Cheryl's statement on health care reform:
Sunday night, the House of Representatives passed a historic health care reform bill. It looks like the Senate will follow suit. I'm glad Brian Baird and the rest of Congress listened to the voices of citizens who called, wrote, and organized in support of expanding access to health care. This bill will save lives, will save money, and will help pay down national debt. In Washington's 3rd Congressional district alone, this bill will prevent discrimination against more than 12,000 people with pre-existing conditions, provide insurance to more than 50,000 uninsured residents, and give tax breaks and other help to more than 16,000 small businesses and 175,000 families. The bill provides millions of dollars in additional Medicare reimbursements to doctors and hospitals in Washington State, making it easier for seniors to access the best doctors and hospitals in the state. It is a strong step towards affordable health care for all.
I will continue to work to ensure everyone has access to affordable health care, and that insurance companies are held accountable. Single-payer health care remains the most efficient, most accessible, most affordable system. Committed citizens must keep raising their voices, educating and persuading our neighbors and representatives, so that next time Congress takes up health care reform, we can pass a single-payer bill.
I’m not naïve to the political realities of the health-insurance negotiations. Insurance companies and Republican leadership have lobbied hard to protect corporate profits by spreading misinformation - remember death panels? If we can’t get the votes for single-payer health care, we need to take other steps to provide affordable health care to all Americans.
Amend ERISA
If we can’t pass single-payer at the federal level, we should amend current law to allow states to pass their own single-payer systems. Right now, the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) pre-empts states from enacting single-payer systems on their own. Representative Denis Kucinich (D-OH) and Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) have both offered amendments to ERISA that would free states to create single-payer systems. If the federal government can’t cover all Americans, we must not stand in the way of states doing it.
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