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Bill Scher

Bill Scher

Posted: November 23, 2009 11:47 AM

The Insincerity Of The Public Option Haters: Lieberman's Weasel

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When Sen. Joe Lieberman first announced he would filibuster any health care bill with a public option, I noted that he lied, falsely calling the public option an "entitlement program" that would be "trouble ... for the national debt." In fact, the public option is an "option," not an entitlement, which would help our federal government save money.

Yesterday on Meet The Press, Lieberman didn't exactly lie, but deployed -- as his Senate colleague Al Franken coined in his old radio program's "Wait, Wait, Don't Lie To Me" game show segment -- the "Weasel."

And Lieberman's Weasel brightly illuminates the blatant insincerity on the part of the crusaders against the public option.

Lieberman said on Meet The Press:

[The public option] won't even lower the cost of health insurance, which the advocates said it originally would, because the Congressional Budget Office has now said to us that the public option in Senator Reid's bill will actually charge more for insurance than the average charge by health insurance companies.

Yes, it's true that the CBO estimates that Reid's version of the public plan would end up offering premiums that are "somewhat higher than the average premiums for the private plans" it would compete against in the proposed health insurance "exchanges."

But Lieberman willfully leaves out two key pieces of information.

1. All insurance premiums would be reduced. The CBO also concluded that Reid's reform package, including the public option, would reduce the overall average premium for all plans in the exchanges, public or private. An earlier CBO report of the similarly structured House public option determined the mere existence of a public option "would place some downward pressure on the premiums of private plans".

2. The public option was weakened to appease insurance industry defenders like Lieberman. All year long conservatives, and some alleged "moderates," have accused the public option of being a Trojan Horse intended to decimate private insurance, not compete with it.

To reassure critics, both the House and Senate versions rejected the "robust public option" we at Campaign for America's Future originally championed, in which the public option could fix reimbursements to health care providers at rates akin to Medicare, currently lower than what private plans offer.

The Congressional Budget Office agreed that such a structure would provide more competitive pressure and cut more costs, without undermining the private insurance industry -- only an estimated 4 million in our nation of 300 million would end up choosing the Senate's version of a public option.

But right-leaning Dems continued to abandon their supposed interest in reducing the deficit to protect the insurance lobby, and congressional leaders had no choice but to offer a weaker version, which couldn't fix rates, but would have to negotiate with providers just as private plans do.

While CBO said the weaker version wouldn't save as much money, it still saves some and, as noted above, helps reduce premiums overall.

How does Lieberman respond to winning such a concession? He spits on it.

He twists the CBO analysis. He pretends "advocates" were misleading about the public option's potential when it was weakened to appease myopic politicians like him. He makes the completely contradictory argument that public option premiums that are a little higher than private plans somehow constitute a devastating threat to his insurance company CEO constituents.

Surely he's read the CBO report. So he knows he's a weasel. He knows he does not have a sincere argument against the public option, and he is merely shilling for the insurance industry. Which makes it incredibly difficult to deal with him, and the political reality is, his vote is needed.

But if the non-insurance industry CEO constituents of Lieberman, and those of the other holdouts Sens. Ben Nelson, Mary Landrieu and Blanche Lincoln, hold their Washington representatives accountable for their insincere arguments, those Senators may recognize that there are more people in their states worried about skyrocketing health care costs than there are CEOs worried about skyrocketing health care profits.

Originally posted at OurFuture.org

 
 
 

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guveqzero
Inventor and Innovator
05:38 PM on 11/24/2009
Democrats are fooled again. It's pretty easy to make Demo's do back-flips­. Don't you get it? Lieberman wants to keep his power. And, he will do or say anything to keep it. Threaten him with obscurity and see how long it takes to change his position.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jinxed
starting over at 60
04:44 PM on 11/24/2009
I am so offended by this, this ... I can't find a word to describe him and weasel just insults REAL weasels. Joe has shown how duplicitou­s he is. I'm sure all this anger and hatred for the Democratic party goes back to the 2000, 2004 and 2006 elections. He thinks he is God's gift and the majority of Dems think he's a joke. He should be forced out of the Democrats' caucus if he tanks HCR. I WANT HIM TO LOSE HIS GAVEL. He needs to be held accountabl­e. Hopefully President Obama won't be so forgiving this time.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carl Caroli
Give peace a chance
12:47 PM on 11/24/2009
He pretends "advocates­" were misleading about the public option's potential when it was weakened to appease myopic politician­s like him.

This is what he is good at. In fact they are all good at it - that's why it's so hard to get to basic bottom line truths are needed to make good decisions.
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AnnfromCA
11:44 AM on 11/24/2009
Gallup out with a new poll, and those recommendi­ng to their senators to vote no are in the lead.

People don't want either the House or the Senate bill.

It's bad legislatio­n, and people know it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
1izzard
11:48 AM on 11/24/2009
links?
pizzmoe
My micro bio is empty
11:40 AM on 11/25/2009
Because those people are being misled. How could anyone with a conscience vote against the public option?
mamalisa38
I love you Thomas and I miss you like crazy RIP
11:22 AM on 11/24/2009
Single payer is the only answer to our health care crisis. For profit health insurance is immoral. The only way to maximize profits, and that's what Wall Street demands, is to raise premiums and deductible­s and deny claims.

Whatever problems single payer countries have they do not have 45,000 people die every year because they can't afford health care. They don't have people, who have health insurance, file bankruptcy because they got seriously ill.

Unfortunat­ely, our elected "represent­atives" have been bought and paid for, with our premium dollars, by the health insurance companies.

Until we get corporate money out of our elections the American people will always lose.
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AnnfromCA
11:44 AM on 11/24/2009
Your moral viewpoint is not shared by the majority of voters.
mamalisa38
I love you Thomas and I miss you like crazy RIP
11:54 AM on 11/24/2009
So, AnnfromCA, you think it's ok for the insurance executives to use our premium dollars to pay themselves yearly multi-mill­iion dollar salaries and give them to our legislator­s as campaign contributi­ons?
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WoodyCPM
Now what?
02:07 AM on 12/03/2009
So you admit then do you that the majority of Americans have no morals.
batguano
Ain't it funny how time slips away
02:17 PM on 11/24/2009
Spot-on mamalisa! The power of campaign contributi­ons by big-money is deatroying our representa­tive government­, where right and wrong, and truth nd falsehood are twisted to the advantage of big -money and greed. This health care reform fight is just like all the others, both past and yet to come; we will never have true reform on any issue until the power of money to corrupt and subvert our elected reps is ended once and for all.
04:47 PM on 11/23/2009
If we had half the president we thought we were getting, wouldn't Obama be saying about now, no public option = veto? Instead, we seem to have a few sincere liberals saying "no PO, no bill," but with no hint of even moral support from Fearless Leader. I may never vote again.