The Best the Dems Have to Offer
March 1, 2010
Let us now take a look at the best of what the Democratic Party has to offer.
That would be the so-called Progressive Caucus.
That would consist of the 80 or so members of the Congress who say they support a single payer health plan.
But who won’t lift a finger to fight for it.
As a result, single payer was taken off the table before the health care debate started last year.
In July 2009, 57 members of the Progressive Caucus drew a line in the sand.
Emphasis on the word “sand.”
They wrote a letter to the House Democratic leadership.
It it, they said this:
“Any bill that does not provide, at a minimum, for a public option with reimbursement rates based on Medicare rates — not negotiated rates — is unacceptable.”
That would be, as in, unacceptable.
Today we surveyed those 57 members and asked them a simple question.
Since the new health care plan being floated by President Obama and the House leadership is stripped of a public option, do you still find it unacceptable?
That is – will you vote against it?
Not surprisingly, only one member of Congress responded to the survey.
That would be Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio).
Kucinich indicated strongly that he will vote against Obamacare.
His press secretary forwarded an article from the Wall Street Journal.
Kucinich told the Journal:
“The new proposal starts with a wholly unacceptable Senate health care bill and, with a few exceptions, continues to make it worse. It’s a much better bill for insurance company investors than it is for the American people.”
Kucinich and Eric Massa (D-New York) were the only two single payer progressives in the House who voted against Obamacare last year – when it contained a weak public option.
At the time, they both called the bill a bailout of the insurance industry.
But as of now – it appears that of the more than 80 so-called progressives in Congress – only Kucinich has held firm.
That could be enough to sink Obamacare.
And begin again to build a populist base for single payer.