Posted on 07/28/2008 11:06:24 PM PDT by gpapa
Gearing up for 2009, liberals are eager to claim Massachusetts as a Valhalla of health reform. Their enthusiasm is apparently evidence-proof.
Even Mitt Romney, who should know better, took to these pages recently to proclaim, "Health-care reform is working in Massachusetts." Shortly after Mr. Romney's self-tribute, Governor Deval Patrick wheeled out a new $129 million tax plan to make up for this year's health spending shortfalls. Yet partisans are cheering the cost overruns as a sign of success.
(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...
Socialism sucks.
One of many reasons that Flip was unfit for the job of POTUS.
Is Romney a republican in the John McLaim/Ted Kennedy mold or in the Barry Goldwater/Scoop Jackson mold?...
More like the flipper mode.
So Romney is off the political stage but still set to be tarred and feathered for a program he expressly did not like and did not intend to bring with him on the national stage?
Okay.
Please dont pick this asshat for VP
In the Bubba Clinton/Al Gore, Jr. mold.
*ping*
Is this just your opinion or is it the new official Romney for VP flip?
ping
“The main reason people are uninsured is because coverage is too expensive. Massachusetts didn’t have many options for reforming the way health dollars are laundered in the third-party payment system created by the federal tax code. But it could have helped make insurance cheaper by reforming its private market before defaulting to public programs.”
Frivilous lawsuits don’t help. Also PRIVATE INSURERS don’t want them.
Oh, it sounds so easy to adjust the federal tax code. For YEARS we’ve been wanting to do that - flat tax, lower taxes and it goes nowhere. So the government gets stuck with the healthcare tab and YOU the taxpayers pay it.
“So Romney is off the political stage but still set to be tarred and feathered for a program he expressly did not like and did not intend to bring with him on the national stage?
Okay.”
Facts don’t matter to Romney haters. They’re as bad as liberals when it comes to inconvenient facts.
Uh...he LOVED the program when he was guv. But he knew he could never “sell” it to the GOP base, and tried to pretend it never happened.
MITT ROMNEY: “Well, I like the idea of letting states have some flexibility to develop their own programs to get more and more people insured. We found a way to get everybody in our state, Massachusetts, insured. I like the plan. I think it’s one of the best things we did in my administration.”
April 24, 2007
I could point you to this very article to see how Romney truly feels about the “program he expressly did not like” - but then facts never matter to the Flip Romney pushers.
On Sunday, December 16, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney told NBCs Meet the Press host Tim Russert, The plan we put together in Massachusetts I think is working in Massachusetts. I happen to like what we did. I think its a good model for other states.
http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=24141
Facts are stubborn things.
Yet here he is signing off on a program "he didn't like." Wow, his sadness and anger at the bill sure is showing, ain't it ?
That’s gonna leave a mark.
Here is what Mitt Romney himself had to say in an Opinion article he wrote just a week or two ago. He says some fine tuning is needed, and the MA state legislature passed some additional parts to the plan that Romney didn’t like, but he was no longer Gov of MA and couldn’t do anything about it (Duval Patrick, a total leftist became Gov of MA). Here is what Romney said (again just recently):
OPINION
“What We’ve Learned From the Massachusetts Health Plan
By MITT ROMNEY
July 12, 2008
It may come as a surprise to some on the left, but it is the Bush administration that made the state of Massachusetts’ health-care revolution a reality.
Health and Human Services Secretary Michael Leavitt, together with Massachusetts leaders from both parties, enabled our state to launch a health-care plan that is on track to get virtually every citizen insured. Moreover, Bay Staters are now able to own their own insurance with the same low rates that are paid by employers. And there is no more worrying that if you lose your job, you lose your health insurance.
The Bush administration will decide in the coming days whether to continue to facilitate this experiment by accepting the state’s financial contribution as qualifying for federal matching funds as in the past. If the federal government refuses or reduces federal participation, the state could be forced to curtail the program.
The plan has critics as well as proponents; I hope both can agree that what we are learning is invaluable. Here’s how I see it:
There is a misconception in this country that individuals who do not have health insurance also do not receive health care. But in fact, people without health insurance regularly show up at emergency rooms — and by federal law, they are treated, usually at no cost to them. The cost is picked up by everyone else, and by government.
Our plan said no to “free-riders.” Massachusetts residents are now required to have health insurance. For those earning less than 300% of the federal poverty level, there is a subsidized insurance program called Commonwealth Care. Individuals pay a share of their monthly premium, based upon their income level. This is private insurance, chosen by the individual. It is not Medicaid or Medicare.
For those earning over 300% of the federal poverty level, we created a “Connector” to enable individuals to purchase private insurance at lower rates, and with pretax dollars.
Already, the number of uninsured has been cut by 340,000 — more than half. Some have signed up for Commonwealth Care, some have purchased insurance through the Connector, and some have purchased insurance through their employer. In fact, ours is the only state in the nation where the number of people purchasing through their employer has actually risen. Within two years, nearly every Massachusetts citizen will have health insurance.
The subsidized Commonwealth Care program accounts for about two-thirds of the new enrollments to date. This is as expected: We initiated this subsidized program well ahead of the unsubsidized program, and the incentives to purchase the unsubsidized insurance have only recently begun kicking in.
Hundreds of thousands of people are receiving better health care, including preventive care and treatment for chronic ailments. These people will be far less likely to suffer acute — and expensive — conditions in the future.
When fully implemented, almost everyone who is not on a federal entitlement program will be paying for all or a portion of their health-insurance cost. We have tackled the free-rider problem.
The cost and value of health insurance for individuals who purchase their own insurance has improved markedly. Before our plan, a healthy 37 year old (the median age of our insured population) paid $355 a month for insurance. Now, the Connector reports that that same individual can purchase insurance at just over half the cost and with double the benefits.
The cost of the insurance policies that are offered through the Connector is actually less than what was originally forecast. Market forces are beginning to go to work in health care.
Still, there are corrections that are needed. The Massachusetts plan is more costly than it needs to be. Critics overstate the cost problem by ignoring the hundreds of millions it saves by replacing prior programs for the uninsured. Even so, mid-course corrections can significantly lower cost and improve the program. Here are a few:
- Require everyone to pay something. My plan did just that, but the state legislature decided that the poor (those earning at or below the federal poverty level) should pay nothing. If people get something for free, they don’t value it and they overuse it. Further, the individual’s share of the Commonwealth Care premium must be regularly adjusted for both fairness and budget.
- Remove coverage mandates. Mandates such as unlimited in vitro fertilization drive up the cost to the state and to the individual. In an abundance of caution, the legislature voted to keep all mandates in place even as it put a moratorium on any new mandates. Now that the plan is working, the governor and the legislature should revisit this issue.
- Phase out direct payments. We must follow through on the agreement to end direct state payments to the hospitals that care primarily for low-income patients. The legislation calls for the last payment of $160 million to be paid in 2009. Stick to this phaseout, as agreed.
- Strict enforcement. Tighten the requirements for the free care that is still being provided by hospitals, and follow up with strict enforcement. Hospitals have grown accustomed to these dollars and will resist giving them up. Large opaque payments to hospitals must be replaced by the subsidy that is given to individuals who purchase their own insurance.
- Cost containment. Vigorously promote the cost containment features that were contemplated in the original legislation, including cost and quality transparency among providers and co-insurance options for purchasers.
Health-care reform is working in Massachusetts. The people of the state, having the closest view of the plan, are the most positive: A recent poll shows favorable opinions outnumber unfavorable by three to one.
The left argues that to get everyone insured, the federal government must take over health care. Leaders from both parties in Massachusetts and the Bush administration have proven them wrong — this will be one of their signature achievements. It would be a mistake to walk away from it now.”
Mr. Romney is the former governor of Massachusetts.
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