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Enzi Boasts About His Role In Delaying Health Care Reform

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Sen. Mike Enzi (R-WY)

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Sen. Mike Enzi (R-WY) is proud of how he helped stop health care reform from passing.

"If I hadn't been a part of the debate, you would already have universal health care," Enzi said Monday, according to a report in the Casper Star-Tribune.

Enzi was part of the infamous "Gang of Six" senators tasked with putting together a health care compromise that both Democrats and Republicans could vote for. However, no Republicans wound up supporting the final bill, which squeaked by in the Senate with a vote of 60 to 40.

Earlier today, Enzi became the first Republican to accept an invitation to the White House's health care summit.

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February 17, 2010 7:36 PM   

Well I sure can see why we need guys like him in the room.

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February 17, 2010 7:55 PM   

How do people like this live with themselves?

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February 18, 2010 2:31 AM    in reply to Prysmith

...better health care than the rest of us?
well, that's how they live, anyway....

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February 18, 2010 5:54 AM    in reply to Prysmith

Exactly. He wasn't even on the list of people invited (members of leadership and the heads of the relevant committees). Is this douche related to the Salahi's by any chance?

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February 18, 2010 5:55 AM    in reply to Prysmith

Oh wait.. I misread your comment as "inviting himself". My bad.

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February 17, 2010 8:02 PM   

Jane Hamsher should donate to his campaign. She loves bill killers.

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February 17, 2010 8:16 PM   

To be proud of this? To whom is he speaking -- not to his constituents/voters, is he?

No, only to his funders, insurance companies, I presume.

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February 17, 2010 8:33 PM    in reply to MyMy

It's Wyoming. That's how they are out there. All seventy eight of them.

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February 18, 2010 1:12 AM    in reply to The Commenter Formerly Known as NCSteve

This is where Rachel Maddow's really got a point. You give these few curmudgeons living dirt cheap off of our Federal land *two* Senators (*two*??), that's wickedly imbalanced as it is. And then you double down on the abuse by letting them filibuster as well? Every measure?

Now you're really not talking about representative government at all.

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slb

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February 18, 2010 2:04 AM    in reply to Overreach THIS!

Exactly. The filibuster only exacerbates an already existing problem with skewed representation.

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February 18, 2010 6:55 PM    in reply to slb

Yep!

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February 17, 2010 8:18 PM   

"If I hadn't been a part of the debate, you would already have universal health care." What an amazing statement. Something to ponder if you consider this:

"For every person who dies in a terrorist attack globally, 58 people in the US die due to lack of health care."

See More Here.

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slb

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February 18, 2010 2:08 AM    in reply to BlindBat

And I encourage Sen. Enzi to take credit for every one of those deaths starting from this past August. Go ahead Senator. Let's hear you brag about how many deaths you are responsible for.

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February 17, 2010 8:34 PM   

And yet, here we all are, fulminating and castigating and being scornful but conspiciously not calling for him to be hanged.

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February 17, 2010 9:12 PM    in reply to The Commenter Formerly Known as NCSteve

Hang the bast***!!!

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slb

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February 18, 2010 2:09 AM    in reply to The Commenter Formerly Known as NCSteve

I know. We progressives are such wimps.

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February 17, 2010 8:59 PM   

Oh gosh, and here he is publicly refuting the crap that his party trots out about no Republicans being at the table on healthcare reform. The reality is that this so-called gang of six were given inordinate amount of power, even though the Republicans were thrashed badly in 2008. Thanks Harry Reid. You invited this uninvited guest to the dinner table and all you got was a public screwing.

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February 18, 2010 12:34 AM    in reply to jsdc007

Really, thank you, Harry Reid.

And an open warning to all Washington Establishment Democrats reading this:

Whatever you do, do NOT pay any attention to the fact that 80% of Americans are opposed to the Supreme Court Citizens United decision, and that Republican Congressional leaders lauded it. Do NOT try to capitalize on this! It will end badly and you will be forced to apologize for your temerity! You must work assiduously and tirelessly to make sure the issue fades!

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February 18, 2010 2:35 AM   

Well, now I know who to blame ...

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February 18, 2010 5:52 AM   

Comical. The only GOPer who has accepted was even in the list of people invited.

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February 18, 2010 8:20 AM   

Max Baucus: Brilliant judge of character.

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February 18, 2010 10:54 AM    in reply to Moose49

Though it pains me to defend him, Baucus had long-term, personal relationships with all of these people that he really thought would enable him to get something done. Personal relationships like the ones Baucus had, or thought he had, used to be the mechanism by which the Senate managed to be a functional legislative body despite having rules on the books that empowered small minorities, or even individual senators, to gum up the works.

That used to be one of the key benefits of seniority. The longer you were in, the more of those relationships you had and the easier it was to form them with new members, who looked to the older ones for guidance on how to conduct themselves. Ted Kennedy, for example, used to be able to work those relationships to get bills passed even under Republican presidents in Republican controlled Senates. The young Republican firebrands who equated Teddy with Satan during the campaign would come in, see the older guys mentoring them treating Teddy with warmth and respect and by the end of their term, they were another of Teddy's friends who would occaisionally swap a vote for a bill if his for a favor down the road.

Far too many Senate Democrats still haven't managed to come to grips with the fact that those relationships are now utterly, completely meaningless, at least as a political matter. The ranks of their old friends have thinned out as, one by one, they've been replaced by half-crazed zealots like DeMent who are openly contemptuous of the "old boy" clubbiness that used to be the lubricant that kept the wheels turning. People who, indeed, are openly hostile to the entire concept of the public interest underlying the assumption that the wheels should turn.

Dodd's remarkably clueless statement about how all they need is love yesterday is a good example of that. I've long been an admirer of his, but he demonstrated yesterday that his decision to bow out was a prescient one. He, and Baucus and probably even Reid--though to a lesser extent than I believe a lot of people here think--are still working through the Kubler-Ross cycle for the death of the institution they've known and loved for decades. And some of them are stuck on denial.

I honestly feel sympathy for them. For the long-timers, the guys (and gals) who've really loved being senators, there's a vision of the Senate as an institution that they've invested their lives and identities into, a conception of the Senate that they truly loved like a child or a spouse. But now that Senate is dead, dead, dead. The generation of machiavellian manichean zealots that Gingrich brought in to the ranks of the GOP in the late 80s and early 90s have killed it beyond hope of recovery.

I recognize that now, and it's why I've done a 180 on killing the filibuster, but I don't have my whole life and identify invested in the place like they do. The ones who did don't want to believe it. They can't let it go.

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February 18, 2010 11:15 AM    in reply to The Commenter Formerly Known as NCSteve

Thanks -- that was very thoughtful and a valuable perspective. For the past year, it has seemed evident to me that the Democrats were playing one game but were clueless that the Republicans were playing a completely different game. Too many of the old dogs seem to be incapable of learning new tricks.

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February 18, 2010 2:52 PM   

Healthcare reform can start now with no high price tag

Obama and Congress are taking the entirely wrong approach to healthcare reform. We can be doing so much right now to improve healthcare without suspicious price tags. There is nothing wrong with carrying out reform in two phases: the immediate and low price-tag phase, and the longer-term, let's-find-the-money-first phase.

What can be done now, with little public opposition:

One group plan
Everyone would have access to insurance if all insurance companies were required to offer a plan to individuals as though they were all in one large company group plan, with the same rate and no exclusions. There is no cost to taxpayers; premiums are paid by the insured.

Guaranteed coverage and insurance market reforms
Few would argue with such provisions. The health insurance industry has been such a Wild West that companies could promise anything and provide nothing. They suffered no bad consequences when they blatantly breached contracts with subscribers. Other than enforcement, there would be no cost to taxpayers.

Essential benefits
An independent committee would define an "essential benefit package" as a minimum quality standard. It would include preventive services with no co-pays or deductibles, mental health services, and oral health and vision for children. It would cap the amount that consumers have to spend per year, and cost taxpayers nothing. Insurance companies could add features to this basic package. Now they can get away with not paying for basic services because most people do not have a choice of plans, and insurance plans are far too complicated to easily compare.

Individual responsibility
It is time for the government to be honest about the lifestyle factors that cause many of our healthcare problems. According to an article at preventdisease.com that is based on research reported in The New England Journal of Medicine, "preventable illness makes up approximately 80% of the burden of illness and 90% of all healthcare costs," and "preventable illnesses account for eight of the nine leading categories of death." This is the single most important factor in lowering healthcare costs and making people healthier. But in most ways it is not a role for government. It is up to individuals to change their habits. However, the federal government certainly shouldn't be making the situation worse. That means telling the truth about the fast food and prepared food industries. And it means requiring that government agencies and contractors use part-time and telecommuting work arrangements so people have time to exercise and prepare food at home. A national campaign aimed at employers, encouraging them to use flexible schedules for workers, such as part-time and telecommuting, could do a lot of good, with the government itself taking the lead. Cost to taxpayers: nothing. In fact, there are potentially huge savings in lowered healthcare costs.

Pushing for results
It is time for ratings. Netflix movies are rated. EBay sellers are rated. This is established technology. It is time for a central web site that shows us ratings for healthcare providers. Some sites do this now, but there are too many with too few ratings and it is chaotic. An insurance company doing ratings of its providers is not an unbiased source. How good is that doctor / hospital / radiology lab anyhow? How effective? How organized? How long a wait? How polite? How accurate a bill? This costs little and offers so much in savings and making healthcare very effective quickly. No more money is wasted on ineffective providers. People get well much sooner. Providers change their methods to get better ratings. Cost to taxpayers: very little. Such a site would also reveal the really bad eggs . . . moving on to . . .

Making sure healthcare providers really do their job
States are supposed to enforce this now, but often don't. According to a press release from Public Citizen's Sidney Wolfe, MD, "Most state medical boards are doing a dangerously lax job in enforcing their state medical practice acts and adequately disciplining physicians." In another article, Dr. Wolfe said that from 1990 to 2002, just five percent of U.S. physicians caused 54 percent of the nation's malpractice lawsuit payments, basing his numbers on information from the National Practitioner Data Bank. A constant stream of reports show that hospitals are covering up mistakes. If states were doing their job, there would be little or no malpractice lawsuits. This is far more important than tort reform. With ratings, state regulators, properly funded and monitored, could spot and check on providers who are doing a poor job before they do something really really wrong. Such a practice would eliminate payments to incompetent providers and lower malpractice cost. Cost to taxpayers: very little.


Emphasizing primary care
Healthcare reform needs to enhance the partnership between patient and primary care doctor. The primary care doctor is the one who needs to be on top of what is happening with a patient, with whatever record-keeping system works best for him or her (usually a hybrid of paper and database. All-electronic record-keeping is not reliable yet). Primary care doctors need to be paid as much or more than specialists and be paid for phone call and record-keeping time instead of just doctor visit time. Many doctors are forced to use a more expensive visit when a phone call will do because they don't get paid for phone time. Cost to taxpayers: nothing

Looking close at hospitals
Hospitals need to be very closely audited. Not only are there often bogus charges on bills, but the charges are far far beyond costs. No one really checks this, so they keep doing it. Employees wander around hospitals that don't seem to be doing anything. Hospitals charge for unnecessary tests, with no one making sure that tests are based on research. Anyone who complains is ignored. Medical institutions are roach motels for our hard-earned dollars. Dollars check in but they don't check out. Cost to taxpayers: very little.

A simple little thing
Refrigerator magnets can save millions. Yes, you read that right. A magnet can list the phone numbers, hours, and locations of urgent care centers that can be used during weekends and evenings instead of much more expensive emergency rooms. We now waste millions on non-emergency problems being treated in emergency rooms simply because people don't know where else to go. Cost to taxpayers: very little.

Another simple little thing
Money is wasted on mailed Explanation of Benefits forms from insurance companies when this information could be provided for free via a secured web site. Cost to taxpayers: nothing.

These no- or low-cost changes would greatly improve care and save millions. They are the first step. There is no reason to delay them in order to get a “comprehensive” healthcare reform. No reform can possibly work without them in place first.

Patty Zevallos
media producer – web, video, print
www.pbzproductions.com

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