On the heels of an explosive political document that has been hitting millions of mailboxes of potential voters— third-quarter 401(k) statements showing how much the Wall Street meltdown has hurt individual retirement savings—another potential game-changer is beginning to brew in employee conference rooms and lunch halls: the annual open enrollment sessions for health insurance benefits.
When workers hear—as I did earlier today—how much their health insurance premiums are about to rise or what kind of compromises in coverage they will have to accept to keep them from going even higher, a lot of them will be reminded just how hazardous the right-wing plans to remake health care embraced by Sen. John McCain—highlighted in an opinion-page ad by the Institute for America’s Future in The New York Times on Tuesday— will be to their health.
I just got word today that the insurance premium for the health insurance plan my employer uses will go up almost 17 percent. That will mean a total premium of $463 for individual coverage and $1,296 for family coverage. The premium increase, we were told, would have been closer to 25 percent if we had not agreed to accept up to 50 percent higher co-payments for prescription drugs, which means that a prescription drug will cost us as much as $60 for a 30-day supply.
A McClatchy Newspaper report today says that "many of the 158 million Americans who receive employer-based health insurance can expect to pay more of the costs" of their health insurance. Figures from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation actually indicate that double-digit premium increases may be unusual. Nonetheless, premiums are still about double what they were in 1999, with a family policy averaging $12,680 per year. That repost also notes that in 2008, 18 percent of employees were covered by a health plan that cost at least 20 percent more than the average.
It is in this environment that Sen. John McCain is trying to sell his YOYO (you’re on your own) insurance plan, which he appears to have modified in recent days in the wake of stinging attacks from a number of fronts, particularly the Obama-Biden presidential campaign. As the plan was originally conceived, individuals would receive a $2,500 tax credit and families would receive a $5,000 tax credit. That would have been paid for by ending the employer tax deduction for health insurance costs and taxing as income the value of health insurance benefits employees receive. As Sen. Barack Obama noted in the second presidential debate, "what one hand giveth, the other hand taketh away."
Conservative proponents of this idea expect many employers facing higher taxes to drop their health insurance plans, which would force workers to fend for themselves in the private market, where they would not have the advantage of being in a pool where someone is bargaining on their behalf. In that environment, costs would logically be higher or coverage skimpier—that is, if they could get coverage at all. For those with pre-existing conditions that would freeze them out of the private market, McCain offers the vague promise that he will "work with governors to develop a best practice model that states can follow" to set up some coverage of last resort, with assistance for people with incomes "below a certain level."
McCain’s website now says that under his plan employers "will continue to deduct the cost of health insurance they provide to employees" (and it adds the confusing statement that "payroll taxes will be protected from taxes" under the McCain plan). That statement should alarm deficit hawks—which McCain used to be back in the day—for without the revenue from the health insurance tax there is nothing on the table to offset a multibillion-dollar drain on the Treasury. The media should ask McCain asked explicitly about this.
But, most importantly, the fact that the McCain plan appears otherwise intact should alarm ordinary Americans, because for them this simply won’t work in their favor.
One reason is because McCain has made it clear that he is not interested in imposing mandates on the health care industry that could help control cost increases or ensure coverage. In fact, by allowing insurance companies to market across state lines, McCain sets the stage for a race to the regulatory bottom that would parallel the migration of banks and credit card companies to low-regulation states starting in the late 1970s. What’s being sold now as consumer choice—people being able to shop across state lines for the best insurance deal—would quickly become consumer screwed, a world in which there would be few if any options beyond those offered by companies free to offer low-coverage, high-profit-margin policies.
The quality of the debate that has taken place on health care in the last few weeks of the campaign has not matched the severity of the problem. Some of that is understandable, given that the nation has been preoccupied with a Depression-level economic crisis. But the country has lived in the midst of what is in effect a health-care recession for years now—roughly 47 million people uninsured, tens of millions more underinsured, and the rest facing increases that persistently outpace the rate of inflation. All this while the scary bogeyman of government has been told to sit on the sidelines and watch as health care lobbyists dictate the rules.
But I’ve got a sheet of paper with a 17-percent insurance premium increase on it and I’m mad. And I need a better answer than a pledge to reform health care "as we have done in banking." In fact, we all do.



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zed
close the book on McShorty …period
I haven’t had a raise in years. It all goes to benefits. This year, out of pocket on health care plus no raise.
Thank you for this, Isaiah. We really need to pound on this, ordinary Americans are going to see their health care benefits dwindle while expenses go up.
Oh, and please digg
Dugg your Digg Egreious!!
And McCain’s health care promise… it is nothing but a golden EGG for the Health Cate Insurance Companies. Just another Rethuglian give away bonanza for the Rich!!!
Slam it shut! — zedlyes.
:( for that, but we’ll always have Paraguay. :)
ok, so I happen to detest him myself, but an endorsement from Colin Powell will be the “nail – meet coffin” moment.
imo, ymmv, wtf, etc…….
Evening, all-
I think, barring something really big and unexpected, McCain is done. This plan will recede into history as another bad idea by a failed candidate.
Loo Hoo and Demi, I know it was a while back, but I would love to read a collaborative diary by you guys on your visit with Issa’s staff.
Insurance companies get money from us and invest in safe investments I’m not sure what they think is safe the thing is the market is down the Insurance companies investments have tanked AND NOW THE TAX PAYERS ARE STUCK PAYING AGAIN!
The WaPo endorsed Obama in tomorrow’s paper.
McCain & Obama at event together on CNN
cool.
now that mccain is done, i hope obama starts feeling the pressure because his plan won’t cut it.
You think narrow-minded voters will care what Powell has to say, or not? Sorry, I can’t tell.
rut roh, I don’t have any Idea where that is.
We used to have an archive here, maybe we can find the post of Christy’s last summer, September I think.
Mc Cain with some genuine nice things about Obama. . .really.
Oh, my husband just said he’s got something on his desktop of mine called Issa.
Are the insurance companies going to ask their CEOs, Executives, Board of Directors etc to give back their years of bonuses and stock options for their
PaperPonziFictionalall of the above profits and really, really bad business advice?Will they resign? Will Congress force them to resign before they get the cash?
This is the best I’ve ever seen of Senator McCain.
I still think it’s his handlers that sank him, just like Kerry.
that’s better than i got – my insurance carrier changed policies on us (and didn’t bother to tell us) and when i went to the pick my script (for 30 days), the bill was over $300 – because the new policy only paid %50 percent. needless to say, i went home without it. it eventually got worked out (fingers crossed) and i was permitted to change plans (for more $ ‘natch) so that i once again have coverage.
and i’m lucky, because i live in MA.
here’s hoping that progressives will start pushing for single payer and not the crappy “let’s not piss off the insurance companies too much” proposals we’ve been seeing.
Less so than last night, but still creepy to me.
Less blinking, but still doing so.
This shows us what They Are About.
These inside the belt -thinkaboutit- way are all in bed with each other.
couldn’t be that they are people could it?
You think narrow-minded voters will care what Powell has to say, or not?
Narrow-minded supporters (i.e. Teh Base)? No.
Former Military Superman (spit) giving Obama CIC cred? Could pull in two or three points via the votes of a few of the still somewhat sane Repub vote (white male and security moms) and the dreaded, but terribly important, numb-skull “undecideds”.
Tack on another 2 or 3 points for Obama, and it’s positively all over but the bleating.
(standard disclaimers *here*)
Obama up on MSNBC>
OT:
Iseman cometh clean:
“I did not have a sexual relationship with
that manSenator McCain”I want that Micheal Moore film “Sicko ” on National TV before Obama tries to change Healthcare, we need a plan, we need to prepare the ground first and debate Obama’s plan from the Left.
Otherwise the GOP will insist that we compromise with them and we end up with half Obama’s half McCain’s plan.
I would prefer the Debate was between Obama’s plan and Michael Moore.
Soviet Foreign Commissar Molotov, in an air-raid shelter in Berlin, upon being told by Ribbentrop that Britain was defeated: “Then whose bombs are these from whom we are sheltering?”
Can’t counterattack until the battle is won on 11/4. That’s looking pretty hopeful, re the decline of McCain…so, imo, the time is now to plan how to give Obama the political cover to push the agenda as far as possible, and pressure from the left to keep him on his toes. “I agree with you-now go out there and make me do it”, as FDR said.
The corporatist impending loss on 11/4 will be the rupture in his lines. At which point, we should be positioned to exploit that as quickly, massively, and seamlessly as possible. Roll up the flanks, and push the window of what is possible, as quickly as possible.
Reverse Shock Doctrine.
Yes, I know People. I’m one.
THEY huh
Mc Cain with some genuine nice things about Obama. . .really.
what – are they within punching distance of each other?
McInsane can’t say the shit to Obama’s face that he’ll be saying again first thing tomorrow morning, because, at heart, he’s a cowardly puke.
I was referring to the people in the room listening to Barak Obama right now.
What?
That is what Our Job should be:)
“Who would have thought a cross dressing republican could not get the nomination. Tough primary there huh John?”
NOthing but a bishop between them.
I totally agree. If McCain had run the campaign he said, and the kind I think everyone expected, I think we’d be looking at a different race. But this “deny reality and smear Obama” plan has not served McCain or the nation well.
Kinda sad, really. I miss the John McCain I used to respect so much.
Yea, but the purists here won’t like that a bit. Tough shit.
He had some good jokes.
Serious and respectful question – what did you like about him?
that’s not the shock doctrine – which relies on having the proposal/idea at hand (we do) and then using it immediately when the shock occurs.
i get that you don’t want to criticize obama until after the election – i just don’t agree because i don’t see how we have any leverage at all then. i sure hope you know what you are talking about on this one, because i’d really like to be proven wrong this time.
My husband works for a small company of about 35 people which provides health ensurance for it’s employees. Becasue they chose to do the right thing and cover pre-existing conditions the cost is around $15,000/family. This is with a $1000 individual deductible and a $5000 family deductible. By McCain’s standard this is a “cadillac” policy as it costs more than the national average of $12,680/family.
Our insurance has 4 tiers of drug coverage, with the cheapest being the generics which you can get at a better price at Walgreens or CVS or a grocery store. The next level is $50, then $90, then $130 for a 1 month prescription. In addition, any time one of our doctors prescribes a level 3 or 4 drug, the insurance rejects the claim and requires a cheaper drug therapy be substituted first to see if it is effective. They fall back on “standard treatment” protocols that according to our doctors are outdated by decades. When the insurance company is allowed to second guess the doctor as to best established practices, effective treatment is delayed and medical conditions can worsen leading to even more serious complications. And all this with a “cadillac” plan. Good luck to everyone staying alive if you ever need serious healthcare.
Health insureance does not equal health care.
P.S. Out insurance went up 25% two years ago as my husband’s company decided to not change the policy coverage. The insurance company paid out in claims, 43% of the money that my husband’s company paid for their plan that year. That means that subtracting overhead of around 20%, 37% profit was just not sufficient for the insurance company. This year, our benefits have been cut to keeep the cost contained (at a mere $15,000/yr).
I expect that next year the insurance companies will raise rates again. Especially if the market tanks on horrible Christmas sales because the insurance companies will lose even more then on their investments.
Of course they will blame Obama then for the rate increase and the Media will be front page with the story.
Not some lone blog post.
No offense Isaiah, heck I like it this way I like getting news the MSM doesn’t cover obviously I’m not going to invest in insurance companies thanks to this post for a long while:)
I don’t think anyone who, as a child, lost loved ones in Vietnam and then watched those POW’s get off that plane could ever help but give those men a whole lot of goodwill and leeway-and later, though my politics diverged wildly, I respected the fact that he did largely shoot it straight, right up till 2004 when he allowed as to how he would consider running with Kerry.
I agreed with him on little, but as an American, I deeply respected him nonetheless. This campaign has been very hard for me.
What’s good for the goose, is good for the gander.
I would like it if the commenters here all allowed the Lake to be a place where not only do we share information about politics, and from time to time a hug, but also opinions of all folks, especially ones who have been here a long time and share a relationship with other long timers.
I would like to see the main legislative ideas for the Congress, given a Democratic sweep. I’m sure the plan is already written. I have criticized Obama consistently, and will continue without rest after the election. I don’t see Obama vetoing much passed by a new, revitalized Congress, especially if it has broad public support and the threat of unrest from the left.
Thank you for your answer. I respect your thoughts. I really knew little about him personally until he ran for Prez the first time. It appears that he has always had an anger problem. He seriously has gone off track in the last few years. It’s too bad.
(demi) have another hug from me. i’m still overjoyed to know that you are safe.
One particularly effective way, IMO, to pressure Obama will be not direct pressure from the left, but pressure from Congressmembers who are facing primary challenges from the left. They’ll need his help, and that means consideration of the reasons for the challenge.
not trying to give you a hard time rond, i just remember all the similar promises i got (not from you) before the 2006 elections about how we were going to hold the dems in congress accountable. and we did a pretty sucky job of that – if anything the 110th congress was worse than the 109th. and i got a lot of grief along the way for calling the pelosi and others out when i thought they were fucking up.
i’m feeling like charlie brown right now – being told this time it will be different. and while i really, really hope so… i just don’t see why it should unless we make it different.
obama’s crappy health plan (and lack of progressive push back) is one of the things that sets me off. will try to leave it now, at least for the rest of the evening.
Hey, hey. You’re making me blush, here.
To what extent does McCain feel he is “owed the Presidency” and relies upon his service as a POW as that entitlement? Sorry Ron, but McCain has always been about himself. America be damned.
I think BMAZ is right. Those of us who know him hold him in contempt. That is the Real McCain. The other was a carefully crafted public persona.
rond – the Ds are going to have control. they are going to have k street in their pocket. they are going to need us less than ever. unless things change dramatically, we’ll be lucky if we can threaten a couple of incumbents. how will that put any pressure whatsoever on obama? the congressmembers we threaten won’t need to actually get good policies passed, all they will need is to be permitted to vote with us on some of the many manufactured cosmetic votes (as we’ve seen the past two years).
this is why i’m frustrated – i’ve yet to see any plan / strategy that will put pressure on obama after he is elected. it all seems like wishful thinking to me.
again, i really hope to be proven wrong and will be so happy to be reminded multiple times a day about how wrong i was. but what if i’m not wrong?
(((selise)))
The process of getting what we want may be incremental, and take a long time…but at least, by defeating McCain, we have stemmed the tide, and can now begin the real war. It took a long time to get this F’d up, and will be a Herculean battle to fix. This is the first victory in a long war, and there will be reversals and setbacks. We cannot let that dispirit or demoralize us-we fight for the essential rightness of the cause.
Oh, hell.
(((selise)))
If you’re right, I’ll be right there next to you.
Damn, you two are going to make me cry.
Okay, I’m still a little emotional over Everything, but still. F’ing A! The Cause!
thanks (((rond))) – there are only two things that i can think of that ever demoralize me – one is when we treat each other badly and the other is when i think we’re being had by the dem party leadership and we don’t (or won’t) see it. the thought that obama may not be on our side, that he won’t stem the tide, that he will make things worse (as i think clinton did) does not faze me so much.
I think he feels he is owed the Presidency the same way Dole did, and for the same reason-it’s his turn. I also think his larger reason involves measuring up to his father and grandfather, as well as atonement for those things he said and signed as a POW. It may have been a persona, but it was the one that shaped my perception of him. I have been sad to see it unravel, and though I always wanted him to lose, I never wanted to see him destroyed.
counting on it. *g*
still hoping i’m wrong though.
that’s the good stuff. we do share a cause even when we see different ways of fighting for it.
gotta go work on some other stuff now – thanks to you and rond for cheering me up.
How he handles the defeat will tell us what kind of man he is way down inside. He has a chance to redeem himself but he may have gone so far down the road that he can’t go back.
Clinton was an interruption of the plan-Bush 92, Dole 96, Bush 2000 & 04, and so on. As much as Clinton screwed things up, I can’t help but think we would have been much worse off without him
Nah, McCain has firmly planted the anchor around his own neck. He has spent an entire career trying to be the maverick burning both ends of the candle. It caught up with him. As far as I’m concerned he can sink or swim.
Kerry? You are probably right about his handlers.
The weakness of Private Insurance for healthcare and Obama’s plan to a lesser extent is that when the market goes down and people have less money and are losing their jobs and can afford to pay higher insurance costs the least.
Well that is exactly when Insurance Companies who have invested their money and lost in a down economy need to raise what they charge us for Health Insurance to cover their losses.
Not only is Government Health Insurance Cheaper it is immune from a sudden loss in the market.
Sure tax revenues do go down in a bad economy but the government can cut spending in other areas like the military Star Wars program to offset the loss more than Private Insurance companies can cut spending or are willing to take back Lavish CEO pay for bad investment choices that contribute to a bad market.
Thanks for the answer. I value your opinions very highly. JC
not disagreeing – but i still think we were worse off at the end of his presidency than at the beginning. and that need not have been the case if i and others had not been distracted by the Rs crazy impeachment attempts and instead had focused on what clinton was doing.
“When the insurance company is allowed to second guess the doctor as to best established practices, effective treatment is delayed and medical conditions can worsen leading to even more serious complications.”
There was an interesting post (possibly on FDL) from a lawyer whose response to the insuraance companies was a standard:
“I always ask The Insurance Company who made the decision on care, and to send me a copy of their medical license, and when that person examined the insured (patient).”
Looks like a good standard response.
Must disagree. In ‘92, we were in deficit, recession, deeply fractured by racial divisions, watching the successful burial of Iran-Contra, the ignoring of the civil war in Afghanistan, the stationing of troops in Saudi Arabia, the deliberate gutting of the middle class, etc…the problems were legion. Eight years later, we were so comfortable that many people couldn’t see why Al Gore was better than George Bush.
Thank you very much…likewise.
clinton helped buried iran-contra, clinton kept the troops in saudi arabia (even though we had promised to remove them – and apparently that’s what radicalized obl et al.) in order to maintain a crushing sanctions regime aimed at the people of iraq and that killed hundreds of thousands (mostly children). clinton continued the gutting of the middle class and our manufacturing base with his trade polices (see nafta, wto, china trade). clinton’s telecommunications act deregulated the media and set the stage for the media consolidation we now have. under clinton the decision was taken (at the urging of his cabinet) to prevent the regulation of credit default swaps. under clinton the practice of extraordinary rendition was begun. clinton started a war without a un security council resolution and against the expressed wishes of our congress. (illegal wars anyone? wonder why george bush will never be held accountable for his own illegal war?). the pre-patriot act. setting the stage for nsa spying on the internet.
the list goes on and on, but it’s too depressing to continue. i can not think of one of our big problems today that does not have some roots in the clinton administration.
and the most depressing thing, imo, is how little most democrats know (or have an interest in knowing) about what clinton did.
I’m 75 yrs old and been under medicare since I was 62 my health
coverage is $96 a year and is paid from my SS.I pick my oun doctor
and my co-payment is $15 I see him once a year.I get 4 perscription
drugs a 90 day supply cost me $28.85.I honestly belive every man,
women & child should have this same coverage.Every person elected
to congress get FREE health coverage for them selves and their
families payed for by the tax payers.Now with a new pregressive
president and a filabuster proff congress we the people should
demand this type of coverage.
Of course Clinton helped bury Iran-Contra; as the Governor of Arkansas while the operation was running out of Mena, he was in it up to his eyeballs. The mechanics of imperial strategy are the same regardless of who is in power-the best one can hope for is that power will be exercised humanely, because all exercises of power are inherently ruthless. This is why Clinton kept that army in Saudi for as long as he could: in order to exercise veto power over the resources of the most valuable spot on Earth-the oil of the Persian Gulf, much as we now are going to keep an Army in Iraq for as long as possible, and for the very same reason. Likewise the NATO action in Kosovo, as stated up front by Wesley Clark, and which Clinton ignored until he was shamed publicly by Ellie Weisel. A devil’s advocate might say that Clinton’s deployment in the Mid East guaranteed stability for a decade, while UBL was radicalized long before. He might also say that the mechanics of globalization are the infrastructure for a transnational government, necessary to regulate transnational corporations. We are watching the condensation of a global state, and its birth pangs will be as real as those that occurred right here, during the westward expansion and the Industrial Revolution. American “manifest destiny” was brutal subjugation, but it also prevented a situation like that in Europe, which saw 2000 years of non-stop slaughter as competing states strove for mastery. All systems are either progressing or declining-there are no static conditions. I have no wish to defend Clinton, but it is necessary to point out that the Empire is, and a leader who pretends otherwise will not be effective for long. Cinton did seek to ensure that the rising tide at least lifted most boats, which in my mind left us far better off than we would have been in 2000 if we had had an uninterrupted string of neo-conservative rule. The morality of Princes is not the morality of the common person.
Above all, the Prince must be feared.