In headlines you never thought you’d see here, this is one of them. But today Senator Harry Reid delivered for the American people. He sent a bill to the CBO for scoring which includes a public option, and doesn’t include health insurance industry-favored triggers, which would basically enable the insurance industry to continue to increase premiums and squeeze the American middle class.
Individual states may be able to opt out of the public option. But that process will require state level politicians to take a stand against expanding access to health insurance and for continuing the broken system of insurers paying bonuses to employees who deny the sick the care they need. It’s unlikely that state-level politicians would take this path; and even if they do, voters have the ability to hold them accountable at the ballot box.
By taking this strong stand, over the objections of the White House and the powerful health insurance industry lobby, Harry Reid is ensuring that millions of Americans will be able to access the doctor. That cancer patients will no longer have to fight with their insurance company over unjust denials, and will instead be able to focus on beating their disease.
This won’t happen because of the specific provisions in the public option. But it’ll happen because who the American health care system is accountable to will fundamentally change if the Senate passes the health care bill that Senator Reid outlined this afternoon. As it is, insurers are accountable to Wall Street investment firms and big banks. These massive shareholders increase their own dividends by relentlessly pressuring big insurers to cut expenses–even when expenses are chemotherapy for a cancer patient.
If the Senate follows Senator Reid’s strong leadership on this issue, the system will be accountable to the people again. Don’t get me wrong, there will still be profits, and the salaries of insurance CEOs will still be obscene. Big insurance will be riddled with people who, in the words of Sen. Diane Feinstein (D-CA), have no moral compass. These people will try to get a leg up by knocking down the meekest among us.
But the system will not longer be accountable only to industry and Wall Street insiders. The moral component of insurance–that we all have an interest in spreading risk and sharing the burden for those of us who become ill–will not longer be an after-thought confined to college textbooks on actuarial science. Instead, the health care system will ultimately be accountable to the people.
If an insurance company rescinds a policy, denies a needed treatment, or otherwise makes life difficult for people suffering from life-threatening illnesses –and they all do this daily at the moment–they will be held accountable to elected officials, and not quarterly reports and the daily vacillation of stock prices. The insurance bureaucrat who is more worried about her own bonus than the morality of our health care system will no longer be the most powerful person in health care.
Patients, who currently don’t know where or how to appeal denials to, will have a clear path towards holding insurance executives accountable for their wrong doings: calling your Congressman. And that is the fundamental change that Senator Harry Reid is poised to bring about with his impressive, unforeseen, and brilliant leadership on this issue. Because of Harry Reid’s decision, millions of Americans will get to go to the doctor, thousands of doctors will no longer have to deal with insurance bureaucrats in some cubical thousands of miles away overruling their decision, and tens of thousands of lives that otherwise would’ve fallen through the cracks of our current health care system will be saved. Well done, Senator Reid. Well done.



10 Comments







Yes, he really did. Sign the petition thanking him: http://healthcareforamericanow.org/page/s/reid
Thanks. I just did.
Good points, and recommended. A little progress made today, and very welcome too. We can begin to see a little progressive power growing here, and that is a very heartening thing.
As much as I dislike Dodd. He must have squeezed Harries nuts long enough to do the job.
Old Harry being like Obama, I would give Him that much credit. A leader would have done it from the start.
This prez seems to be stepping back the Executive Power, and letting Congress step up – as it should. Prez Obama campaigned on Health Care Reform, but waited for Congress to wake up and do it’s job.
Bravo, Majority Leader Harry Reid!
What happens when the public finds out that there’s no option in it for them other than private insurers?
The next task is to expand access to the public option to all who wish to make that choice.
I’m not yet sure that we should be thanking Senator Reid. I might sign the petition that Jason gave us @ 1, but more to encourage him than to thank him.
Rachel Maddow just explained the bill Reid sent to the CBO as having a public option that is just one little step better than a trigger. It’ll only be available to the uninsured and only to them if they live in a state that hasn’t opted out.
That is, it’s an option for people who don’t have any options, so long as they happen to live in a state that hasn’t opted to take the option away.
Not much of a victory.
Your diary entry has inspired me to write ”Let’s not thank Senator Reid just yet.”
And you should also see letsgetitdone‘s “Sorry, Harry, It’s Not Enough Yet To Get Credit, Only Blame.”
Thanks, Knoxville. Seriously bag, I just don’t see this thank you yet.
Harry can do so much more than he has done. he can use reconciliation. he can use the nuclear option to get rid of the filibuster. He can support a much stronger PO. He can throw Lieberman out of the caucus.
We need to keep the pressure on him and not let up until he prioritizes the 45,000 annual deaths and one million annual bankruptcies resulting from our present non-system more highly that the continued existence of the insurance companies.
According to Pelosi’s office, access to the opt-out public option will not be limited to those who are without insurance otherwise.