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DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
Thu Oct 3, 2013, 11:02 AM Oct 2013

The Millions Left Out of Health Reform by John Roberts

By Matthew Yglesias

This is not news to people who've been following the Affordable Care Act closely, but Sabrina Tavernise and Robert Gebeloff have a timely reminder in the New York Times that the implementation of Obamacare "will leave out two-thirds of the poor blacks and single mothers and more than half of the low-wage workers who do not have insurance."

But something that's worth noting here more prominently than they do is that this is not an oversight of the law or of the Obama administration. It's due to the actions of Chief Justice John Roberts and then to a number of Republican Party state and local elected officials led by Texas Governor Rick Perry. What happened is that the Affordable Care Act relies on an expansion of Medicaid to provide health insurance to many poor families. Yet Medicaid is a joint state/federal program and states have substantial leeway in deciding how many people get Medicaid coverage and on what terms. So the authors of the law decided to make state governments an offer they couldn't refuse—on the one hand, expansion would be nearly 100% paid for by the federal government while on the other hand failure to expand would come with significant financial penalties.

Then came Roberts. In his landmark ruling upholding the constitutionality of the individual mandate, he burnished his conservative cred by striking down the penalties portion of the Medicaid expansion.

That's where the problem comes from. Still, it should have been no big deal. Medicaid expansion on these terms is a no-brainer, which is why a range of Republican governors from Michigan to Arizona have embraced it. But most GOP legislators in those states still reject the idea, and Republican officeholders in the south are especially resistant. This becomes a huge problem because the very conservative states whose politicians are most hostile to the idea of poor people getting health insurance coverage are precisely the places that have the largest number of uninsured people. So the non-participation of Texas in the expansion just on its own takes a huge bite out of its effectiveness.

full article
http://www.slate.com/blogs/moneybox/2013/10/03/john_roberts_medicaid_non_expansion_millions_will_lose_out_on_health_insurance.html?wpisrc=newsletter_jcr:content

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The Millions Left Out of Health Reform by John Roberts (Original Post) DonViejo Oct 2013 OP
Like I said before: gopiscrap Oct 2013 #1
The right-wing predatory lust against the poorest workers is execrable. raging moderate Oct 2013 #2
+1 freshwest Oct 2013 #4
Glad to see attention being paid to this. bunnies Oct 2013 #3
The people in those states need to let their voices be heard bigwillq Oct 2013 #5

gopiscrap

(23,761 posts)
1. Like I said before:
Thu Oct 3, 2013, 11:05 AM
Oct 2013

this is great start but we must continually fight for a universal single payer plan!

raging moderate

(4,305 posts)
2. The right-wing predatory lust against the poorest workers is execrable.
Thu Oct 3, 2013, 11:11 AM
Oct 2013

They continue to show blood-lust for these people, and irrational rage against anyone who tries to stand between them and what they regard as their lawful prey.

 

bigwillq

(72,790 posts)
5. The people in those states need to let their voices be heard
Thu Oct 3, 2013, 12:08 PM
Oct 2013

In November, Next November and in the November after that.

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