President Obama has not read the House bill that he supports. Obama says that all persons can keep their own private plan. But the House health bill page 16 says that private plans will be illegal in five years. So yes – you can keep your plans for a limited number of years.
Congress passed the cap and trade energy bill and NOBODY read the bill. Do you really believe Obama when he promises to reduce health care costs and add 15-40 million to the roles? The American public is too smart for that kind of double talk. Remember – if you don’t speak up — and do read the bill — then you are part of the problem. Complacency can kill a democracy.
August is the month to contact your congress representatives and say what you think.
Sam Farr meets August 10 6pm in Monterey at 409 Pierce Street at Monterey Institute of International Studies, Irvine Auditorium. Sam Farr is in Santa Cruz Aug. 12 at the First Congregational Church at 900 High Street, 6 pm. And he is in in Hollister at the San Benito County Board of Supervisors Chambers at 481 Fourth St., Hollister, CA
Obama Health Plan Draws Majority Disapproval in Poll
By Kristin Jensen
Aug. 5 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obamaâ€
The July 27-Aug. 3 poll found that 52 percent of American voters disapprove of the way Obama is handling the health-care issue and 39 percent approve. Thatâ€
Almost three-quarters of the respondents said they donâ€
“Itâ€
The House of Representatives left Washington on July 31 for a five-week recess after putting off a vote on legislation until September. One of the two Senate committees with jurisdiction over health care is still struggling to craft bipartisan legislation, and the Senate also gave up on meeting Obamaâ€
Persuading Voters
House and Senate lawmakers are grappling with issues such as whether to create a government-run health-care plan that would compete with private insurers, whether to mandate that employers offer health insurance to their workers, and how to pay for a plan that may cost $1 trillion over 10 years.
House Democrats are now trying to persuade voters in their home districts that the effort to cover millions of uninsured Americans and reduce health-care costs is worthwhile; the poll suggests they have a lot of work to do.
“The average voter out there is skeptical about government,†Brown told reporters in Washington today.
Affecting Care
A plurality of 39 percent of respondents said they donâ€
White House spokesman Robert Gibbs yesterday accused a group opposing the health-care overhaul plan of disrupting town-hall meetings convened by Democratic lawmakers by “manufacturing†outrage.
Leaders of Conservatives for Patientsâ€
Richard Scott, the groupâ€
Some Approval
As other recent polls have shown, Quinnipiac found support for individual elements of the plans that Obama and Democratic leaders in Congress are proposing, even amid some disapproval.
The Quinnipiac poll showed that 62 percent of voters favor allowing Americans to opt into a government-run insurance program, compared with 32 percent who donâ€
A requirement that individuals obtain insurance drew fire from respondents, with 68 percent opposed and 26 percent in favor. All the plans so far have some sort of mandate on Americans to obtain coverage, with help for those with lower incomes.
The poll included 2,409 registered voters nationwide and has a margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points.
To contact the reporter on this story: Kristin Jensen in Washington at kjensen@bloomberg.net