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SCHIP Is Back, House to Vote Again This Week

Posted by Scarecrow at 5:34 AM on October 25, 2007.


Scarecrow: This is one we can win and/or make the opposition pay dearly next November.
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This post, written by Scarecrow, originally appeared on FireDogLake

Last night Speaker Pelosi announced she would bring a slightly revised SCHIP funding bill to the House floor for a vote -- today. The revised bill still provides $35 billion in additional funds and health coverage for 10 million children, but it makes a few changes to counter the Bush Administration's misrepresentations and opponent's alleged concerns.

As Pelosi promised last week, the plan is to enact the full SCHIP funding again, and if the President is foolish and heartless enough to veto it again, attempt another override, with the opposition having even fewer excuses to vote no. This type of strategy is exactly what many progressives have been hoping from the Democratic leadership when they know the public is solidly behind them against an out-of-touch, unpopular President. It's not just good politics; it's good public policy, because this program deserves passage and has the overwhelming support of the American people.

The changes include clarification that coverage does not extend to families with annual incomes at $83,000 (a confusion left over from New York's request that the Administration had already denied); it apparently won't cover those not legally in the US for five years; and it further limits coverage for adults who do not have covered children.

Although the "revision" regarding immigrants appears only a clarification of what was already in the prior bill, the absence of potential coverage for undocumented immigrants is particularly regrettable; denying health care to any child is both morally unconscionable and incomprehensible from a public health perspective. But in light of yesterday's 52-44 failed cloture vote -- 60 were needed -- on the DREAM Act, which would have allowed those undocumented immigrants brought to the US when they were 15 or younger to earn a path to legal status after two years of college or military service [see Marisa Trevino's post and Phoenix Woman's coverage], that exclusion in SCHIP appeared politically unavoidable. Add that to the list of 100+ other really important things we need to fix in 2009.

From Speaker Pelosi's statement:

"It's supported by a bipartisan coalition, Democrats and Republicans across the country. Republican and Democratic governors support the SCHIP initiative. Every organization that you can name, from the AARP to the YWCA, and everything in between, AMA, the Catholic Hospital Association, Families First, are lobbying for the passage of this legislation. . . .

"The focus is on the poor children. These are poor children. The poorest children receive their health care through Medicaid. Then just above that tier, the working poor families, the focus is there and we're very proud of the legislation.

"It honors the spirit of 10 million children, $35 billion all paid for, no new deficit spending, pay as you go. And again, this is a clarification of the legislation that we put forth to ensure these children. We are responding to some of the concerns expressed by our colleagues and some clarification that we thought improved the bill."

The White House, already concerned about having to go behind closed doors again to veto a popular children's health program, issued a "fact sheet" -- meaning it is full of misrepresentations and diversions. Bill Scher at Campaign for America's Future debunks that nonsense, while The Hill reports on how anxious Bush loyalist Republicans are to be seen as willing to compromise.

This is what we asked for; it's what Democrats need to do. So we'll need your phone help again, both in getting the revised bill passed by large margins and in working to override the expected veto. And if we need extra motivation, ask why is this man still smiling?

We've taken some lumps lately, with the first SCHIP override vote and then Southwick's confirmation and the DREAM Act failing cloture. But this is one we can win . . . and/or make the opposition pay dearly next November. And who knows; if the Democrats actually win one, they might be willing to stand up to Bush on FISA.

Photo: Kids hauling petitions to override the SCHIP veto. (AFP/File/Mandel Ngan)

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Tagged as: s-chip, health care, bush, conservative democrats, democratic congress, pelosi, children

Scarecrow is a regular blogger for FireDogLake


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S-CHIP based on the backs of taxes on tobacco
Posted by: Bibsi on Oct 31, 2007 8:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Rethugs will not pass this bill to upgrade health care for children; they've attached nearly a dollar per pack to cigarettes to fund it. In my backward state of TN, our governor pushed for and passed another $.42 cents per pack while TN has the highest sales tax in the nation and while they passed a lottery a couple years ago to pay for, they said, education. TN used the money they got from tobacco companies (as did some other tobacco-growing states) for other projects than anti-smoking programs aimed at teenagers. Now they have a surplus in lottery funds and have added another "sin" tax to tobacco users, saying it's for education.

From Atlanta Journal-Constitution, an excerpt: "The compromise would still expand SCHIP, or State Children’s Health Insurance Program, by $35 billion over five years and raise the money through an increase in tobacco taxes, Republicans complained."

No one is opposed to health care for children; however, does everything have to be funded by a "sin" tax which only a few pay? Tobacco users pay nearly $30,000,000,000 per yr. in taxes non-users do not pay, but those non-users receive services of all kinds. The obese and morbidly obese cost American taxpayers much more for health care than smokers, if for no other reason, there are more of them! Tobacco users pay exorbitant taxes, and another is being tacked onto this bill. I despise George Bush, and he did not veto the bill because it would unfairly make tobacco users pay for it, he simply doesn't give a gd about anyone. Also, check out the U-tube videos regarding this.

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