Earlier this spring, Republican Gov.
Bobby
Jindal proposed his America Next Freedom
and Empowerment Plan that would address this provision under national law,
envisioning in it the repeal of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
(“Obamacare”). That’s about all a governor can do in this regard, put it out
there and hope others take it up. So far, nothing has happened at the federal
level but at the state level he found an unlikely ally in Democrat state Sen. Ben Nevers who wanted to pursue this plan
adapted to the state level.
Nevers originally favored measures
taken straight out of Obamacare that would expand eligibility in the existing
Medicaid system, but Jindal opposed these as they could cost the state as much
as over
$2 billion through 2023 and at a minimum
hundreds of millions of dollars more (and states
cannot opt out once they accept it under Obamacare terms) for care shown statistically producing worse
outcomes than if uninsured. Thus, Nevers turned to the politically possible
in taking as many of Jindal’s ideas that could be and putting them into a
state-level version, with Jindal’s blessing.
These include health savings
accounts, wellness incentives, and premium support (with a high-risk pool to
subsidize those individuals) for those earning between a quarter and a half the
federal poverty level to purchase insurance with no co-payments while those
from half up to the FPL may contribute co-payments and cost sharing. This use
of Medicaid dollars for premium support, which essentially expands Louisiana’s Bayou Health
program that covers adults at a quarter of FPL or below to cover the 25-100
percent FPL range, would require the federal government to grant waivers to
allow use of federal funds in block grant format for premium support and for
the high-risk pool funding. The plan anticipates savings (such as the $135
million in fiscal year 2013 from Bayou Health) would pay for increasing
coverage.
Simply, the bill expands health
care insurance as does Obamacare, but not by using the existing Medicaid
fee-for-service paradigm (which actually likely will drive down premiums for
all because it would expand the covered base in private markets). That bill, SB
682, has moved out of the Senate into the House. But if you depended upon
large metropolitan daily newspapers and television stations in Louisiana outside
of Baton Rouge, you’d never know this. Only that area’s television stations and
the Baton Rouge/New Orleans Advocate
even have reported about the bill
and its
progress.
Nor have any Democrats who
championed publicly the idea of expanding health insurance provision through
Obamacare, with the exception of Nevers, spoken
in favor of his bill. In fact, predictably enough, the only vote so far
against the bill either in committee or on the floor came from state Sen. Karen Peterson, also the chairwoman of
state Democrats, demonstrating that in turning down a chance to expand
insurance coverage for the indigent she’s more interested in empowering
government than in helping people.
But perhaps a bigger hypocrite
than Peterson is the New Orleans
Times-Picayune. In the span of a year it editorialized 12 times favoring Medicaid
expansion, dodging the facts that this would cost more money for worse care.
Then comes Nevers’ new bill built on Jindal’s model that expands subsidized
health insurance availability, just not utilizing the Medicaid fee-for-service
paradigm … and then nothing. Not a single story appeared in the T-P about the bill or its progress, nor
any editorial supporting the legislation concurs with the very goal the T-P led its readers to think it backed.
Then last week, it ran an article,
about week after the actual announcement, that Indiana Gov. Mike Pence had proposed “Medicaid
expansion” in his state. The Republican Pence’s plan
also would employ health savings accounts, wellness incentives, and premium
support requiring federal government waivers – in concept, close to what Jindal
had proposed nationally and Nevers had translated to the state level.
So the next day on the editorial
page appeared an editorial
in favor of Pence’s plan and imploring
Jindal to emulate it! Not only do the T-P’s
capitol reporters appear blind, deaf, and dumb for not covering SB 682, but
also its editorial writers look entirely ignorant and unsophisticated in not
even understanding that if they like what Pence has done, Jindal basically
already has delivered that to them.
Such obvious selectivity in
publication choices about this issue, as more generally with Democrat politician
and liberal special interest reactions, happens for one or both of two related
reasons: to them, any plan with Jindal’s name on it automatically becomes
anathema and any workable solution that fails to empower and grow government
when such an option exists cannot be acknowledged. As such, responses of those
like Peterson’s and the T-P’s show
they really do not care about helping the poor but only want to use them to
score political points to further a political agenda based upon expanding government
and its power.
No comments:
Post a Comment