Obama to announce fix for canceled health plans

Discussion in 'Politics' started by gwb-trading, Nov 14, 2013.

  1. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    Obama to announce fix for canceled health plans
    http://www.wral.com/obama-to-announce-fix-for-canceled-health-plans/13110480/

    This is becoming more amusing than Mayor Ford in Toronto smoking crack.

    Let me predict.... he will say that you can keep your current policy for one more year without tax penalties - if the insurance company still is willing to offer it.... or some type of similar nonsense.
     
  2. Lucrum

    Lucrum

    :D :D

    What makes Obongo think, other than the pot he smokes, that insurance companies will reinstate cancelled policies at the lower original premiums?
     
  3. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    "The Crack - it really messes with your head." - just waiting for this quote at a press conference.
     
  4. Rush was predicting republicans would fall all over themselves to help obama out of this mess.

    They should hold the budget hostage to a total repeal. Settle for nothing less. Go all in for once and let the chips fall where they may.
     
  5. Lucrum

    Lucrum

    "Boner" and company don't have the stones for any such thing.
     
  6. Insurance companies aren't going to like the fix. Here's why:

    Second, Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-OR) became the second liberal Democrat (along with Sen. Dianne Feinstein) to sign on as a co-sponsor to Sen. Mary Landrieu's bill to fix Obama's "if you like your health plan, you can keep it" lie. The legislation grandfathers in all health plans up until January 1st, 2013, as Rep. Fred Upton's bill in the House does, but it takes it a step further. Landrieu does more than just allow insurers to continue offering health plans to current beneficiaries. She requires them to do so.

    Besides the fact that this plan is likely technically infeasible, it also is a massive government intervention into the insurance market. Many insurers cancelled plans because they were filled with high-risk people. They would now have no choice to continue offering them. Others, like United Healthcare in California, have pulled out of the state individual insurance market altogether; they would now be forced back in, unless they choose to also exit the much-larger group insurance market.

    When Landrieu's legislation was supported by mostly red-state Democrats who were up for re-election in 2014, insurers had little to worry about. It was all politics. But now, with Landrieu and Merkley as co-sponsors, this bill just gained mainstream Democratic support. It's unclear what its chances are in the House, but its momentum is building.

    Insurers have largely been quiet the past month and a half as the administration tries to get the website working. Everyone involved has the same goal so insurers have seen little value in publicly criticizing the White House. But it's becoming increasingly likely that insurers will face an unexpectedly expensive pool of beneficiaries in their plans and that any legislative fixes to the law will come at their expense. So far, they've stuck by the administration. That could change in the near future.
     
  7. Ricter

    Ricter

    The outcry over cancelled plans is solid evidence of how much value people put on health insurance. So bringing millions of the previously uninsured on board is a very good thing for the country.
     
  8. LEAPup

    LEAPup

    That's all it's about. Onazi could give two shits about the serfs. He cares about keeping the senate where it is: broken under democommunist majority so he can enact even more slavery upon America.:mad:
     
    #10     Nov 14, 2013