Union leader predicts healthcare bill will die in House

By Raw Story
Friday, December 18th, 2009 -- 9:03 am
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afl cio logo Union leader predicts healthcare bill will die in HouseThe head of the massive AFL-CIO union took one step farther in labor's disenchantment with Senate Democrats' healthcare bill -- he promised the bill would die in the House of Representatives if it isn't changed.

AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka told reporter Sam Stein in little-highlighted comments Thursday that he's "extremely disappointed" with the current state of the Senate healthcare bill, which at this point has lost both a public healthcare option and the option for those over 55 to buy into Medicare.

"If the Senate bill in its current form went to the House it would go down," Trumka told Stein. "I can tell you this. The plan as it currently is would not get much support from the American worker unless it is improved.

"So that is another line they are going to have to deal with. Speaker [Nancy] Pelosi I think will adequately represent everybody involved," he added. "And I think that is a better model for a bill."

Raw Story's earlier report on union dissatisfaction with the bill follows.

Story continues below...

aflciounion Union leader predicts healthcare bill will die in HouseTwo of the nation's largest, most influential unions expressed serious reservations Thursday about the Senate health care bill, with the AFL-CIO coalition calling it "inadequate and too tilted toward the insurance industry."

"The absolute refusal of Republicans in the Senate to support health care reform and the hijacking of the bill by defenders of the insurance industry have brought us a Senate bill that is inadequate: It is too kind to the insurance industry," said AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka.

Union opposition presents a political problem for the White House, as Barack Obama relied on the unions' ability to organize and influence voters to build his presidential campaign last year.

In a statement released Thursday, Trumka listed what he saw as the fundamental problem with the Senate version of the health care bill, now that it has been stripped of a public option and a proposed expansion of Medicare benefits.

-- It lacks a public health insurance option, to offer real competition to insurance companies to bring down costs.
-- It fails to make sure employers take responsibility and pay their fair share.
-- It’s funded through a new tax on working families’ health care benefits.

"It doesn’t have to be this way," Seth Michaels wrote on the AFL-CIO blog. "The bill passed by the US House is far better than the Senate’s bill on these and other measures. The House bill finances health care through a small tax on the very wealthiest of earners—those who reaped vast benefits from the Bush tax cuts—and it includes a public health insurance plan and real responsibility for employers."

Meanwhile, the president of the Services Employees International Union issued a "challenge" to President Barack Obama to improve the Senate bill. In a letter to union members, Andy Stern said the president "must remember his own words from the campaign. His call of 'Yes We Can' was not just to us, not just to the millions of people who voted for him, but to himself. We all stood shoulder to shoulder with the president during his hard fought campaign.

"Our challenge to you, to the President, to the Senate and to the House of Representatives is to fight. Now, more than ever, all of us must stand up, remember what health insurance reform is all about, and fight like hell to deliver real and meaningful reform to the American people."

Stern wasn't as strong as the AFL-CIO in his condemnation of the Senate bill, and in fact advocated that the bill be moved forward. But he made it clear the union was unhappy with the the removal of the public option.

"At the very moment that we saw real and meaningful changes within our grasp, one Senator came forward to say 'no we can't.' He can't let the Senate have an up-or-down vote on health insurance reform," Stern wrote, referring to Sen. Joe Lieberman, the Connecticut independent whose declaration that he couldn't support the Medicare buy-in prompted Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid to remove the provision, the last vestige of a public option in the Senate bill.

In expressing discontent with the Senate bill, the unions added themselves to a growing chorus of progressive voices who are turning against the Senate bill. The dissent in the liberal ranks began with former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean's declaration that the bill in its current form is a "dream" for private health insurers and should be killed.

Dean's voice was followed by criticism of the bill from Sen. Russ Feingold, and a declaration from Sen. Bernie Sanders that he won't vote for the bill in its present form, indicating that the concessions to Lieberman did not secure the 60 votes the bill needs to overcome a Republican filibuster.

Dean's vocal opposition to the bill has made him a hero to some progressives. Writing at the Huffington Post, David Sirota declares Dean a "genuine hero" for his opposition to the removal of the public option.

"Here is, in short, a rare movement leader in the age of cynicism showing what a movement can do -- or at minimum, have a realistic shot to do -- when it musters a little bit of courage," Sirota wrote.

Sirota's argument that Dean has transformed himself into a leader of the American progressive movement is strengthened by the fact the White House attacked Dean's criticisms on Wednesday -- indicating the administration sees his as an influential voice.

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Story comments are below...

  • MrMe
    This bill will hand out Billions of free extortion money from taxpayers. Who normally would not be able to afford it. Now they still cannot afford it, instead it will be a criminal act not to pay, so they will be in contempt of the law by default, giving an extra payment to the government. Understand even if this bill only lasts a year or two after it goes into effect our government and big Pharma will rake in Billions. All while breaking constitutional law and robbing it's citizens.


    There does not have to be any point other than giving to the rich, there never has.
  • Rupert
    I find it amusing that most people complain that this health bill has been compromised, to fit Republican's ideals, when the Democrats have enough votes to force it through if they wanted. The compromises have been made to purchase the support from the few Democrats at least aren't completely following Obama blindly. Or it could be they are opportunist that know that Obama will buy them at any cost to push his agenda.
  • raj_shah
    Sorry that unions are not pleases with this. Unions want single payer meaning more union control. Imagine our healthcare where we have a union army that sucks our federal funds. To counter it doctors will get unionized and then guess what? American health care is on strike!
    You think unions really care about the public option? All they care about is to grow the union member ship, which will in return bring union dues. The fact that unions support public option is good enough to oppose it.
  • CoyoteMan
    You will see my 2009 predictions and you can judge my accuracy when I make my 2010 predictions in Jan. 2010
  • CoyoteMan
    The gonad-less Democrats let the Resmuglicans back them into a corner.
    Now the Dems will lose in 2010. (That is 1 of my predictions for 2010.)
    Stop trying to make friends and comprise with the Republicans! They aren't your friends.

    I've been saying this for months! No one is listening!

    Americans want legislation passed that benefits them not big banks and big insurance companies.
    Dems will pay for this mess in Nov. 2010!
  • kevin o
    This has turned into a debacle. This bill should have been split up into several smaller bills and debated piece by piece... just too much, too many players and comprimises for one bill. I fear that, once again healthcare reform is unattainable. Well, it's the thought that counts.
  • There is solid evidence, a vote a couple of days ago on the Dorgan Amendment, which gives the Unions and Governor Dean support.

    It was a truly bi-partisan amendment supported by 30 other senators to lower the cost Americans pay for the exact same medicine Europeans get for far, far less cost.

    Prominent democrats voted against it while about 20 republicans voted for it.

    But it failed to pass.

    http://blogdredd.blogspot.com/2009/12/dorgan-at...
  • WilyArmadilla
    Good. The Republicans hate the idea of single payer, so we compromised. They didn't like the idea of a public option, so we compromised. They didn't like equal competition in the 'co-opts' so we compromised again. Didn't like allowing the middle-aged to buy into Medicare, so we tossed that too. We've compromised until there's nothing left that'll change anything. The bill won't make healthcare more affordable, it won't make the system more efficient, it won't improve the actual CARE at all.


    At this point, what IS the point in passing this legislation?
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