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GOP in Congress Votes To Keep Their Privileged Health Care

by: Elaine in Roanoke

Thu Jul 19, 2012 at 09:12:07 AM EDT


There's more that a dollop of selfishness and self-interest in the votes over and over by the Virginia GOP delegation in House of Representatives to repeal what they call "Obamacare." One little noticed and under-reported section of that law requires members of Congress to get their health insurance in the same exchanges as the rest of us. So, they're losing a sweet deal they had arranged for themselves, one unavailable to us.

Jesse Ferguson, a spokesman for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, stated, "House Republicans refuse to admit they voted to give themselves taxpayer-funded, lifetime-guaranteed health care, instead of having the same health care as their constituents."

"Repeal looks like it's worse than anyone would have thought," a Democratic official said. "Not only are Republicans helping their insurance company donors, they're also trying to help themselves."

Right now, members of Congress and their staffs get their health insurance through the same program as other federal employees. That program enables them to keep the same health insurance policy when they retire from Congress. If we keep in mind that people in Congress become eligible for this benefit after five years, I guess it's no surprise that Eric Cantor and his pals keep voting to repeal the Affordable Care Act and return to a system they had gamed for their own benefit. After all, they get some great perks.

Elaine in Roanoke :: GOP in Congress Votes To Keep Their Privileged Health Care
The government pays two-thirds to three-quarters of the cost of the health insurance plan. Employees pay the rest, whether they are working or retired. Being excluded because of a pre-existing condition has always been forbidden.  

One benefit members of Congress have that's not available to other federal employees is visiting the Attending Physician of the US Congress for an annual fee of about $500. They can also opt for care at any military hospital or VA facility.

So, people in Congress have always had many advantages the rest of us didn't have: an exchange offering many plans in competition with one another, the knowledge that a pre-existing condition won't mean cancellation of insurance coverage, a cozy HMO with the staff of the Attending Physician, and even access to the only "socialized medicine" in America, the VA system.

No wonder the GOPers don't care about repealing the Affordable Care Act. Long ago, they covered their own backsides. As for the rest of us, to paraphrase Rhett Butler, "Frankly, my dear, they just don't give a damn."

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$20 on the line... (0.00 / 0)
... if you can get any Congressman to say that's one of the reasons that they voted for the repeal.


Not exactly a reason... (0.00 / 0)
It's not a reason for their votes so much as the knowledge that they have always had the provisions now available to the rest of us - no worry about pre-existing conditions, automatic family coverage if they wish, some choice in plans. Heck, they get their very own health insurance exchange, one where there really is choice and competition for federal workers, a huge pool that really shares risk. Plus, after being elected to three terms in the House or one term in the Senate, they qualify for government-subsidized health insurance for the rest of their lives. Nice deal if you can get it! So, as I said at the end, as for the rest of us, those voting for repeal follow the Rhett Butler model of caring.

Since the GOP has absolutely nothing to suggest as a replacement for the ACA, I'll give them one, one that still preserves their precious, for-profit insurance. Why not make all of us able to use the federal exchange and choose health plans from it? Talk about a huge pool of the insured!


[ Parent ]
Why didn't you say that in the first place? (0.00 / 0)
Oh... because you wanted to make it sound like them there Republicans were actually voting to keep their health plan.

Your real argument makes sense. Your headlining one is ridiculous.


[ Parent ]
Since... (0.00 / 0)
I repeat,
"Since the GOP has absolutely nothing to suggest as a replacement for the ACA, I'll give them one, one that still preserves their precious, for-profit insurance. Why not make all of us able to use the federal exchange and choose health plans from it? Talk about a huge pool of the insured!"

[ Parent ]
But your headline says... (0.00 / 0)
"GOP in Congress Votes To Keep Their Privileged Health Care"

That headline has so much spin on it that my eyes rolled out of my head.

National Health Insurance sounds so good... wonder if any other countries have tried it?


[ Parent ]
I repeat (4.00 / 1)
"Since the GOP has absolutely nothing to suggest as a replacement for the ACA, I'll give them one, one that still preserves their precious, for-profit insurance. Why not make all of us able to use the federal exchange and choose health plans from it? Talk about a huge pool of the insured!"

The present federal exchange is NOT national health care a la Great Britain, or even a single-payer system like Canada and Medicare. We have only one "national health insurance" run by the federal government, one with doctors, nurses, etc., on the federal payroll. It's called the VA. Members of Congress automatically get access to that system, as well as their federal, private, competitive insurance pool. Plus, they even have access to an urgent care facility in the Capital at all times, for which they only pay $500 per year.

Since the Affordable Care Act requires members of Congress to purchase their insurance from the same pool as citizens in their respective states, a vote to repeal ACA is, indeed, a vote "to keep their privileged health care," where they have a choice of a national health insurance (the VA), a very low-cost HMO (Attending Physician of the U.S. Congress), and a wide choice of health insurance plans from the private sector. Sweet deal!


[ Parent ]
Back to Square One... (0.00 / 0)
Your headline makes it sound like that's the reason they voted for repeal and that's bogus.

Words have meanings.


[ Parent ]
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