Good Heavens, Cuomo -- How Could You?!
A week ago, the advocacy group HCFANY (Health Care For All New York) published a blog post which I quote in its entirety:
The proposed executive budget is shockingly silent on health
coverage:
-Health insurance for immigrants left behind by the ACA:
$0
-State premium assistance for people who can’t afford
coverage: $0
-Funding to stabilize the high costs of NY’s individual market:
$0.
Instead, the people get a “commission” of so-called experts.
What can a commission tell us about health coverage that we don’t already
know? Here’s what we already know: coverage reduces mortality;
coverage reduces morbidity; coverage brings people out of poverty; coverage
provides economic security to people.
Coverage matters. There are plenty of giveaways in this budget
for the health care industry. But no investment to provide the health coverage
that would make such a difference to so many New Yorkers. State leaders in
California, Colorado, New Mexico, and Washington have taken big steps on
coverage. But not here in New York, where over a million people are
uninsured and millions more are struggling to afford their insurance.
New York’s advocates, including HCFANY, have developed agendas
over the years that would move New York towards universal coverage. Our most
progressive advocates have proposed a bold single-payer plan. New York
could take several smaller steps that would immediately ease the financial
burden of accessing health care in New York: (1) state premium subsidies for
people who buy their own plans and have trouble affording them; or (2) a public
option for people who want a cheaper alternative to private plans.
The most heartbreaking oversight in the budget is that it does
nothing to help the 400,000 New Yorkers who are uninsured because of their
immigration status. Again, there are simple steps that New York could take to
help. Governor Cuomo could have proposed an expansion of Child Health Plus to
young adult immigrants, as Governor Newsom did. He could have been bolder and
expanded the Essential Plan to all low-income adults, regardless of status. If
health care is a human right, why are there so many New Yorkers whose birthplace
leaves them without health coverage?
State premium assistance, a
public option, immigrant coverage: all would have been progressive achievements
to crow about – something that would let HCFANY agree wholeheartedly with
Governor Cuomo that New York is the “most progressive big state in the nation.”
After this shocking report, there was an invitation to comment. So I posted: "This does seem to tell us where Gov. Cuomo stands on all
these matters -- apparently centered smack-dab in the desires of the Health Care
Industry, and discernibly not at all on the needs of his constituents, who have
been pleading for help. I wonder why does Cuomo's position seem so counter to the desires of the people?"
Well, for me, the answer seems straight forward: Cuomo, who is sitting on an enormous war chest of dollars, remembers where a lot of that money must have come from -- corporate interests, of which a sizable portion probably came from the Healthcare Industry. Note well: I am not accusing, I am guessing -- but it's a pretty good guess, wouldn't you think? With notable exceptions, most of our Federal government has been for sale; why shouldn't our state -- which has been less than conspicuous for honesty and integrity -- be likewise offered to the highest bidder?
However that may be, it's obvious that Cuomo is trying a tactic designed not only to delay our progress but also to vitiate the considerable momentum our movement has developed. Just as runaway trucks can be slowed by artificial hills of gravel and sand, nothing will grind us to a halt better than empty words -- a lot of them.
All these empty words can be countered by a few pungent ones, such as, GOVERNOR: CUT THE B.S. AND DEAL WITH THE PROBLEM! The problem, should he need reminding, is that people are dying, their families going bankrupt because of an out-of-control, extortionate, profit-driven healthcare system. And what he suggests is another commission?
And it's not only Cuomo. Many of our nominally Democratic Assembly people, who reliably voted for NYHA because they knew the Republican Senate would just as reliably bat it down -- these nominal Democrats, I say, will remember the source of the money that got them elected -- UNLESS WE SPEAK UP!
And the general public, most of whom, I fear, have never even heard of the NYHA -- even fine Doctors and Nurses -- will be ignorant of what Cuomo is doing to us UNLESS WE SPEAK UP!
I feel that this last is most important. One commentator -- seeing what he perceived to be a waffling even on the part of so-called progressive Democrats -- asked "what shall we do -- take to the streets?" He was being serious. We have in our Healthcare Industrial Complex a huge vested interest, which will expend all its resources -- and they are very many -- to keep single payer from becoming law. By insisting that in this particular instance -- healthcare -- the profit motive be set aside, we are getting uncomfortably close to the beating heart of the corporate monster that owns this country.
Dio
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