|
| |
|
|
| |
Fines Proposed for
Going Without Health Insurance |
|
| |
WASHINGTON (AP) - Americans would be fined up to $3,800
for failing to buy health insurance under a plan that
circulated in Congress on Tuesday as divisions among
Democrats undercut President Barack Obama's effort to
regain traction on his health care overhaul.
As Obama talked strategy with Democratic leaders at
the White House, the one idea that most appeals to his
party's liberal base lost ground in Congress. Prospects
for a government-run plan to compete with private
insurers sank as a leading moderate Democrat said he
could no longer support the idea.
The fast-moving developments put Obama in a box. As a
candidate, he opposed fines to force individuals to buy
health insurance, and he supported setting up a public
insurance plan. On Tuesday, fellow Democrats publicly
begged to differ on both ideas.
Democratic congressional leaders put on a bold front
as they left the White House after their meeting with
the president.
 |
|
(AP) Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont.,
talks with reporters after a
meeting on health care reform on
Tuesday,... |
|
|
"We're re-energized; we're ready to do health care
reform," said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of
Nevada.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., insisted the
public plan is still politically viable. "I believe that
a public option will be essential to our passing a bill
in the House of Representatives," she said.
After a month of contentious forums, Americans were
seeking specifics from the president in his speech to a
joint session of Congress on Wednesday night. So were
his fellow Democrats, divided on how best to solve the
problem of the nation's nearly 50 million uninsured.
The latest proposal: a ten-year, $900-billion
bipartisan compromise that Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., a
moderate who heads the influential Finance Committee,
was trying to broker. It would guarantee coverage for
nearly all Americans, regardless of medical problems.
But the Baucus plan also includes the fines that
Obama has rejected. In what appeared to be a sign of
tension, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs pointedly
noted that the administration had not received a copy of
the plan before it leaked to lobbyists and news media
Tuesday.
 |
|
(AP) Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid of Nev., and House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif.,
speak to... |
|
|
The Baucus plan would require insurers to take all
applicants, regardless of age or health. But smokers
could be charged higher premiums. And 60-year-olds could
be charged five times as much for a policy as
20-year-olds.
Baucus said Tuesday he's trying to get agreement from
a small group of bipartisan negotiators in advance of
Obama's speech. "Time is running out very quickly," he
said. "I made that very clear to the group."
Some experts consider the $900-billion price tag a
relative bargain because the country now spends about
$2.5 trillion a year on health care. But it would
require hefty fees on insurers, drug companies and
others in the health care industry to help pay for it.
Just as auto coverage is now mandatory in nearly all
states, Baucus would require that all Americans get
health insurance once the system is overhauled.
Penalties for failing to do so would start at $750 a
year for individuals and $1,500 for families. Households
making more than three times the federal poverty level -
about $66,000 for a family of four - would face the
maximum fines. For families, it would be $3,800, and for
individuals, $950.
Baucus would offer tax credits to help pay premiums
for households making up to three times the poverty
level, and for small employers paying about average
middle-class wages. People working for companies that
offer coverage could avoid the fines by signing up.
 |
|
(AP) Sen. Charles Grassley,
R-Iowa arrives for a meeting on
health care at the Capitol Hill
office of... |
|
|
The fines pose a dilemma for Obama. As a candidate, the
president campaigned hard against making health
insurance a requirement, and fining people for not
getting it.
"Punishing families who can't afford health care to
begin with just doesn't make sense," he said during his
party's primaries. At the time, he proposed mandatory
insurance only for children.
White House officials have since backed away somewhat
from Obama's opposition to mandated coverage for all,
but there's no indication that Obama would support
fines.
One idea that Obama championed during and since the
campaign - a government insurance option - appeared to
be sinking fast.
House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., told
reporters a Medicare-like plan for middle-class
Americans and their families isn't an essential part of
legislation for him. Hoyer's comments came shortly after
a key Democratic moderate said he could no longer back a
bill that includes a new government plan.
 |
|
(AP) President Barack Obama
speaks at the AFL-CIO Labor Day
picnic at Coney Island in
Cincinnati,... |
|
|
That left liberals in a quandary. They've drawn a line,
saying they won't vote for legislation if it doesn't
include a public plan to compete with private insurance
companies and force them to lower costs.
Rep. Mike Ross, D-Ark., who once supported a public
option, said Tuesday that after hearing from
constituents during the August recess, he's changed his
mind.
"If House leadership presents a final bill that
contains a government-run public option, I will oppose
it," Ross said.
Democrats are considering a fallback: using the
public plan as a last resort if after a few years the
insurance industry has failed to curb costs. That's an
approach being pushed in the Senate by Olympia Snowe,
R-Maine, a moderate whose support could be critical to
any health legislation.
Obama's commitment to a public plan has been in
question and lawmakers hoped his speech to Congress
would make his position on that clear. Snowe said
Tuesday that Obama's been open to her fallback idea.
 |
|
(AP) President Barack Obama is
introduced by Charlie Dilbert,
45, who works at A&A Safety,
which... |
|
|
"He has not rejected it. He's been receptive,
recognizing that there's difficulties with the public
option," Snowe said. "The president recognizes that
there's strong reluctance among the American people" to
accepting a public plan, which Republicans have cast as
a government take-over.
Baucus is calling for nonprofit co-ops to compete in
the marketplace instead of a public plan.
An 18-page summary of the Baucus proposal was
obtained by The Associated Press. The complex plan would
make dozens of changes in the health care system, many
of them contentious. For example, it includes new fees
on insurers, drug companies, medical device
manufacturers and clinical labs.
People working for major employers would probably not
see big changes. The plan is geared to helping those who
now have the hardest time getting and keeping coverage:
the self-employed and small business owners.
---_
Associated Press writers Erica Werner, Ben Feller,
Alan Fram and Jim Abrams contributed to this report.
|
|
Learn how easy and convenient shopping for health insurance can be. Get your
free health insurance online quotes today! |
|
| |
|
|
|