Posts Tagged ‘Progressive Party’

Sebelius Warns Healthcare Insurers to Stop Looking for Loopholes

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

Healthcare insurers’ hunt for loopholes could result in the addition of a public option to reform legislation. Kathleen Sebelius, Secretary of Health and Human Services, has warned insurance companies to stop hunting for loopholes as a way to get around complying with healthcare reform.  Additionally, Sebelius intends to write regulations to assure that all insurers cover children with pre-existing conditions, even though some companies are adamant that this is not one of the new law’s requirements.

“The American people debated and discussed health insurance reform for more than a year.  Congress and the President have acted.  Now is not the time to search for non-existent loopholes that preserve a broken system,” Sebelius wrote in a letter to insurance industry lobbyist Karen Ignagni.

President Obama stressed the ban on denying children with pre-existing conditions as a focus of his argument during the reform fight.  His position is that children should be protected almost immediately after the bill becomes law – in this case, next September.  The insurance companies claim they don’t have to cover children with pre-existing conditions until 2014.

The insurers’ revolt over this presumed loophole could mean that progressive Democrats will reconsider adding a robust public option to the law.  The insurance companies’ threat to turn down sick kids makes the case to include a public option significantly more credible.

Theodore Roosevelt Was Bullish on Healthcare Insurance

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

The battle for national healthcare insurance is not new and goes back almost a to the era of President Theodore Roosevelt.
In opening remarks at the March 5 White House conference on healthcare, President Obama gave credit to Roosevelt when he noted that “The problems we face today are a direct consequence of actions that we failed to take yesterday. Since Teddy Roosevelt first called for reform nearly a century ago, we have talked and we have tinkered. We have tried and fallen short, we’ve stalled for time, and again we have failed to act because of Washington politics or industry lobbying.”

071011_nobel_roosevelt_vmed12p_widecPresident Theodore Roosevelt lived during what was known as the Progressive Era. A proponent of health insurance, he believed that a country could be strong only if its people were healthy. Roosevelt’s successors were conservatives, who postponed the kind of leadership that might have involved the government more extensively in managing the nation’s social welfare.

One plank in the Progressive Party 1912 platform – when Roosevelt was the party’s candidate for president — was “The protection of home life against the hazards of sickness, irregular employment and old age through the adoption of a system of social insurance adapted to American use.” The proposed health service was local, not centralized, with employers contributing one third of the cost and workers contributing two-thirds.