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    ‘health care’



    VIDEO: Health Care Webchat

    Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

    We posted yesterday that Rock the Vote President Heather Smith would join Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius in a conversation about the expansion of health care which now allows people to stay on their parents’ health care until the age of 26. Prior to the chat thousands of  people emailed or tweeted questions about the expansion to Secretary Sebelius and Heather, this video gives lots of answers to some of the questions asked.

    Jason
    Bio:

    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com



    Get a Job, baby!

    Friday, March 26th, 2010

    All of our comments are sent to a queue so I read (or glance) over many of them before I hit approve. As you can see, there isn’t any censorship. I just throw away all the spam. So in reading the blog comments, I noticed a lot of people telling people opposed to Health Care Reform to “Stop crying and get a job!”

    While that’s a great plan in theory, with unemployment hovering around 10 percent, that’s not always easy and many qualified people are still out of work and another many work for businesses that don’t offer insurance.

    But what happens when you can’t get a job because you’re an infant (I mean just out of the womb infant) and you’re denied health care because your parents’ insurance company (if they have insurance) says you have a “pre-existing condition”? Are you still a free-loader?

    Check out this story of the Tracy family from Texas. Their infant son is being denied health insurance due to a pre-existing condition and since the provision that makes it illegal for insurance companies to discriminate against kids doesn’t become law until September, the family is fighting for coverage now. A call to the Texas Department of Insurance hasn’t resulted in any results yet. So the baby is fighting to live and the family is doing it all without insurance.

    [The Tracy's} paid out of pocket for Kim Tracy's neonatal care and the baby's delivery. Doug Tracy said they were told that they could apply for insurance for Houston within 30 days of his birth.

    A spokeswoman for Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas declined to comment but issued a statement saying, "Our policy is that if a family has existing coverage with us, a baby can be added to the contract within 31 days without the need for underwriting to assess the baby's eligibility."

    But that's only if the parents have coverage, said the spokeswoman, Margaret Jarvis. Read that with the emphasis on parents.

    You can read the entire story by clicking here

    Jason
    Bio:

    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com



    Seven days till heath care reform?

    Friday, March 12th, 2010

    The White House announced today that the President is going to push back a scheduled trip he had to go to Guam, Indonesia and Australia to stay in the U.S. to make sure health care gets done. Health care supporters are pushing for a vote sooner rather than later, so President Obama is going to hang back to make sure this gets done. And now it seems like Speaker Pelosi is telling the Democrats to cancel their weekend plans next week because a vote is coming.

    Ok, so the President isn’t going on his trip and will be working the phones and having meetings to get the job done. And the Speaker is gearing up for a vote. But, what about you? What are you doing to make sure health care reform stays on track? Did you attend the health care rally in DC this week? Are you organizing phone banks or letter writing campaigns to connect with your member of congress? Are you talking to your friends and family about health care reform?

    Let us know what you’re doing to remind your elected officials that health care reform matters to you and want to get a bill with meaningful reform passed now.

    Jason
    Bio:

    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com



    Monday Action

    Monday, March 8th, 2010

    Have you recovered from the Oscars? Happy with the winners? In addition to the glitz (and dramatized Nazi killing, bomb defusing, Avataring) on display last night, the world continues spinning. Here are a few nuggets:

    • Iraq: nearly two-thirds of all Iraqis voted in this weekend’s national elections, despite the threat – real and actual – of violence. Remarkable.
    • Health care: sounds like things are coming to a close on the details of the health care bill (more on that later). In the meantime, if you are in D.C. and want to get involved in some good old-fashioned protesting, tomorrow (Tuesday, March 9th) thousands of activists will hit the streets to protest big insurance and demand that Congress pass comprehensive health care reform now. March 9th is the day the health insurance lobby, America’s Health Insurance Plans, is holding a national conference at the Ritz Carlton Hotel to advance their agenda to defeat health care reform. Details on tomorrow’s protest are here: http://citizensposse.com/.
    • 2010 elections: really interesting poll from our friends at NDN about the 2010 electorate and how Millennials are shaping it. Check it out here.
    • Financial reform: Are you one of the 2.5 million people who have already watched this? If not, check this out from Funny or Die:

    What else is going on?

    Thomas Bates
    Bio: Thomas is Rock the Vote's Vice President of Civic Engagement.
    @BatesThomas
    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com



    Prognosis Negative?

    Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

    Newsweek has a very interesting article looking at young voters and how lack of action on health care could hurt turnout in the next election. Take a gander – do you agree?

    ~Mary


    Prognosis Negative

    Young people are the group most likely to be uninsured—and to support healthcare reform. If Democrats don’t deliver it, they may stay home in November.
    By Jesse Singal | Newsweek Web Exclusive
    Feb 2, 2010

    Here’s something that should make David Axelrod nervous: there are probably more Yankees fans in Massachusetts than there are young people who voted in the Massachusetts Senate special election, which cost the Democrats their filibuster-proof supermajority. Just 15 percent of eligible voters under age 30 participated. The numbers were similarly dismal during two other Republican electoral victories from last fall. In the Virginia and New Jersey gubernatorial races, just 17 and 19 percent of potential young voters participated, respectively.

    This wasn’t just a fluke trifecta of uninspiring elections. It is, rather, part of a nationwide trend toward apathy among Americans under 30. Harvard’s Institute of Politics (IOP), which regularly polls young people on political issues, found last fall that just 24 percent of 18 to 29-year-olds said that they were “politically engaged or politically active,” a 19-point drop from a year earlier. This could mean trouble down the road for a Democratic Party that may have begun taking the youth vote for granted. Young voters, after all, turned out in record numbers for the 2008 election, and if they hadn’t, Obama might not be in the White House. But if Democrats don’t pass health-care reform, youth turnout may plummet.

    Obama’s strong statements on health-care reform during his State of the Union address dealt at least a glancing blow to the then conventional wisdom, which was that Democrats were mere inches from irrevocable defeat on health care. Still, given the mess Nancy Pelosi faces in the House, it seems more likely than not that the party will, at best, pass through a series of minor patches. The reasons for this are complicated and have been hashed over endlessly, but a compelling reason to pass health-care reform is being ignored by the party bosses: it could forestall a devastating migration of young voters away from the party and back into political apathy.

    Young Americans are uniquely affected by the nation’s broken health-care system. The Commonwealth Fund, a private foundation that aims to improve health care, found in a report released in December that nearly half of all young adults between 19 and 29 said they were uninsured at some time during the past year. Because this age range brings with it a number of transition points that can lead to coverage being cut off—high school and college graduation, and early internships or jobs that don’t provide coverage—it’s a decade fraught with peril.

    Given the weakness in the economy, says Susan Collins, co-author of the report, young adults looking for insurance through their employers face an uphill battle. If the economy gets worse, so too will the health-care outlook for young Americans. “This will become increasingly serious if it’s not addressed through policy,” Collins told NEWSWEEK.

    It’s no surprise, then, that even after months of demonization, including countless falsehoods about government takeovers and “death panels,” young people remain the group that supports health-care reform at the highest rates. When the Commonwealth Fund asked young respondents whether it was important for Congress and the president to improve the health-care system, 88 percent said yes.
    John Halpin, a senior fellow at the left-leaning Center for American Progress think tank (full disclosure: I used to work there), took the issue a step further. Young people, he wrote in an e-mail, “are much more supportive of a positive role for government in the economy and social policy than are older voters…The perception of how the health-care fight has unfolded—as well as other issue battles on the banks and the economy—surely has not helped matters on this front.”

    The Harvard IOP data support Halpin’s view when it comes to health care. In its fall 2009 poll, the Institute found that young people approve by a large margin every potential health-care remedy that involves a more direct role for government, including offering a public option, enacting a universal mandate, and increasing government regulation over how health-insurance companies handle preexisting conditions.

    Halpin’s point and the IOP’s polling hint at the Democratic Party’s biggest youth-vote problem: young voters were awestruck by Obama because he was a once-in-a-lifetime candidate who they thought would act on their behalf, not merely because he was a Democrat. If the Democrats drop health care, there will be an entire generation of young voters unable to point to a single major legislative accomplishment from the party during their lifetime. And as far they will be concerned, when it came time for the Democrats to act on an issue that was particularly important to them, they folded.
    None of this is to say that Obama and congressional Democrats haven’t delivered on issues of importance to young people. Obama signed into law the Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act, which will greatly expand national community service programs and more than triple the size of AmeriCorps by 2017. He has also pushed hard to address onerous student loans, which hamper many young Americans through their twenties and beyond. And Congressional Democrats quickly raised the minimum wage—which young people are more likely to earn than older workers—after taking control in 2007.

    But politically disengaged young voters aren’t as aware of these moves as they are of the noisy fight over health care. They may have deviated from their usual stay-at-home tendencies to vote overwhelmingly Democrat in 2008, but when Democrats exhort them to repeat the act in 2010 and 2012, their inevitable response will be: “why?” In a feverishly anti-incumbent political climate fueled by the terrible economy, this could hand some races to the GOP.

    “I speculate that a lot of [young people] will think if the Democrats drop the [health-care] bill, that there really isn’t any point to engaging through national politics,” says Peter Levine, director of CIRCLE, a Tufts University–based organization that studies youth political engagement.

    Levine drew analogies to 1992, when he and other left-leaning Generation-Xers, coming of age politically after 12 years of Reagan and Bush, were inspired to vote for Clinton. They were quickly disappointed by what they saw as his policy failings.

    “We were waiting for a Democratic president,” he said, “and when he didn’t do what had been expected, a lot of people in my generation then decided that political engagement wasn’t valuable and did service instead.” Sure enough, youth turnout plunged in the 1996 presidential election and didn’t exceed the 1992 level until 2008.

    If the Democrats let down young voters by walking away from health-care reform, history may repeat itself in more ways than one.

    Singal is a freelance writer in Boston. His writing and reporting have appeared in The Boston Globe, Politico, Washington Monthly, and The American Prospect Online.

    Mary
    Bio:
    @Rockthevote
    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com