Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Conyers: Obama Suffers from "Rahm Emanuel Factor"
Obama Suffers from ‘Rahm Emanuel Factor’--On Health Care, White House is Willing to ‘Make a Deal About Anything' Monday, July 27, 2009 By Nicholas Ballasy, Video Reporter
http://www.cnsnews.com/public/content/article.aspx?RsrcID=51625 (snip of article): CNSNews.com) –
When it comes to health care reform, President Barack Obama has succumbed to the “Rahm Emanuel factor," meaning he will make a deal about anything, House Judiciary Chairman John Conyers (D-Mich.) told reporters at the National Press Club on Friday. Rahm Emanuel is the White House chief of staff and a top political adviser to the president.
Conyers was complaining about President Obama not pursuing a "single-payer" health care system as the goal of his health-care reform efforts. This is a system that Conyers supports and that he says Obama also used to support.
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This is what Conyers said about the 1000 page plus heathcare (HR3200, I believe and note, even with admendment; it is no where close to being a bill like HR676)
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Thursday, May 7, 2009
Single payer folks jailed
the following vid is from: http://labornotes.org/node/2239
Labor notes has some good stuff and I recommend folks view. This is the video of what occured when single-payer folks took their comments to the senate: they were jailed.
Given that single-payer folks have been excluded from the healthcare debate, it is natural some leaders do not wish to hear what they have to say. I do have a few words, but publication of those words would probably be a "term of service " violation of the first order.
Far as I am concerned, those folks jailed are heros. Going to jail for a just cause is not a sin.
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HR 676 supporters jailed
http://www.laborforsinglepayer.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=94:exclusion-of-single-payer-advocates-leads-to-arrests
Exclusion of Single Payer
Advocates Leads to Arrests
LCS-P National Coordinator Mark Dudzic was among 8 protesters arrested for disrupting the Senate Finance Committee hearing yesterday as they challenged the Committee Chair's refusal to include any testimony from advocates of Single-Payer healthcare reform.
A short video is available of one of the protesters being removed by police:
A number of members of organizations supporting Single Payer Universal Health Care were in attendance at the hearing along with Mark Dudzic. Here is a note sent by Mark late last evening after being released by authorities:
“I got arrested today with 7 other activists as we disrupted the Senate Finance Committee hearing. Bauchus [Senate Finance Committee Chair Max Bauchus, D MT] has been the most arrogant and disrespectful of the committee chairs. I've been encouraging people to draw the line on him and couldn't resist the urge to join them. The other protesters belonged to the Physicians for a National Health Program and the Healthcare Now Coalition.
“I think it was exactly the right thing to do. We got more mileage out of it than if Bauchus had actually scheduled a token single payer witness and we hijacked the theme of the hearing. The associated press piece said something like "The protesters called for putting single payer on the table. Senator Bauchus called for more police."”
(the following from Workers Independent Network Radio) -http://www.laborradio.org/node/11053---(alas, only the text when I tried)
Single Payer Universal Health Care Advocates Denied A Voice At Senate Hearing - 05/06/09
The Obama Administration and the Democratic Congress have pledged to move forward with establishing a new healthcare system for the country, but not everyone has a seat at the table deciding what the best system should be. Jesse Russell has more:
Tuesday morning the Senate Finance Committee held a hearing regarding the future of healthcare in the United States featuring 15 witnesses, however, not a single witness was a supporter of single payer healthcare. Wanting their voices to be heard a number of doctors and advocates stood up at the start of the session and demanded a seat at the table and as they spoke they were immediately escorted out of the room and arrested by Capitol police.
[advocate]: “It's only when the people living in the park and the people living on Park Avenue have the same healthcare that everyone will have high quality healthcare.”
The speakers who stood up were from the organizations Physicians for a National Health Program, Health Care Now, and Single Payer Action. Senator Max Baucus of Montana is the head of the Finance Committee and he is also the leading Democrat in the Senate to receive donations from health insurance companies. Baucus has received more than $400,000 from the companies and their employees. As the head of the committee it was up to Baucus to bring order to the hearing.
[Baucus]: The whole point of this hearing and other hearings is to try and determine the best route and the best option for reforming our country's healthcare system.
Although Baucus said he respected the position of single payer advocates he didn't offer any of the physicians in the audience a seat at the table. President Barack Obama included supporters of single payer healthcare during his hearing in March.
mailto:organizers@laborforsinglepayer.org">organizers@laborforsinglepayer.org
or call Jerry Tucker at 314-968-5534
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Good Baucus "respects" HR676 supporters position. Anyone know how much loot he has recieved from Drug and Insurance companies?
"Baucus's campaigns have been health professionals and pharmaceuticals. The health sector has given Baucus at least $2.8 million during his career, more than any other sector with the exception of finance, insurance and real estate companies, which have given him $4.6 million."
from: http://www.opensecrets.org/news/2009/01/power-players-with-health-sect.html
which has a lot, lot more on Baucus the fearless leader
Amazing someone whom gets such gifts has such an open mind on the subject. Taking money from strangers and conducting public work with an open mind, so rare these days. Give me a couple million and we would be buddies, but then again I am not a senator.
Cash is prefered.
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By the way, more of the supporter of HR676 are waking up to the idea that some of our ideas are not welcome and folks that supported flipped positions overnight. I suspect more HR676 troublemakers will be seen and heard.
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Wednesday, May 6, 2009
Howard Dean on Ed Show 5-4-09
This is a snip from the ED Show on MSNBC. Howard Dean is the guest.
I admire Dr. Dean, however he does do a bit of spinning on the healthcare topic (my opinion) in this interview. Obama did exclude single payer folks from the healthcare discussions after the first one and no amount of spin will change that fact.
One can make the argument that "Medicare" or Medicaid are "single payer" plans. I believe a flawed argument for several reasons.
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
four pillars of health care reform
At the conservative website, they go over 16 plans including HR676. It even list Jindal's Lousiana's plan. http://www.conservativesforpatientsrights.com/plans.php
At this site, you can click up to four boxes and compare plans. Alas, this site does not list all the health care proposals; but one can get an indication where some of the conservatives are coming from. I urge my political action folks to review some of these and we shall talk about them shortly. I also urge folks to go to above site and watch the Fox news vid about this ad campaign---most informative.
I have looked at many of the listed plans and much more. HR676 is the superior program for the needs of the membership, the needs of America.
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Tuesday, April 7, 2009
Addition to Claire story
healthcare roundtable St. Louis University April, 09
Jerry Tucker was "union" guy at the table.
Michael Mancini
Healthcare Reform Roundtable Scheduled
Event Details: 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m., April 06, Il Monestero
Learn about the current healthcare reform policy landscape at an upcoming healthcare reform roundtable from 6-8 p.m. Monday, April 6, at Saint Louis University's Il Monestero Center, 3010 Olive (just east of Compton).The event is free and open to the public, however reservations are appreciated. A light supper and refreshments will be served and free parking is available at Il Monestero.
The roundtable will focus on healthcare reform policies at the federal and state levels and feature a panel of experts that includes local advocates, activists and community organizers from multiple sectors. Michael Mancini, associate professor in the School of Social Work, will serve as moderator of the panel of experts which includes:
Kirsten Dunham, Paraquad
Ruth Ehresman, Missouri Budget Project
Jacqueline Lukitsch, National Alliance on Mental Illness-St. Louis
Amy Smoucha, Missouri Healthcare for All; Missouri Jobs with Justice
Julie Terbrock, Missouri Progressive Vote Coalition
Jerry Tucker, Labor Campaign for Single Payer Healthcare
Sidney Watson, Saint Louis University School of Law, Center for Health Law Studies
Join us to strategize, collaborate and organize around local efforts to secure quality, affordable healthcare for all.
The event is co-Sponsored by School of Social Work, The Doerr Center for Social Justice and the Department of Public Policy Studies
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By the way, Jerry Tucker is considered trouble-maker UAW fellow. The following is from the New York Times last weekend which quotes him. It also quotes Leo Gerard
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/05/weekinreview/05greenhouse.html
April 5, 2009
In America, Labor Has an Unusually Long Fuse
By STEVEN GREENHOUSE
The workers and other protesters who gathered en masse at the Group of 20 summit meeting last week in London were continuing a time-honored European tradition of taking their grievances into the streets.
Two weeks earlier, more than a million workers in France demonstrated against layoffs and the government’s handling of the economic crisis, and in the last month alone, French workers took their bosses hostage four times in various labor disputes. When General Motors recently announced huge job cuts worldwide, 15,000 workers demonstrated at the company’s German headquarters.
But in the United States, where G.M. plans its biggest layoffs, union members have seemed passive in comparison. They may yell at the television news, but that’s about all. Unlike their European counterparts, American workers have largely stayed off the streets, even as unemployment soars and companies cut wages and benefits.
The country of Mother Jones, John L. Lewis and Walter Reuther certainly has had a rich and sometimes militant history of labor protest — from the Homestead Steel Works strike against Andrew Carnegie in 1892 to the auto workers’ sit-down strikes of the 1930s and the 67-day walkout by 400,000 G.M. workers in 1970.
But in recent decades, American workers have increasingly steered clear of such militancy, for reasons that range from fear of having their jobs shipped overseas to their self-image as full-fledged members of the middle class, with all its trappings and aspirations.
David Kennedy, a Stanford historian and author of “Freedom From Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929-1945,” says that America’s individualist streak is a major reason for this reluctance to take to the streets. Citing a 1940 study by the social psychologist Mirra Komarovsky, he said her interviews of the Depression-era unemployed found “the psychological reaction was to feel guilty and ashamed, that they had failed personally.”
Taken together, guilt, shame and individualism undercut any impulse to collective action, then as now, Professor Kennedy said. Noting that Americans felt stunned and desperately insecure during the Depression’s early years, he wrote: “What struck most observers, and mystified them, was the eerie docility of the American people, their stoic passivity as the Depression grindstone rolled over them.”
By the mid-1930s, though, worker protests increased in number and militancy. They were fueled by the then-powerful Communist and Socialist Parties and frustrations over continuing deprivation. Workers also felt that they had President Roosevelt’s blessing for collective action because he signed the Wagner Act in 1935, giving workers the right to unionize.
“Remember, at that time, you had Hoovervilles and 25 percent unemployment,” said Daniel Bell, a professor emeritus of sociology at Harvard. “Many people felt that capitalism was finished.”
General strikes paralyzed San Francisco and Minneapolis, and a six-week sit-down strike at a G.M. plant in Flint, Mich., pressured the company into recognizing the United Automobile Workers. In the decade’s ugliest showdown, a 1937 strike against Republic Steel in Chicago, 10 protesters were shot to death. That militancy helped build a powerful labor movement, which represented 35 percent of the nation’s workers by the 1950s and helped create the world’s largest and richest middle class.
Today, American workers, even those earning $20,000 a year, tend to view themselves as part of an upwardly mobile middle class. In contrast, European workers often still see themselves as proletarians in an enduring class struggle.
And American labor leaders, once up-from-the-street rabble-rousers, now often work hand-in-hand with C.E.O.’s to improve corporate competitiveness to protect jobs and pensions, and try to sideline activists who support a hard line.
“You have a general diminution of union leadership that was focused on defending workers by any means necessary,” said Jerry Tucker, a longtime U.A.W. militant. “The message from the union leadership nowadays often is, ‘We don’t have any choice, we have to go down this concessionary road to see if we can do damage control,’ ” he said.
In the case of the Detroit automakers, a strike might not only hasten their demise but infuriate many Americans who already view auto workers as overpaid. It might also make Washington less receptive to a bailout.
Labor’s aggressiveness has also been sapped by its declining numbers. Unions represent just 7.4 percent of private-sector workers today.
Unions have also grown more cautious as management has become more aggressive. A watershed came in 1981 when the nation’s air traffic controllers engaged in an illegal strike. President Reagan quickly fired the 11,500 striking traffic controllers, hired replacements and soon got the airports running. After that confrontation, labor’s willingness to strike shrank markedly.
American workers still occasionally vent their anger in protests and strikes. There were demonstrations against the A.I.G. bonuses, for instance, and workers staged a sit-down strike in December when their factory in Chicago was closed. But the numbers tell the story: Last year, American unions engaged in 159 work stoppages, down from 1,352 in 1981, according to the Bureau of National Affairs, a publisher of legal and regulatory news.
Michael Kazin, a historian at Georgetown University, said that while demonstrations remain a vital outlet for the European left, for Americans “the Internet now somehow serves as the main outlet” with angry blogs and mass e-mailing.
Left-leaning workers and unions that might be most prone to stage protests during today’s economic crisis are often the ones most enthusiastic about President Obama and his efforts to revive the economy, help unions and enact universal health coverage. Instead of taking to the streets last fall to protest the gathering economic crisis under President Bush, many workers and unions campaigned for Mr. Obama.
Leo Gerard, president of the United Steelworkers, said there were smarter things to do than demonstrating against layoffs — for instance, pushing Congress and the states to make sure the stimulus plan creates the maximum number of jobs in the United States.
“I actually believe that Americans believe in their political system more than workers do in other parts of the world,” Mr. Gerard said. He said large labor demonstrations are often warranted in Canada and European countries to pressure parliamentary leaders. Demonstrations are less needed in the United States, he said, because often all that is needed is some expert lobbying in Washington to line up the support of a half-dozen senators.
Professor Kennedy saw another reason that today’s young workers and young people were protesting less than in decades past. “This generation,” he said, has “ found more effective ways to change the world. It’s signed up for political campaigns, and it’s not waiting for things to get so desperate that they feel forced to take to the streets.”
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both Leo and Jerry do make it into the New York times from time to time.
Thursday, March 26, 2009
HR676 update and info
Those not supporting HR676, then it is time to put pressure.
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H.R.676 Title: To provide for comprehensive health insurance coverage for all United States residents, improved health care delivery, and for other purposes. Sponsor: Rep Conyers, John, Jr. [MI-14] (introduced 1/26/2009) Cosponsors (72) Latest Major Action: 1/26/2009 Referred to House committee. Status: Referred to the Committee on Energy and Commerce, and in addition to the Committees on Ways and Means, and Natural Resources, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
ALL ACTIONS:
1/26/2009:
Referred to the Committee on Energy and Commerce, and in addition to the Committees on Ways and Means, and Natural Resources, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
1/26/2009:
Referred to House Energy and Commerce
1/26/2009:
Referred to House Ways and Means
1/26/2009:
Referred to House Natural Resources
Friday, March 6, 2009
ARA Obama Health Care

FRIDAY ALERT
Alliance for Retired Americans
815 16th Street, NW, Fourth Floor • Washington, DC 20006 202.637.5399 • www.retiredamericans.org • arafridayalert@retiredamericans.org
March 6, 2009
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Alliance Participates in White House Health Care SummitPresident Barack Obama stepped up his effort to pass health-care-reform legislation this week, naming a new Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and hosting a White House summit to discuss solutions to the issues at hand. On Monday, the president announced Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius as his choice to head HHS. The same day, he named Nancy Ann Min DeParle, who served as a top health official in the Clinton administration, the new director of the White House Office on Health Reform.
The President hosted a White House summit on how to overhaul the health-care system on Thursday, with approximately 120 invited members of Congress, advocates from non-profits, and others gathering to discuss the road forward. Alliance Executive Director Edward F. Coyle was one of the advocates in attendance.
Rather than craft health care legislation on its own, the administration is offering a set of principles to shape a process in which all stakeholders will make concessions.
As an opening maneuver, Obama set aside $634 billion in his proposed budget to be dedicated to health reform. The 10-year reserve fund could be used to provide health insurance to some of the 46 million Americans who do not have it today. To raise that money, Obama would cut itemized tax deductions for the wealthiest Americans and trim federal payments to hospitals, home health aides, drug manufacturers and some physicians.
White House budget director Peter Orszag said on Sunday that he wants to see the effort offset with tax increases or spending cuts so it does not add to the deficit, according to The Wall Street Journal. The White House proposal contains numerous elements that are likely to come under debate, including whether businesses should be required to provide insurance to workers and whether Americans should be required to sign up for insurance. A Democratic proposal to set up a public program to compete with private health-insurance companies is also under discussion. Next up will be Senate confirmation hearings for Gov. Sebelius, who was a two-term state insurance commissioner before becoming governor.
Said Mr. Coyle, “The Alliance for Retired Americans believes that any health care reform passed by Congress must: allow Medicare to negotiate volume discounts with drug manufacturers; close the ‘donut hole’ in Medicare Part D coverage; and provide early retirees age 55-64 the option to purchase Medicare coverage. I look forward to working with my fellow Summit attendees and the Obama administration to improve health care for current – and future – retirees.”
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It was good that a member of labor, retiree organization was at conference. Where are the folks that support HR676, such as the nurse's organizations? Seems some early stacking the deck for the insurance/pharm companies.
Also beware, when folks in Washington or the state houses talk about "benefit reform", they naturally are talking about getting further into your pocketbooks by cutting any promiced benefits. This of course sounds familiar to many in the Canco retirement community for that is exactly what American-National, Silgan, Crown-Cork has done to the retirees. Retirees for many other companies can report this as well and the list would be many, many pages.
Of course, some would remind me this is early; but I think the powers-that-be should be very aware our position here in St. Louis. I figure with the "give-backs" to the company (or theft of benefits one might say), I have already donated to the great society and I for one really do not wish to hear that "compromise" or " give a little" bull hockey.
After all, I am not one who has accepted insurance or drug company blood money nor is any in our merry little band on the West Bank in Missouri.
Most of the SOAR 11-3 folks feel exactly this way.
More on healthcare summit

It is unbelievabal, but it looks as if the "676-ers" were excluded from yesterday's health care meeting. The following is from the "nurses" association.
Labor Campaign for Single-Payer Healthcare
Healthcare Is A Right -- Not A Privilege
www.laborforsinglepayer.org
For Immediate Release: March 4, 2009
Contact: Mark Dudzic: 201-314-2653 – mdudzic@igc.org
Labor Leaders Demand That ‘Single Payer’ Be Part of Obama Healthcare Reform Discussions
The Obama administration’s plans to hold a “Health Care Summit” that excludes advocates of single-payer healthcare reform has drawn a sharp response from labor leaders around the country.
“President Obama has indicated that his administration is committed to the passage of a new ‘universal’ national health care program for all Americans, and he wants it done this year. For working people, and particularly the 48 million Americans currently without health insurance, this is welcome news. We also applaud the President’s efforts to provide immediate relief to the growing number of unemployed workers faced with the loss of their health insurance,” said Mark Dudzic, National Coordinator of the Labor Campaign for Single Payer Healthcare.
“At the same time,” he continued, “we are deeply concerned by the apparent failure of the administration to include a single supporter of HR 676 among the 120 invited participants to Thursday’s Health Care Reform Summit. We are calling on our supporters to call and write the White House and demand that our voice be heard.”
HR 676, the “Expanded and Improved Medicare for All” Act, was re-introduced this year by Congressman John Conyers. It currently has 59 congressional co-sponsors. Because it eliminates the private insurance industry from profiting from people’s misfortunes and, like Medicare, establishes the federal government as the “single payer” of everyone’s medical bills, HR 676 can provide healthcare for all with no co-pays or deductibles in a fiscally prudent manner. HR 676 has the endorsement of hundreds of state and local labor federations and local unions as well as many other civic and religious organizations.
“The first step is to ensure that HR 676 has a ‘seat at the table’ in the upcoming healthcare reform debates,” said South Carolina AFL-CIO President Donna Dewitt. “It needs to be given the same degree of attention as all other credible proposals for reform and subjected to a side-by-side ‘facts based’ analysis with those proposals.”
Leaders of the Labor Campaign for Single Payer are urging President Obama to consider alternatives which, like Medicare, would not rely on private, for-profit insurance companies to ration health care to the American people. “Proposals which funnel our precious healthcare dollars into the pockets of the for-profit insurance industry and other
special interests will do nothing to contain and control costs or improve the quality of care,” said Fernando Gapasin, President of the West Central Oregon Central Labor Council.
Labor leaders from Massachusetts are particularly concerned that their state’s law requiring all individuals to purchase private health insurance is being touted as a model for the nation. “Last month 40 of my fellow union leaders wrote to President Obama to urge him to reject a Massachusetts-style plan that would leave private insurance companies at the center of the system through an individual mandate and expensive public subsidies supported by taxes for plans that still don’t provide enough coverage. The Massachusetts plan is widely recognized as unsustainable and now that we are facing an economic crisis, it is even more problematic.” said Peter Knowlton, president of the Northeast Region of the United Electrical Workers Union (UE).
“If anyone should be excluded from this summit,” said Ray Stever, New Jersey State Industrial Union Council President, “it should be the representatives of the health insurance industry. These are the very people who caused the crisis in the first place. They will move heaven and earth to continue to deny Americans the healthcare justice that citizens of all other industrialized countries enjoy.”
The Labor Campaign for Single Payer Healthcare joins other single payer advocates and organizations who are demanding that their views be represented in the growing debate over health care reform. These include the Leadership Conference for Guaranteed Healthcare, Healthcare-NOW, the All Unions Committee for Single Payer, the Physicians for a National Health Program and the California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee whose Co-president, Geri Jenkins, RN, recently warned, “Any reform premised on expanding the insurance-based system will likely fail, frustrate the public desire for a real solution to our healthcare crisis, and undermine the political capital the administration has earned for reform.”
“That is why it is so important to speak up at this moment,” said Clyde Rivers of the California School Employees Association. “The stakes are too high to allow special interests to hijack a discussion whose outcome will so importantly affect the lives and livelihoods of the American people. We call on President Obama and the leaders of both houses of Congress to give HR 676 the fair and open hearing that it deserves,”
**** **** **** **** **** ****
The Labor Campaign for Single Payer Healthcare was formed at a January 10th meeting in St. Louis, Missouri attended by over 150 representatives from labor organizations in 31 states that have endorsed HR 676. We believe that the struggle for universal, single-payer health care needs labor’s dynamic grassroots involvement. www.laborforsinglepayer.org
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I watched the "interview" and comments after the first meeting. I think the term Obama used was "Bleeding heart liberal" in his after comments.
Horse droppings is my reply. This liberal supports HR676 for a number of reasons and "bleeding heart bullshit" is far down on the list. Most of Soar 11-3 believes likewise.
In any case, if Obama puts down the concern that over 20k fellow citizens die each year from lack of preventable care (and this estimate is too low in my opinion) as "bleeding heart nonsense", then Obama does not understand the full horror of the disaster we call health care and deserves to be a one termer.
It is folks like himself that took insurance blood money and pharm pay-offs for his election and not myself or any in the group. Yes, blood money for how does one think these folks make money. Soylent Green type thinking it seems.
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Obama's health care mistake

President Obama is making a grave error. He has excluded the Nurse's Associations promoting HR676 from his upcoming health care conference.
Several of the members have called the White House and or sent e-mails. If you support the "Medicare for All Americans Act" you might wish to call and call soon.
Excluding our guys from productive imput in the mess we call health care in this nation is a grave error on the parts of the elected ones. We admit that HR 676 will not solve all the health care woes of the land, but it is the best proposal currently in congress. This plan is the closest proposal to our "old time" canco insurance, which was vastly superior to the current mess we all enjoy thanks to the greedy companies.
From Nurses's e-letter:
TELL THE PRESIDENT LET NURSES IN!
The voice of single payer has been shut out of the Obama Health Care Summit. Nurses, Doctors, Patients and millions of other activists do not have a voice at the table. Obama promised an open process, instead the only "evidenced-based reform" for health care – single payer – is excluded!
All other groups support keeping the insurance industry in place, even though single payer would generate 2.6 million additional jobs in America while covering every patient!
Nurses worked hard in every state in this country to elect Obama on the belief that their patients would finally have security about that which is most precious - the health of their families. It is not too late!
Call The White House today!Tell them to let single payer into the White House Summit on health care.
(202) 456-1414 or (202) 456-1111
TELL THE PRESIDENT America's HealthcareSolution is HR 676 - Medicare for ALL - Let Us In!