Will Republicans vote against the People


June 9, 2010

Will Republicans Stand Up For Families And Seniors…In Their Own States?

The tax extenders bill currently being debated on the Senate floor creates jobs, cuts taxes for small businesses and families and provides much needed assistance to workers affected by the recession. A critical part of the bill also helps cash-strapped states as they seek to balance their budgets and assist individuals enrolled in Medicaid. Republicans need to decide if they will help Democrats pass this bill or continue to stand with Washington special interests over families and seniors in their own states.

STATES SEE ALARMING RISE IN MEDICAID ROLLS

Medicaid Enrollment Rose by Over 3 Million People Between June 2008 and June 2009. “Medicaid enrollment rose by 3.3 million people, or 7.5%, from June 2008 and June 2009, new data from the non-partisan Kaiser Family Foundation shows. Enrollments rose in every state for the first time since the early 1990s. On average, Medicaid makes up 21% of state budgets, equal to education. Medicaid serves the nation’s poorest children, some parents, pregnant women, people with disabilities and seniors in nursing homes. States must provide basic benefits for people who earn up to the federal poverty level of $22,050 for a family of four. They aren’t threatened by the cuts. States have added people at higher incomes and optional benefits, which are now at risk.” [USA Today, 2/19/10]

Ø  Medicaid Has Seen a 21 Percent Increase in Enrollment Over the Last Three Years. “Medicaid, which covers more than 60 million people nationwide, is one of the costliest services states provide. It ate up about 21% of state spending in fiscal 2009, according to a recent report by the National Governors Association and National Association of State Budget Officers. The Great Recession sent even more Americans onto the Medicaid rolls, growing by an estimated 21% over three years. At the same time, state tax revenues plummeted, forcing governors and legislators to make deep budget cuts. To help states cope with this double-disaster, the Obama administration increased the federal share of Medicaid payments by $87 billion as part of last year’s massive stimulus program. States are prevented from tightening eligibility requirements in order to cut costs.” [CNN Money, 6/8/10]

Opposition to Increased Medicaid Funding Could Cause States to Raise Taxes or Cut Budgets. “The aid, worth a total of $25 billion, amounts to nearly one-quarter of the collective budget deficits states face for the fiscal year that begins on July 1 in most states. To balance their budgets, states would have to raise taxes or cut their budgets by that much.” [McClatchy, 5/11/10]

MAJORITY OF STATES HAVE ENORMOUS BUDGET SHORTFALLS

States All Across the Country Are Seeing Millions If Not Billions in Budget Shortfalls. According to the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, many states, including those represented by Republican leaders in the Senate, saw enormous budget gaps in 2010. For instance, Kentucky and Arizona saw a $1.2 billion and $1.9 billion mid-year budget gap. [Center for Budget and Policy Priorities]

Ø  Large Public Sector Job Cuts Are Hindering the Nation’s Recovery. New federal data shows “states, localities, and school districts have cut 231,000 jobs since 2008, including 22,000 jobs in May alone. Such cuts slowed the pace of economic growth in the first quarter of 2010 by one-half of one percentage point.” [Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, 6/8/10]

Stabenow, Reed Discuss Democratic Efforts To Cut Taxes For Small Businesses And Create Jobs

Washington, DC— Senate Finance Committee member Debbie Stabenow (D-MI) and Senator Jack Reed (D-RI) held a press conference this morning to discuss Democratic efforts to pass legislation that would close loopholes that reward companies for outsourcing American jobs, and give over $18 billion in tax cuts to families and small businesses to strengthen our economy and create jobs. Democrats are urging Republicans to support this bill and stand with the middle class, not special interests.

“American businesses need immediate assistance to make new investments here at home and create jobs,” said Senator Stabenow.  “The jobs bill we have before us will provide billions in tax cuts and support for small businesses across the country to hire new employees while closing loopholes that reward big corporations for outsourcing American jobs. This legislation will also provide additional tax cuts for middle-class families and a long-overdue extension of unemployment insurance for struggling households. I call on my Republican colleagues to stop protecting corporate interests and support this jobs bill so we can put Americans back to work.”

“This bill will provide tax cuts to help businesses create jobs while providing additional relief to families hit hardest by the recession,” said Senator Reed.  “We have made significant progress in reversing the huge number of jobs losses under the Bush Administration, which was hemorrhaging 750,000 jobs a month.  That is positive, but we have to keep the pedal to the metal, and this bill does that.”

The bill includes several key tax cuts for families and businesses, including:

  • Property Tax Deduction – This bill extends the additional standard deduction for state and local property taxes to save families money on their federal tax returns.  This deduction, created by Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) in 2008, allows taxpayers who do not itemize their tax deductions to receive property tax relief as a standard deduction of $500 for single filers and $1,000 for joint filers.
  • Tax Cut for College Tuition – This bill extends a tax deduction for qualified education expenses including college tuition and fees, so Americans can get the world-class education they deserve without going bankrupt in the process.
  • Research and Development Tax Credit – The bill extends a tax cut for research and development to help American businesses spur innovation and grow.
  • Tax Credit for Equipment Investments – The legislation allows companies to receive tax refunds on a portion of their Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) credits if they invest in capital equipment for use in the United States.
  • Tax Benefits for Capital Investments – The legislation extends a tax cut to allow restaurant owners to depreciate new construction and improvements and retail store owners to depreciate improvements over 15 years rather than 39.5 years, supporting construction jobs, encouraging economic development and saving these businesses money they can use to reinvest in their companies and hire new workers.

Call and Thank Sens. Murray and Cantwell for opposing Sen. Murkowski


We need you to Call Sens. Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell

Call Sens. Murray and Cantwell: Save the Clean Air Act
Keep fighting!

Our campaign to stop Sen. Murkowski from gutting the Clean Air Act is gaining traction.

We are expecting Murray and Cantwell to vote against Sen. Murkowski’s efforts to gut the Clean Air Act when the senate votes as early as this week on her resolution. We need all of the “NO” votes to stand strong and fight hard to influence their colleagues.

Can you call Sens. Murray and Cantwell and thank them for showing leadership on saving the Clean Air Act?

Senator Maria Cantwell
Phone: 202-224-3441

Senator Patty Murray
Phone: 202-224-2621

When senators take a stand like this, it’s important that they know their constituents support them.

As a constituent, your voice will matter most.

Here’s a sample script you can use:

Hi — my name is [NAME] and I live in [YOUR CITY], [YOUR STATE].

I’m calling to thank [Senator’s NAME] for opposing Sen. Murkowski’s effort to gut the Clean Air Act. I am counting on [HIM/HER] to be a leader and influence other senators to also oppose Sen. Murkowski’s efforts gut the Clean Air Act.

These calls matter. Thank you for your time and effort.

Adam Quinn, Campaign Manager
CREDO Action

P.S. Join our Clean Air Act page on Facebook.

Add your name to the Petition …denounce Congressman Don Young’s comments


Sign the  Petition
Republican Congressman Don Young is feeling the full force of grassroots Democrats over his outrageous Sarah Palin-esque comment saying that the Gulf of Mexico oil spill is “not an environmental disaster.”

Last week, we set a goal of having 50,000 people sign our petition denouncing Mr. Young’s outrageous comments protecting his Big Oil friends. Already, more than 62,000 activists have signed the petition and added their voice to the fight.

Let’s turn up the heat even more on these Big Oil protecting Republicans by helping us reach our newest goal of 75,000 signatures.

Add your name to our petition denouncing Congressman Don Young’s outrageous protection of Big Oil in the midst of this disaster.

Once you sign the petition, forward it to five of your friends and invite them to sign. We’ll send your comments directly to Congressman Young.

Congressman Young’s outrageous comments fly in the face of reality. With your help, we can hold him accountable.

Now let’s keep the pressure on and send the loudest message possible to other Big Oil protecting Republicans: It’s time to ge t serious about ending our addiction to oil. It’s time to support pending clean energy legislation in Congress.

Your voice will make the difference in this fight.

Thanks,

Jon  Vogel
Jon Vogel
DCCC Executive Director

P.S. One you sign the petition, share it with your friends on Facebook and Twitter!

ThinkProgress.org


UNDER THE RADAR

RELIGION — MUSLIM LEADER RECEIVES SUSPICIOUS WHITE POWDER IN THIRD RECENT ANTI-MUSLIM INCIDENT IN JACKSONVILLE, FL: On Monday, a Florida Muslim leader named Joshua Evans was at the center of an anthrax scare, when he received a “tissue stuffed inside with white powder” in the mail. Officials had him go to the hospital for testing, although it was eventually determined that the materials were not a “biological threat.” Still, Evans said that the intent was clearly malicious: “Someone does not wrap a tissue up with powder in it and stuff an envelope and send it to you with good intentions.” Evans used to be a Christian minister before converting to Islam, and he now often attracts controversy for criticizing his former religion. What is even more disturbing about this incident is that it is the third high-profile anti-Islamic incident in the Jacksonville, FL area in recent months. As the Progress Report reported in April, when University of North Florida professor and Fulbright scholar Parvez Ahmed went before the city council for confirmation to the Jacksonville Human Rights Commission, he had to answer irrelevant questions “about gay marriage, God, Islam and prayer in public places.” Another councilman mocked him for being Muslim and requested that he “say a prayer to your God” during a public hearing. Last month, someone set off a pipe bomb at the Islamic Center of Northeast Florida. Although dozens of people were inside, no one was injured. The attack came just a few hours before Ahmed was to attend his first Human Rights Commission meeting. Both Ahmed and Evans worship at that mosque. Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) spokesman Ibrahim Hooper told The Progress Report that the three incidents are “related to the overall rise in anti-Muslim sentiment in our society, unfortunately.”

Health Care …Implementing Reforming


The Progress Report: ThinkProgress.org

Yesterday, President Obama sought to sell the health overhaul law to skeptical seniors, “launching a defense of his presidency’s biggest accomplishment” as the government prepared to release “the first batch of $250 checks to seniors who fall into Medicare’s prescription drug coverage gap, known as the ‘doughnut hole.'” “Each month, as more seniors hit the doughnut hole, more and more checks will hit the mail, helping more than 4 million seniors by the end of this year,” Obama explained. “Now, beginning next year, if you fall into the coverage gap, you’ll get a 50 percent discount on the brand-name medicine that you need — 50 percent. And by 2020 — it’s being phased in, but by 2020 this law will close the doughnut hole completely.” The White House’s pitch comes in the midst of a renewed Republican effort to discredit reform as a costly and unnecessary government takeover of the system. Yesterday, right-wing pundit Bill Kristol launched a new website, ObamaCareWatch.org, and “28 Republican Representatives, including top GOP House leadership,” signed onto an amicus brief “filed in support of Virginia’s constitutional challenge to the law.” As Rep. Mike Pence (R-IN) said in April, “House Republicans will not rest until we repeal Obama care lock, stock and barrel and replace it with health care reform that will lower the cost of health insurance without growing the size of government.” But as Obama explained yesterday, he will not allow the country to move backwards on reform. Republicans “would roll back the rebate to help you pay for your medicine, if you fall in the doughnut hole. They’d roll back the free preventive care for Medicare recipients,” Obama said. “They would roll back all of the insurance provisions that make sure that insurance companies are not cheating folks who are paying their premiums. … They’d put insurance companies back in charge.” “I refuse to let that happen. We’re not going back. We are going to move forward. That’s why I was elected.”

IMPLEMENTING INSURANCE REFORMS: On Monday, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced that it will be freeing up $51 million in grant dollars through the health care law to help states strengthen their premium review programs and prevent insurers from dramatically increasing insurance premiums. While the federal government does not have authority to overturn so-called “unreasonable” premium increases, the law does allow the HHS Secretary to assist states in developing a plan for denying rate hikes or preventing insurers with “unreasonable” hikes from participating in the exchanges. Insurers will be required to submit “a justification for an unreasonable premium increase” to the state insurance commission authority, who then makes the appropriate recommendations “to the State Exchange about whether particular health insurance issuers should be excluded from participation in the Exchange.” Significantly, states will also be required to report their medical loss ratios — “the fraction of premium dollars collected that are actually spent on health services instead of on administrative underwriting, marketing, and capital costs including profits or surpluses or both.” Insurers will have to report their MLR ratios “in the 2010 plan year,” and by 2011, “all commercial insurers will have to meet minimum loss ratio requirements in all markets.” The regulations are designed to prevent insurers from rounding up huge profits before most of the reforms are implemented in 2014. The new law also requires individuals who “have been uninsured for at least six months and who have a serious preexisting condition be eligible to buy an insurance product” in a state-based high-risk insurance pool by the end of the month and the Department has been moving quickly to implement the measure. In April, the Secretary sent a letter to all governors “clarifying her intent to build on existing state programs and make this a joint effort with the states,” 35 of which already have high risk pools in operation. States have the choice of operating their own pools or ceding control of the operation to the federal government, as approximately 19 states have chosen to do.

ESTABLISHING THE EXCHANGES: The high-risk pools are a temporary measure that will serve as a dress rehearsal for the new health insurance exchanges. Although states can opt out of the process, “the new law gives states the clear responsibility of creating their own exchanges and offers them many choices about how to do so.” Jon Kingsdale, who until recently ran the successful Commonwealth Health Insurance Connector Authority in Massachusetts, suggests that exchanges should function as shops for insurance and help customers choose a compatible insurance plan. A purchaser of insurance should be able to “generate rate comparisons for any level of benefits simply by providing his or her date of birth, household size, and ZIP code. These rating rules make it possible to automate insurance pricing and facilitate comparison shopping in an exchange.” But “how many choices to offer, and of what kind, are matters of judgment and consumer preference,” Kingsdale suggests. “Too much choice may confuse consumers and lead to adverse selection. On the other hand, too little choice may conflict with consumers’ preferences and stifle innovation in the design of insurance policies and benefits.” Kingsdale writes that exchanges have to create administrative efficiencies and add transparency to the health care system. “Today, in the absence of exchanges, the  non group and small-group markets offer a bewildering array of benefit choices and crate hurdles to purchasing coverage.” “Many of the functions associated with sales, enrollment, premium billing, and collections could be streamlined through a combination of manual rating and economies of scale,” he predicts.

EXPANDING MEDICAID: About half of the increase in health insurance coverage is expected to come from expanding Medicaid in 2014 “to a new nationwide eligibility threshold of 133 percent of the poverty level — $14,400 for a single adult or $29,300 for a family of four.” Throughout the health reform debate, state governors complained that this requirement amounted to an unfunded mandate, but as Leighton Ku explains in Health Affairs, the federal government will be picking up most of the cost of the expansion. For instance, the Congressional Budget Office estimates that the federal government expenditures “will rise above the baseline by $434 billion during the next decade, while states will incur just $20 billion in higher expenditures.” Similarly, a recent study by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that “the federal government will bear virtually the entire cost of expanding Medicaid under the new health-care law” and states will be able “reduce payments they make to support uncompensated care costs.” As Ku notes, “some states’ projections of new costs appear to be overstated,” as governors have “not accounted for factors such as the reduced costs of serving the newly eligible.” Moreover, “most economists expect the economy and employment to brighten by 2014, so there should be fewer income-eligible people and higher state revenues than today.” The expansion and increase volume of patient needs will require plans to expand networks and states will have to take steps “to design simple application forms and procedures, including online.