Health Insurance Industry Shifts Focus

By Wendell Potter
Even though Congress hasn't even taken final action on health care reform legislation, the special interests, i.e., Big Insurance and Big Pharma, are already shifting some of their considerable resources to state capitals to try to thwart the intent of whatever legislation Congress finally sends to the President. It's a big assumption that the President will get something to sign, of course, but insurance and drug companies are taking no chances, as reported by The New York Times today in "Health Lobby Takes Fight to the States." We've been predicting this would happen for some time, so it's about time the Times and other media started paying attention. As they have done at the federal level, the insurance and drug companies have made "investments" in state legislators, mostly Republicans, where they think they have a good chance of getting state lawmakers to circumvent some of the most important components of meaningful reform. So reform advocates will not have a minute to rest. The battle will just be shifting from one city to many after the first of the year.

Topics: 

Comments

There seem to be 3 small things left to push for in this essentially lobby-written bill as it goes to conference. ((I'm a stalwart Medicare4All person, but even Medicare4More seems lost lost lost for now, horribly.)

3 things: 90% MLR(Medical Loss Ratio). National Exchange. Anti-trust laws -- that the Insurance Corporations be subject to the anti-trust laws.

AND us sane & humane should NEVER EVER utter the phrase "single payer" again. We should always and only say Medicare4All. Single Payer has too much baggage -- "socialist"; "European." The Republicans hate Medicare (and Social Security) but they don't dare really bad-mouth them.

Well, it’s amazing. The miracle has been done. Hat’s off. Well done, as we know that “hard work always pays off”, after a long struggle with sincere effort it’s done.
-----------------------------
dwilson1707
Home Insurance

This only proves one thing: that the insurance companies have a strong influence on what's coming next. Still, the president will have the final word on the next health plans, he's aiming the best interest of people but the best interest of people is such a relative term under these circumstances.

Auto Insurance Agent