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Sam Stein

The Huffington Post   stein@huffingtonpost.com

$40 Million Health Care Campaign Will Target Some Dems

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July 8, 2008 08:36 AM


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A consortium of progressive groups, think tanks, trade unions and activists are set to launch a $40 million health care campaign to prepare the ground for the next president to sign expanded care early in 2009.

The work of Health Care For America Now was first made public late last week. But the group, with Elizabeth Edwards as a figurehead, offered expanded insight into the details of its campaign during a meeting on Monday. In addition to spending $40 million -- $1.5 million of which will be put behind an initial ad buy (national TV, print, and online) -- the group will be sending organizers to 52 cities, blasting out emails to 5 million households, airing spots on MSNBC and CNN and submitting op-eds to major papers (officials hinted at the New York Times piece to come).

In addition, the campaign is going to take advantage of Moveon.org's massive data files to reach out to like-minded supporters and officials promised to work in Democratic and Republican districts alike.

"We'll have an organizer in the district of every Blue Dog Democrat," said HCAN campaign manager Richard Kirsch of the conservative Democrats.

"The focus of the campaign," he added, "is on national legislation. "This year, however, it is also a referendum: do you support quality, affordable, health care for all, or an alliance with the private insurance industry?"

Kirsch stressed repeatedly that the effort was legislative, not political. And, as such, the campaign will not offer direct criticism of John McCain's health care policy. Nor are there plans, at this point in time, to coordinate with Barack Obama -- who has stressed that he will make health care legislation a priority in the White House -- or Ted Kennedy -- who is reportedly set to relaunch a Senate effort to achieve universal care.

Asked whether the campaign's goals were at odds with those of Obama (whose plan does not, like Hillary Clinton's, rely on mandates), Kirsch stressed that the shared goal of providing a more comprehensive health care system outweighed the disagreements in preferred solution.

"The principles behind our campaign are similar to those Obama has," he said. "These are principles we've developed over many years and they make sense."

The campaign, which will be officially launched at the National Press Club today, is slated to last through the election and into the next administration, though Kirsch insisted that it was not a "long-term" institution. In the end, the goal -- either through influencing voter preferences or candidate positions -- is to get comprehensive health care legislation passed by 2009 and no later.

UPDATE: Greg Sargent at TPM, has the group's first ad.

 
 

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- salmo See Profile I'm a Fan of salmo

Good for you Elizabeth! Our prayers and our deepest admiration go with you. And, having heard about what you are doing, I'll be sending a check.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:05 PM on 07/08/2008
- DMHendrix See Profile I'm a Fan of DMHendrix

That was a great ad! Funny they used the "Magic 8 Ball" as the focus...I have thought many times that it must be the way that Bush makes decisions.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:08 PM on 07/08/2008
- UnbiasView See Profile I'm a Fan of UnbiasView

The Barack Obama Magic 8 Ball has been around for awhile:

http://www.ktlkfm.com/cc-common/hal/obama8ball/

Since Obama answers all questions with broad statements and no specifics it fits very well.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:35 PM on 07/08/2008
- CyberCitizen See Profile I'm a Fan of CyberCitizen

Thank you, Elizabeth, for doing the heavy lifting on behalf of all of us. Peace, prayers, and blessings to you and your family.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:04 PM on 07/08/2008
- bayside See Profile I'm a Fan of bayside

I trust Obama to do what he can to give us a good health plan. Our goal should be to get those blue dogs(Republican dems) out as soon as possible so he can..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:59 AM on 07/08/2008
- swift_goat_pet_for_truth See Profile I'm a Fan of swift_goat_pet_for_truth

Go get 'em, Liz Edwards.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:24 AM on 07/08/2008
- swift_goat_pet_for_truth See Profile I'm a Fan of swift_goat_pet_for_truth

IMHO HCAN would do better to try to influence large corporations to support a single payer system.

It is beyond me why GM, Ford, and the old airline, who constantly whine that legacy health care costs are killing them, do not support Medicare for all, which would take a LOT of their costs out of their products and really "even the playing field".

My only conclusion is that these companies would rather go bankrupt than support nationalized healthcare.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:23 AM on 07/08/2008
- JJeff88 See Profile I'm a Fan of JJeff88

Just wondering but, when Sen. Obama says that, if you can't be part of (or afford) an employer-based plan, you can join a plan 'just like the one I have as a Senator'", is that "default plan" a form of Single Payer coverage?

Further, if it turned out that this so-called "default option" proved effective and popular, wouldn't this raise the possibility that market forces would move even more individuals toward single payer?

I hope so.

The attack on single payer as "socialistic" is, in my opinion, off the charts on what I like to refer to as the "Bogosity Scale." We don't call the Federalized Highway System "socialized highways" or our military "socialized armed forces" or our local police force "socialized police."

Time to get real. Best way to save money is to eliminate the middle man (in this case: insurance companies and to some extent the pharmaceutical industry) from the system. I just hope Elizabeth Edwards and other Democratic leaders have the courage to do so.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:51 AM on 07/08/2008
- SCG See Profile I'm a Fan of SCG

add " socialized fire department " and "socialized public schools" to the list.

But again, I agree Obama's proposal has the potential. But it's sad the Democratic party ceedes the ground of the debate, before it has begun. I believe Truman advocated a single payer plan 50yrs ago, was he among the "fringe"? Was he unrealistic?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:38 AM on 07/08/2008
- IowaKid See Profile I'm a Fan of IowaKid

The pharmaceutical companies are in bed with the insurance companies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:18 AM on 07/08/2008
- stillfresh See Profile I'm a Fan of stillfresh

Getting a fair system to treat humans who are sick in any way means untying the bonds that attach even a hangnail to medical insurers. They set themselves up long ago to get a cut of our misery. Keep your eyes on the RICO laws. Most apply to UnitedHealthcare, Blue Cross, Aetna, HealthNet, Cigna. If you want to talk domestic terrorism, these medical insurers make obscene profits for themselves by doing to us with paperwork and arbitrary denials of care what bin Laden did with planes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:44 AM on 07/08/2008
- SCG See Profile I'm a Fan of SCG

Why doesn't the democratic party poll the public on single payer plan? After all who does the health care system purport to serve, investors or patients?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:29 AM on 07/08/2008
- UnbiasView See Profile I'm a Fan of UnbiasView

They would have to explain what it is first and the costs . . . which would render it impossible.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:38 AM on 07/08/2008
- kellygrrrl See Profile I'm a Fan of kellygrrrl

sure will be nice to have some compassionate POPULISTS on the team

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:14 AM on 07/08/2008
- Sarahjan See Profile I'm a Fan of Sarahjan

She is great!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:07 AM on 07/08/2008
- IowaKid See Profile I'm a Fan of IowaKid

Thank you Elizabeth the health care system is terrible. It really cost me. My husband was totally disabled from a stroke which I managed to keep him home and take care of him, and keep a job down at the same time. 2 years ago he came down with head a neck cancer which he lost that battle last year. I have watched my own health insurance get worse and worse but now my back is up against a wall I have heart disease and diabetes and avoid going to the doctor as much as I can because even with health insurance I still cannot keep up with it and I know I'm not the only one in this situtation.. I wish we could nail our politicians down on this policy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:02 AM on 07/08/2008
- JABean See Profile I'm a Fan of JABean

One of the things I have appreciated about Elizabeth Edwards is her insistence that any health program be UNIVERSAL. However, this current effort seems like the that very important part is already being parsed away with phrases such as, "Kirsch insisted that it was not a "long-term" institution...in the end, the goal -- either through influencing voter preferences or candidate positions -- is to get comprehensive health care legislation passed by 2009 and no later." That's political spin for keeping Obama's less than universal plan as better than nothing, even if it leaves the insurance companies in charge of our health care, as they are now. Ask one of those 15-20 million people if it's important. Comprehensive does not equal universal. "Comprehensive" is Obama-speak, which is increasing parsed and nuanced. He is such a disappointment. And, if Elizabeth Edwards is willing to go along with this in her big effort to solve the health care crisis, then she is a disappointment also. Shameful all around.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:41 AM on 07/08/2008
- RTIII See Profile I'm a Fan of RTIII


I hope your reading of the tea-leaves is wrong...

The ONLY universal health care I'm FOR is SINGLE PAYER. Nothing Else Works.
.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:50 PM on 07/09/2008
- justobserve See Profile I'm a Fan of justobserve

"the goal -- either through influencing voter preferences or candidate positions -- is to get comprehensive health care legislation passed by 2009 and no later."

Yes, it's about time! The broken system has been with us for so long that it's an urgent matter to change it now. The private insurance companies have shown they are not up to the task. Health is not something for profits. The new system must be streamlined to a simple one so that the administrative costs to manage a complex one are eliminated and lower the premium. People should pay for the real costs.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:34 AM on 07/08/2008
- personalpolitical See Profile I'm a Fan of personalpolitical

I wish she'd support truly universal health care, single payer, not that corporate, greed-centered health care bandaid she is proposing. The Democrats need to wake up and realize our health care system will always be a scam and operate to screw people over and cut corners as long as it is profit-driven. It needs to be public, it needs to be single payer, we need corporate America's grubby fist out of our lives.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:23 AM on 07/08/2008
- TXfemmom See Profile I'm a Fan of TXfemmom

We do not need these insurance companies to complicate the system, make it more costly, and take a good proportion of the premiums in profits.

It has reached the point where they are undermining the welfare and threatening the health and continued prosperity in this country as much as any terrorist can do. It is time for a single payer system, where every employer and every person contributes, we cut out the administrative costs, pay for what works, and stop paying the highest costs in the world for technology and pharmaceuticals. For me, that would be the highest form of patriotism. A single payer system could require much less in payments from employers and the people than what is paid just in premiums now, and provide Universal Care. The savings could be enormous.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:23 AM on 07/08/2008
- PATina See Profile I'm a Fan of PATina

Completely agree. Insurance companies are no good for health insurance... single payer is the only way to go.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:07 AM on 07/08/2008
- olivia See Profile I'm a Fan of olivia

Dennis Kucinich had the best health care plan of all.

Hill was too beholden to people she took money from to truly fix the system.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:39 AM on 07/08/2008
- frustratedinohio See Profile I'm a Fan of frustratedinohio

Do you really have to keep insulting Hillary? Really? You don't know what happened there.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:09 PM on 07/08/2008
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