given fair consideration in the debate to reform health care.
When nurses and doctors protested this undemocratic exclusion of not having a spokesperson, who supported the single-payer view, represented on the Baucus health care reform panel the Washington Post didn’t even bother to run their own story about it. Instead they ran a small AP piece that was hostile to single-payer (they characterized it as “government run” health care) that gave very few details about what actually happened and why. And now today the Post is once again failing to inform their readers about relevant facts because of their policy not to report on single-payer.
Max Baucus excludes single-payer representatives from having a seat at the table for discussion on health care reform and instead of being challenged by the Washington Post, as he should have been, he is awarded with a puff piece by them designed to enhance his reputation because the Post sees itself not as a watchdog for the public but as a propaganda mouthpiece for the president’s “protect the insurance industry” agenda. And sadly, the Post is not alone. The majority of our establishment media are doing the exact same thing, as this study by FAIR documents so clearly..
The establishment media censorship of single-payer is more in line with the kind of propaganda we’d expect from Pravda then it is with what we’d expect from a FREE PRESS that historically prided itself on serving the democratic principle of the public’s right to know. In the Murray/Connolly Washington Post piece today the readers are deliberately lied to about Max Baucus in order to continue with the Post’s policy of not reporting about single-payer. For a country like the United States, that fancies itself as the world’s leading democracy, fully capable of spreading democracy around the world, this is an absolute disgrace.
Cross posted at Democracity
Update: I also found this hilarious yet sadly depressing chat answer in another Washington Post discussion where Garance Fanke-Ruta refers a questioner from Princeton (who’s asking about single-payer) to Ceci’s Connolly’s blog. Yeah, the very same Ceci Connolly who helped write today’s Max Baucus piece where she and Murray lied about "the Baucus approach to health care reform because it’s Washington Post policy not to report on single-payer."
Princeton, N.J.: You may think single-payer health care has no chance. But this will be a self-fulfilling prophecy if the facts are not available to the people. (YUP!)
We see article after article on process, but never any discussion of content. Since the wealthy health insurance industry has the power to suppress the facts, we only have the media, you, to get the truth out.
Garance Franke-Ruta: Thanks for your faith in the power of the fourth estate! (Faith in the Power of the fourth estate? Really? You’ve got to be kidding me, right?) One good place to get more of the substance of the debate is our new Health Reform 2009 aggregating page and Ceci Connolly’s Daily Dose blog:
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/health-care-reform/



21 Comments







Recommended. Thanks. Ugh.
great post! thank you.
The ‘message’ that WaPO serves the interests of the political parties abnd has as a very low priority informing the public and that the NYTimes does the same and adds another ‘boss’ in Wall Street needs to be pointed out repeatedly.
Let me suggest all that read this diary go and view this ; It’s an interview with the former Congressman Jim Leach (him of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act).
It’s titled “Congress, Globalization, and the Economic Crisis” and just one of the interesting points he makes compares Presidential politics with Congressional politics and how the primaries truly restrict the voice of U.S. citizens in their elections.
i guess what bothers me more than the wapo is that so-called progressive groups like hcan seem just as committed to keeping single payer from being seriously considered.
p.s i had skipped the leach podcast (i thought it would just piss me off), but now plan to give it a listen based on your recommendation.
It may actually be this interview
http://www.uctv.tv/search-deta…..owID=16385
Where he spells out the minimal input voters have for candidates during primaries; both are interesting in that they show the ‘other side’ and address systemic failings.
Worse, the public option groups deliberately sow confusion by implying (or in the case of Howard Dean, actually saying) that a “public plan” is synonymous with single payer. That’s the one topic I wish Moyers had spent an extra minute or two clarifying — Himmelstein’s refutation of public- option arguments zipped by a little too quickly.
HCAN and allies (including Obama, I’m afraid) also pull a fast one with respect to the virtues of “choice” — deliberately blurring the distinction between choice of provider and choice of insurer.
In its purest (eg, Canadian-style) form, single payer would eliminate choice of insurers but expand choice of providers, by eliminating the concept of “out-of-network.”
Who among us actually cares about choice of insurer? What we want is choice of provider and quality care, funded generously and equitably, under a system where we can’t go broke if we get sick, which in turns requires that insurers and investors can’t get rich off the undertreatment of our infirmities.
Who among us actually desires a comparison shopping spree among competing health insurance plans, weighing premium price against the gamble of death or penury lurking in the thousands of incomprehensible words of fine print?
A truly public plan would win hands down and obliterate private insurance and therefore the chimera of “choice.” But the Schumers and Baucuses are not about to let that happen. Instead, any public plan they arrive at will come pre-hobbled so as to compete on a “level playing field” with private insurers.
And so our leaders will proudly boast of their beneficence in offering us a choice among multiple junk plans.
It’s like a rapist claiming high ethical standards by letting the victim choose which orifice to have violated.
sowing confusion, intentionally or not, has been going on for some time.
from my pov, it started with the choice of name: hcan – health care for americans now!, when the name of the group advocating single payer was healthcare now. other stuff: continually saying they support obama’s plan and we should too when there is no “obama’s plan” to evaluate let alone support. reports from the ground like this:
http://healthcareil.org/piperm…..00107.html
but the worst aspect imo is not just that single payer option is never mentioned but more generally there seems to be an unwillingness to discuss policy options comprehensively or in any detail. not even their own – i have yet to get one hcan supporter to discuss the details of how the plan(s) they support would work (so that one may evaluate the pros and cons of things like how much would it cost, what regulation would be required, who would be covered, who would be helped and harmed, etc). what this does is block a real public discussion to advance our understanding of the policy issues as stake.
all this effort to keep single payer (and indeed a real policy discussion) off the table has the appearance, to me at least, of attempting to contribute to the confusion that has been most recently exemplified by dean’s conflation of single payer with the so-called public option.
some background here:
http://www.pnhp.org/blog/2008/…..lly-about/
http://www.pnhp.org/blog/2008/…..stened-to/
Highly recommended. That the WaPo could publish such an obvious fluff piece as America begins our national debate on health care, full of lies and omissions, is really shocking. I’m amazed at my capacity to be shocked by their kowtowing to the powers-that-be, but this article really stretched the limits.
No mention of single-payer, while claiming all options were on the table.
No mention — none!! — of the health insurance/care industries’ huge contributions to Baucus throughout his career.
If the insurance companies get their way, we could end up with a health insurance mandate with no relief as to choice or premiums or high deductibles and all the other drawbacks to the present system. Imagine a law that said everyone had to buy health insurance from one of the companies represented or else face a penalty added to your income tax. when I watched the Bachus hearings, it was focused on protecting profits (the phony level playing field argument) and mandates to force everyone into buying a policy. Very little focus on regulating premiums to make them affordable or making sure the policies covered what needs to be covered.
If attention is not paid, we could easily end up with something far more expensive and unaffordable than what we have now. But profits would be guaranteed…not coverage or care. Change we don’t need.
I love your Freudian slip and misspelling Baucus as Bachus, god of inebriation.
Excellent post. The Washington Post is primarily propaganda for the oligarchs.
Max is having listening forums here in Montana. His staffers seemed to forget to invite single payer advocates. Well, we didn’t. They will be there. Fight back people. Show up to these deals and demand single payer.
Also, does anybody know why paid SEIU organizers are on these panels pitching Max’s plan?
Any chance you or your peeps can cover those meetings in a diary (or diaries) here? I think you’ll have a lot of interested readers *g*
It might be that SEIU has MAJOR loans with BofA and Baucus is in bed with the financial industry as well as the ‘healthcare’ industry.
Sadly, your scenario sounds all too plausible.
also it might reflect different priorities and interests of the union leadership with the rank and file union members.
IMHO, that’s an irrelevant distinction. As on so many other issues, the president has done a complete flip to the industry’s side on the healthcare issue, specifically to the side of the insurance industry on the matter of single-payer insurance. At 1:10 in the Himmelstein/Wolf video at Bill Moyers’ website, you’ll see the Obama of old, who knew that single-payer was the only way to go. At 17:30 in that video, you’ll see a spineless cynic babbling the nonsense that his corporate masters have paid him to babble: single-payer would be too disruptive.
I strongly recommend that entire video as well as the one of Donna Smith at the same site. Both are well worth the time required to watch them.
that was an awesome program – bill moyers rocks!
pmorlan, thanks for this great post.
Thanks. While I’m happy to have an interesting post I wish these people would stop giving us such terrible things to write about. I was stunned when I read Perry Bacon Jr.’s comment about why the Post and other media outlets weren’t covering single-payer. I was stunned, not because I didn’t know that they were doing this but that they were so brazen about admitting it and even posting it for all to see on their website.
(Hope that last analogy didn’t drive folks away.)
The accommodationist core of the HCAN coalition has been sucking up to Baucus from the get-go and more recently has treated Chuck Schumer as the stalwart defender of a “robust” public option. SEIU’s current actions strike me as just more of the same.