Showing posts with label Obamacare implementation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Obamacare implementation. Show all posts

Saturday, April 19, 2014

Pols and Pundits: Betting on Obamacare Failing, And Losing


Pardon our indulging in a little more schadenfreude over the success of Obamacare in its first enrollment cycle.  After years of gibberish about "death panels," tripling insurance premiums, beellions being kicked off of their insurance plans, deficit busting, and the end of Freedom in America (courtesy of right-wing media, the Koch brothers and other lying malefactors), we have millions more Americans being covered by affordable health insurance.  While the dead-ender right isn't finished with Obamacare (and will never give up), they may yet pay a price for going all-in on opposing this humane and decent achievement.  Here are snippets of some worthwhile readings:

Greg Sargent:
The announcement of eight million Obamacare sign-ups may finally be enough to jolt commentators into realizing that maybe, just maybe, the Republican plan to build an entire campaign against the law for the next six months might suffer from a few imperfections. The President, for his part, seized on the moment to urge Democratic candidates to stand proudly by the law’s achievements — and to attack Republicans for wanting to strip them away.

Josh Marshall:
On Obamacare, the Republican party has bet big on failure for four years. Now the results are in. And they lost. Big time. 
Of course, substance policy success and political outcomes aren't the same thing. And just as importantly they do not always run on the same time scale. So it is entirely possible. I would say it is likely that the GOP will still derive benefits this November from the core of voters who are extremely upset about Obamacare, extremely motivated to vote and also happen to be the same people who routinely turn out in disproportionate numbers in mid-term elections. But on the core of the policy, which I think there is good reason to believe will align with political outcomes in the future, the results are in. And they lost. 
And, finally, Lucia Graves at the National Journal calls out specific Republican journalists pundits who, in toeing the hyperbolic party line on Obamacare, are seeing their predictions of doom blow up in their smug faces.  The list of numbnuts is much longer than Graves has space or patience to cover, unfortunately =cough= Fox "News" =cough= Krauthammer =cough= Will =cough=.  Of course, the "mainstream media" is/was often complicit in peddling Republican lies in their typical "he-said, she-said" narratives (because,  as NBC's  Chuck Todd has schooled us, it's not the media's job to sort out the truth!). Nonetheless, history will surely and righteously enroll all of them in its Book of Shame.

Monday, April 14, 2014

Obamacare Update: Looks Like Republicans Will Have To Redefine "Failure"...Again


Let's see the latest Congressional Budget Office report on Obamacare.

Hmmm...  Lower net costs to Federal Government than previously projected.  More insured than previously projected.  Lower premiums for Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) plans than previously projected.

If that's "failure," may the Democrats "fail" in the same manner in the fall elections.

Saturday, April 12, 2014

Republicans On Obamacare: Rooting For Failure, And Losing


Here's some worthwhile Saturday morning reading on the consequences of Republicans' nihilistic approach to affordable health care (actually, government in general), and how they've painted themselves into (another) corner because of a selfish, ideology-based refusal to accept reality.

From Brian Beutler:
The Affordable Care Act's enrollment comeback has confounded conservatives in many ways. The realization that there happens to be popular demand for something as self-evidently grotesque as Obamacare has given rise to a palpable cognitive dissonance on the right. A growing recognition among Republicans that they can't bank on organizing the midterm campaign around relentless Obamacare opposition has party elders looking at contingency plans (even if they haven't exactly gone back to the drawing board). 
But most importantly, it has thrown the conservative health policy community for a loop, and completely wrong-footed Republicans in Congress who were hoping -- against considerable odds and a well-worn historical pattern -- to craft an Obamacare alternative that both passes the laugh test and doesn't create a significantly lower level of welfare. If enrollment had sputtered, that task would have been considerably easier. The fact it surged in March, and continues to grow today, measurably limits their options.  (our emphasis)
From Greg Sargent:
Last fall, as the law got underway and as the website then crashed, the Republican position was essentially that the law was fatally flawed (nobody wanted it, supposedly) and thus would inevitably fail to fulfill its own goals. Now that the law has hit enrollment targets, and evidence comes in that it is for now on track, the Republican position is that the law is a failure even if it is more or less doing what it was designed to do — cover a lot more people. Indeed, one way to describe the GOP position is that Republicans think the law is an inherent failure precisely because it is doing what it was designed to do. 
The Republican position — that the law can’t work by definition – is essentially an admission that Republicans simply don’t support doing what Obamacare sets out to do: Expand coverage to the number of people the law hopes to cover, through a combination of increased government oversight over the health system and — yep — spending money. The GOP focus on only those being negatively impacted by the law, and the aggressive hyping of cancellations into “millions” of full blown “horror stories” – combined with the steadfast refusal to acknowledge the very existence of the law’s beneficiaries — is, at bottom, just another way to fudge the actual GOP position: Flat out opposition to doing what it takes to expand health care to lots and lots of people.  (our emphasis)
The Republican id:  lack of empathy for others.  We see it in the right's inability to relate to affordable health care for others, income inequality, voting rights for minorities, women's reproductive rights, and on and on.  Last August, Sean McElwee posted an article on the Republican empathy void.  Here's his conclusion:
Most social phenomenons can't be pegged to a single event. But the Republican Party's shift from empathy to disgust and from viewing government as a force for good to a necessary evil, although developing for a long time, is aptly summarized in two lines from Ronald Reagan's "A Time for Choosing" speech. The great orator said, "Each year the need grows greater; the program grows greater. We were told four years ago that 17 million people went to bed hungry each night. Well that was probably true. They were all on a diet. But now we're told that 9.3 million families in this country are poverty-stricken on the basis of earning less than 3,000 dollars a year." This was much more radical then than it seems now. Poverty, had for decades been, "not a trait of character," but rather something,  "created anew in each generation, but not by heredity but by circumstances." Now it was a choice, not something to war against, but something to mock. As Noam Chomsky noted, some victims are considered "worthy" and others "unworthy." With those simple words, Reagan created a large class of "unworthy" victims that do not deserve our help or empathy. Government, he decided could not help them. Is it any wonder that inequality began its increase under Reagan and has spiraled out of control ever since?  (our emphasis)
Of course, this Republican id existed before St. Ronnie of Hollywood put a happy face on it.  It goes back before Father Coughlin, Ayn Rand, the John Birchers (hello, Daddy Koch!), Robert Taft, and Barry Goldwater.

In historical terms, there is no greater oxymoron than "compassionate conservative."

Monday, April 7, 2014

Gallup: Fewer Uninsured Americans Today


Here's Gallup out with a poll showing Obamacare implementation is resulting in the fewest uninsured Americans since 2008.  (That 18.0 on the chart is approximately when the Obamacare rollout began.) But we know from experts like Republican Sen. John "Can't Spell My Name Without The Ass" Barrasso (Yahoo-WY) that they must be "cooking the books."  Collectivists!

(click to enlarge)


BONUS:  Ed Kilgore gives us the go-to right wing position on accumulating evidence that Obamacare is ... uh, working:
 But let’s remember there is a conservative fallback position if it does ultimately appear Obamacare is working as intended: it just means the number of Americans enslaved by dependence on the federal government is increasing. There simply cannot be any proximate point at which the Right accepts the law as a positive development. Heads they win, tails you lose.
See also "Monday Reading..." post below.

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

7 Million and Counting


As we noted earlier, there are now a confirmed 7-million-plus enrollees in Obamacare, and the numbers are rising as people who had started the application process in the HealthCare.gov system by the deadline are taking advantage of extended enrollment time.  Far from what the Republicans have been calling a "train wreck," Obamacare has overcome a near-disastrous kick-off and is beginning to function the way it was intended.   Most importantly, people who were one operation or diagnosis away from bankruptcy can now get affordable health insurance.  Seven million people (and counting) will have a little more peace of mind, and better health care, thanks to this "train wreck" the Republicans have been so desperate to stop.  Once this nascent success story has a chance to mature and sink in, enrollment during the next open period in November will be something to watch.  Repeal that, suckers! (And, yes, we know the fight is never over.)

Meanwhile, Michael Hiltzik at the L.A. Times has a guide to Republican excuse-making that's worth a read (and a little schadenfreude, too).

BONUS:  Inside and outside the right-wing reality bubble.

Sen. Mitch "Missy" McConnell (Endangered Turtle - KY) bubble world:
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said that “millions of Americans [are] facing higher premiums, canceled plans and the loss of doctors and hospitals they liked as a result of this law.” Once again, he called for it to be scrapped.
Real world:
Obamacare has cut Kentucky's uninsured population by more than 40 percent, signing up roughly 360,000 residents since enrollment opened up on Oct. 1, according to the Louisville Courier-Journal. 
Some 75 percent of them -- 270,000 -- were previously uninsured. That means Kentucky's uninsured population of 640,000 has come down by 42 percent. 

Thursday, March 13, 2014

No Wonder Right Wingers Didn't Like Obama's "Between Two Ferns" Appearance


"Making a mockery," "tragic," "inappropriate."  Waaaah!  Concern trolling and faux outrage on the right are what you've come to expect any time President Obama takes an action (or doesn't, for that matter). Fortunately, Stephen Colbert covers the right's latest blatherfest  =cough= Fox News= cough= about President Obama's recent appearance to promote Obamacare on Zach Galifianakis's "Between Two Ferns:"


The Colbert Report
Get More: Colbert Report Full Episodes,Video Archive


As Colbert points out, the appearance had the desired effect of stimulating interest in Obamacare (the Affordable Care Act) in the "Between Two Ferns" demographic  - traffic to the health care web site, up 40%.   Cue wingnut heads exploding.  Cue us smiling.

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Saturday Reading - Rooting For Failure


Today, of course, is the target date imposed by the Obama Administration for many fixes to the HealthCare.gov web site to enable more people to successfully sign up for affordable health insurance.  Who's that cheering from the sidelines, and what are cheering for? Tim Egan in the New York Times explains:
It’s hard to remember a time when a major political party and its media arm were so actively rooting for fellow Americans to lose. When the first attempt by the United States to launch a satellite into orbit, in 1957, ended in disaster, did Democrats start to cheer, and unify to stop a space program in its infancy? Or, when Medicare got off to a confusing start, did Republicans of the mid-1960s wrap their entire political future around a campaign to deny government-run health care to the elderly?
Of course not. But for the entirety of the Obama era, Republicans have consistently been cheerleaders for failure. They rooted for the economic recovery to sputter, for gas prices to spike, the job market to crater, the rescue of the American automobile industry to fall apart.
The Republican media arm (Fox "News" and the rest of NewsCorp., of course) has been getting a lot of help from other corporate media, who react to the smell of blood in the water and love a good "government fails again" story as much as any Rupert Murdoch entity.  But the early, very unfortunate mis-steps on the Federal web site may not be as painful a memory in the spring or summer of 2014.  With potentially millions of Americans successfully subscribed to affordable health insurance by then, and with health care costs slowing for the great majority, the Failure Chorus on the right and in the media may end up being drowned out by the Hallelujah Chorus of newly insured Americans.  Let's withhold judgement until then, at least.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Media Ninnies and Republicans' Worst Nightmare

A propos of the posting below, this commentary triptych comes courtesy of Daily Kos.

Paul Begala:
[D]espite the bed-wetting from Beltway Chicken Littles, the President's problems are eminently fixable. The Affordable Care Act isn't collapsing. The Obama presidency isn't imploding. And the ninnies making those sweeping and stupid predictions will one day look like the Washington pundit who boldly declared of the Clinton presidency, "This week we can talk about 'Is the presidency over?' " He asked that question 11 days after Bill Clinton's inaugural. His first inaugural. Clinton's presidency was not over for another 2,911 days.
 Noam Levey:
Despite the disastrous rollout of the federal government's healthcare website, enrollment is surging in many states as tens of thousands of consumers sign up for insurance plans made available by President Obama's health law.
A number of states that use their own systems, including California, are on track to hit enrollment targets for 2014 because of a sharp increase in November, according to state officials.
Kevin Drum:
It really is all about the website. In places where it's working, people are signing up and are pretty happy with what they're getting. Rate shock is an issue for a few of them, but not for a lot. The bottom line is the Republican Party's worst nightmare: Once Obamacare has been up and running for a while, it's going to be pretty popular.
Time, indeed, for Democrats and progressives generally to come out of their crouch on health care reform and start punching back hard against the New Confederate/ Republican/ Stupid Party and their media enablers.

BONUS:  Just for good measure, Michael Hilzick:
... the myth of Obamacare’s “failure” is a product of the same Republican noise machine that has been working to undermine this crucial reform since Day One. It’s assisted by news reporting about canceled health policies that typically ranges from woefully misinformed to spectacularly ignorant, and even at its best is incomplete.
Indeed, the spectacle of Democrats panicking over bad news on Obamacare resembles the herds of giraffes one sees on the Serengeti being stampeded by swarms of tsetse flies. Here’s a lesson the giraffes could teach the Dems: Stampeding leads only to injuries and death, and doesn’t solve the tsetse fly problem…

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Letters We Wish We'd Written Dept. - Obamacare Edition


From today's once great Washington Post  Bezos Bugle:
Regarding the Nov. 12 news article “HealthCare.gov tally: 40,000 are signed up”:

Many opponents of the Affordable Care Act seemed almost gleeful that only about 40,000 Americans signed up through the law’s federal health insurance marketplace in the six weeks since enrollment began. But it feels like good news to some of us.

With all the problems HealthCare.gov has had, tens of thousands of people still signed up, and that doesn’t include people who have been able to get reasonable insurance policies on the cooperating state exchanges. If we add in those hundreds of thousands who are benefiting from the expansion of Medicaid, I would have to say that things are looking pretty darn good. We mustn’t forget that only 123 people signed up in the first month of Romneycare. Can we please give the president a break?
 
Joanne Clark, Alexandria
That's right.  123 people in the first month of Romneycare in Massachusetts.

To whom it may concern:  Please to get your panties out of a bunch.

Friday, November 15, 2013

Obamacare "Fixes"


Here's a helpful chart from Think Progress to help sort out in simple terms what the current "fixes" to the "ok, you can keep your crappy insurance" problem are:

(click to enlarge)


Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Lies and Then Some


Jon Stewart on who the real liars are when it comes to Obamacare (after the inevitable commercial):


Sunday, October 27, 2013

Everybody Continue to Breathe Normally, Please


From BooMan:
...The extremely temporary problems with the Healthcare.gov website are of no lasting import whatsoever. The only potential problem here is that it doesn't get fixed quickly enough to avoid a deficit of healthy consumers and the rates are annoyingly high as a result. But even that would be fixed and forgotten within a couple of years.

Before long, the website will function exactly as it was intended to and people will get good, solid and affordable access to health care. And the only kind of stories worth writing about the political impact of ObamaCare are ones that look at what it will mean for millions of people to get their healthcare with the assistance of government subsidies, and what it will mean for a political party to oppose those subsidies or seek to diminish them.
And John Cole:
I just watched the SNL opening skit mocking Sebelius and ACA, and the only thing I could think was thank fucking ALLAH that Social Security and Medicaid were rolled out in the pre-internet days.
Think about it, you fucking jackasses at the Wonkblog and you other alleged liberals. All the programs you claim to love, like SS, Medicare, Medicaid, etc. At this point in the rollout for these programs 50, 60, and 70 years ago, the mail would just be reaching the respective offices. Problems people are experiencing today would not even be noticed for four months in those days, yet people still participated, just as people are right now.
We now return you to your regularly scheduled programming, which includes execrable hackery from the likes of CNN.

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Happy Obamacare Day!


With everyone distracted over the government shutdown, it's nice to report that there's been a great deal of activity this first day to sign up under the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). Over a million visitors in the first 3 hours on the national website (www.healthcare.gov) and big numbers for many state sites.

Meanwhile, check out Andy Borowitz, who's monitoring border crossings as the wingnuts flee the tyranny of affordable health care from private insurers!

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Three Little Pigs


-- Sen. Joe "My Other Mansion Is A" Manchin (DINO-WV), a.k.a. Cornpone Joe Lieberman, is reading Rethuglican talking points... again.

-- Space invader and former Rep. Allen West (R-Uranus) will no longer be employed by right-wing wurlitzer Pajamas Media because he just might be anti-Semitic (but not because he's a raving loon, oh no!).

-- The State Representative referenced by President Obama in the clip below -- the one who likened the Affordable Care Act to the Fugitive Slave Act -- is State Rep. Bill O'Brien, former New Hampshire House speaker and current Ign'ant Analogy Champeen.

"All Of This Would Be Funny If It Wasn't So Crazy"

The President on Rethuglican Obamacare scare tactics, today at Prince Georges Community College (MD):


Thursday, September 5, 2013

Today's Cartoon


(click to enlarge)



(Kal, Baltimore Sun, via gocomics.com)

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Your Typical Republican Asshat, Ralph Hudgens


Here's Georgia Insurance Commissioner Ralph Hudgens, speaking to a meeting of fellow Republicans:
“Let me tell you what we’re doing (about ObamaCare)[:] … Everything in our power to be an obstructionist.”
After pausing to let applause roll over him, a grinning Hudgens went on to give an example of that obstructionist behavior, this one involving so-called “navigators” who are being hired to guide customers through the process of buying health insurance on marketplaces, or exchanges, set up under the federal program.
“We have passed a law that says that a navigator, which is a position in that exchange, has to be licensed by our Department of Insurance,” Hudgens said. “The ObamaCare law says that we cannot require them to be an insurance agent, so we said fine, we’ll just require them to be a licensed navigator. So we’re going to make up the test, and basically you take the insurance agent test, you erase the name, you write ‘navigator test’ on it.”
Hudgens clearly thought that was a pretty cute way for state officials to obstruct and delay implementation of the program and to ensure that it doesn’t work well for Georgians. Judging from their reaction, his audience thought so too.
Just one of many Republican obstructionists.  Servin' the public, that's good ol' boy Ralph! 

(Photo:  Your typical Republican asshat)

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Your Poll of the Day - Shutting Down Government Over Obamacare Edition



 Not the most popular thing out there:
A new poll done for Republican members of Congress has found huge public opposition, and solid opposition among Republicans, to the idea of shutting down the government over the issue of funding Obamacare.

In a national survey of 1,000 registered voters done July 31 and August 1, the question, from pollster David Winston, said, “Some members of Congress have proposed shutting down the government as a way to defund the president’s health care law” and asked respondents whether they favored or opposed that plan.
Overall, 71 percent of those surveyed opposed a shutdown, while 23 percent favored a shutdown. Among Republicans, 53 percent opposed, versus 37 percent who favored. (our emphasis)
Unfortunately, we suspect the 37 percent of Republicans that favored a shutdown over Obamacare are overwhelmingly the ones most likely to vote in a primary and who, therefore, must be obeyed!

Fortunately, former crackpot Rethuglican Sen. Jim "Demented" DeMint, who now is polluting politics over at the Heritage Foundation, has an alternative to Obamacare!