Senator Obama,
As a constituent a multiple contributer, I am aware of your history of fighting for AFFORDABLE health insurance for illinois working families.
I know that as a former democratic chair of Health and Human services committee in the Illinois Legislature you have successfully worked to provide health insurance for working families. This is an issue that you have deep passion for; I'm aware that as a young state senator, one of your most ambitious goals was to make it CONSTITUTIONAL for every illinoisan to have health insurance as good as what Senator Lobbyists FreeRide got(lol). It failed because of a republican governor and republican majority in the Springfield. So when Paul Krugman spews untruths like "i suspect he's not serious about universal healthcare" I wonder if he's done his homework.
BUTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT!
You're making a big mistake!
This is a communication issue: Your approach to universal healthcare is distorted by a respected progressive economist, Mr. Krugman.
You have said that YOU ARE NOT OPPOSED TO MANDATES, but don't think MANDATES SHOULD come UPFRONT before there's assurance of lower cost, afterall, folks won't purchase until they know it's affordable.
You have also said that this is all about LEVERAGE: That if you can have proof that your insurance is CHEAPER than private options, THEN you are in a good position to enforce a mandate!
As Mr. Krugman's own reader said in a response to his highly critical review of mandates, the experience of California and Massachussets suggests carrots will be better than sticks at the beginning of a healthcare reform process.
Re "Mandates and Mudslinging" (column, Nov. 30):
Paul Krugman dismisses Senator Barack Obama's points about health insurance mandates as "echoing right-wing talking points" on health care. Really?
It was two pragmatic Republican governors, Mitt Romney of Massachusetts and Arnold Schwarzenegger of California, who proposed mandates as cornerstones of their respective health reform plans.
In California, resistance to that approach has come primarily from unions and Democrats. Although I have favored the mandate component of Mr. Schwarzenegger's plan, Mr. Obama raises valid points about the practicality of immediate mandates as the path to universality.
In California, there are real questions about whether the insurance that people would be required to buy and able to afford, even with subsidies, would be worth having. Massachusetts has already had to grant waivers to many.
In addressing this issue, carrots may prove more effective than heavy-handed sticks.
John Walkmeyer
San Ramon, Calif., Nov. 30, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/04/opinio
n/lweb04krugman.html?_r=1&oref=slogi
n
It seems Mr. Krugman hasn't seen you say this despite you giving extensive interviews with New Hamsphire Editorial Boards about this.
http://www.nhelects.com/NHPrimaryVideos. asp?MultiID=70&HTitle=VLTitle
So In the INterest of neutral voters who want to get a better health care system,
I suggest that you PEN an open ed in the New York Times about your specific approach and how that will be a superior and pragmatic approach.
I know that you have emphasised that the president must allow a transparent process and that will be key to engaging americans who want affordable healthcare desperately.
Thank you for your service to our beloved country.
Paul Krugman is a respected progressive.
On healthcare, he would want a single payer system.
None of the Leading candidates went there; all of them favor private-public mixture.
Edwards and Clinton have individual mandate for all; obama wants mandates for children.
Throughout this debate, obama has said that he will be in a POSITION to enforce a mandate if there's ample proof that the health insurance provided by the government is cheap for working families.
obama's premise is that enforcing a mandate upfront is unnecessary since folks won't buy it unless it is cheap.
AND SPECIFICALLY OBAMA has said that he'll be open to mandates when he has the leverage to impose it and that he is not against mandates.
Krugman's entire basis for his criticism of obama is that his language provides fodder for rethugs. that's ridiculous. If obama is president he'll have the bully pulpit. AND IN A TRANSPARENT PROCESS rethugs will not be able to distort stuff.
Besides most people will enroll in a reasonable plan if it is cheap.
ANY HEALTH REFORM PLAN that doesn't aknowledge the fact that people will not buy a cheap plan they don't trust is dishonest.
Finally,
I take exception to Krugman calling obama "not serious" about universal healthcare. What?
Obama tried to make health insurance a constitutional right of every Illinois citizen as a young state senator; he was TOO ambitious about and it didn't work with a republican governor and republican senate majority in the Illinois legislature.
He didn't give up though, in fact he went ahead and did the hard work of forming a group to study it and that group's recommendation formed the basis of the current illinois plan by Governor blagovevich(geez, this name is hard).
Obama must pen and open-editorial in teh new york times to answer krugman.
Here, in an interview with NH Sentinel, he elaborated on his approach to universal healthcare.
http://www.nhelects.com/NHPrimaryVideos. asp?MultiID=74&HTitle=VLTitle
Democrats.
* Clinton: 39%; vs. 48% in the previous survey; and 50% before that. Her support has fallen 11 percentage points in a month.
Poll was taken from Nov. 30th to Dec. 3rd.
She is also polling in the 37% and slipping in the Rasmussen daily polls. http://rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/election_2008__1/2008_presidential_election/daily_presidential_tracking_poll http://blogs.usatoday.com/onpolitics/2007/12/national-suppor.htmlApparently Hillary Clinton can run for US Senate in New York despite not knowing where manhattan is on a US map, but Iowa college students who have lived in Iowa for more than 1semester can't vote in the state where they pay taxes in.
Remember the year 2000 when the first lady who had never lived in New York suddenly became a Yankee fan and run for an open seat? Conservatives scoffed that person; Guiliani had good humor lines about it until illness forced his joke into a frown. Well, that first lady now thinks that what she did was so wrong that she should be stripped of her seat. In fact she's willing to offend thousands of college students to do that. Why hasn't MSM called her out on her hypocrisy? Might that have something to do with our short attention span?When Barack Obama talks about lobbyists, he knows what he's talking about. He often chastises them on the campaign trail but admits that he swims in a system infected with them.
In Illinois, he swam with them, played poker with them, played basketball with them YET poked them in the eye when he got to the Springfield Capitol.
The AP has the details
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5gPP3m W7pH3yzkL_V06E5iACM9vqwD8T8OLS80
I like this part best:
When E.J. Dione, Washington Post's respected columnist was on Keith Olberman's show last night, he strongly defended Obama's rapid response to the shit from Bob Novak.
Mind you, Dione been around Washington for a long time; he can see shit when he smells it.
Some people think obama overreacted. I'm beginning to think he was more than right; he was prescient.
When you are a new candidate in national office you have to be alert to the tricks to the machines in washington; the mark penn machine, karl rove machine, RNC. etc.
obama has written extensively about himself. Unlike Bill clinton who lied about sexual relations with his intern, lied about smoking pot and had several affairs whiles a governor of arkansas and lied about it, obama has been proactive about his life.
One of the things he talks about a lot is his political awakening in college after indulging in self-destructive behavior.
At Occidental College, participation in the Anti-Apartheid Movement helped him discover a political voice that has marked his political career. Friends and classmates recall his activism in the Anti-apartheid movement at Occidental college.
http://www.kansascity.com/445/story/3678 41.html
After occidental he transferred to Columbia University and by his own admission spent those two years in the library; He said, "I was a monk" (dreams from my father). He said that he didn't have a life at columbia and by testament of his professors he was an A student, was 1 of 6 honor students in his senior year thesis class. Again, if you read the book, he doesn't talk about activism at columbia; his activism was at occidental college and there's enough evidence that he was active in that movement.
Well, if you doubt his passion for social work you need not sweat; He was a community organiser(not peace corps or any establishment organised thingy), something he did in Harlem and then in Chicago full time for about 4yrs before going to law school. after law school he continued to train commmunity organiser until he came to washington.
So the clinton folks have started spewing lies on this blog about him; those of us who know him will be watching you. you've been put on notice.
Someone commented on Mr. Caufield's blog and said this:why are you guys doing this now? (none / 0) Can't you wait until next week to start filling in BO's bio, when more people are paying attention? Why do it now when most people are focused on thanksgiving celebration stuff? I hope you guys are just laying the groundwork for what's to come next week. I don't want the big bang until then when it can have more of an impact on the race and more people are paying attention....http://mydd.com/story/2007/11/20/192417/07 Exactly what filling in are you talking about? Again, you've been put on notice.
For neutral observers: if you ever doubted Novak, think twice.
Mark Penn is too connected to too many insiders and lobbyists and operatives to be given the benefit of the doubt.
I will be watching this.
all obama supporters should be alert.The Novak story is very eerie, however unethical the dude is.
In fact, for some reason, I had just finished reading on some blog that the LA Times was sitting on a major presidential campaign sex scandal(The LA Times denies it).
http://pajamasmedia.com/xpress/ronrosenb
aum/2007/10/29/shocking_inside_dc_scanda
l_rum.php
Slate, portfolio.com and other blogs have speculated that that LA Times story must be about Obama since any other candidate won't be affected much by such a scandal.
http://www.portfolio.com/views/blogs/odd
-numbers/2007/11/04/passing-along-a-rumo
r
So when I read Novak's posted by a blogger on Obama's website, I thought, damn it, Obama must come clean or respond forcefully if he's not guilty.
So I was happy to see him respond himself.
Some people are already falsely saying that he accused the Clinton campaign of wrongdoing; he didn't.
He dismissed the story:
"The item did not identify these 'agents,' nor did it reveal the nature of the charge. It was devoid of facts, but heavy on innuendo and insinuation of the sort to which we've become all too accustomed in our politics these past two decades. If the purpose of this shameless item was to daunt or discourage me or supporters of our campaign from challenging and changing the politics of Washington, it will fail. In fact, it will only serve to steel our resolve.
Now, he has forced the Clinton campaign to deny it and hence cut off any legs the story might have.
Stories like these must be forcefully denounced before they get legs and though Bob Novak isn't ethical by any standard, he's been a source of lots of D.C. scandals and the campaign had to take the allegations seriously.
In 24hrs the so called "scandal" has been forcefully denounced and I doubt that any person in the media believes that obama has anything to hide. Even if he does, the strong response from the candidate himself suggests that it has nothing to do with a sex scandal.
Obama has passed this test because his forcefully response has put to rest any suspicions about his past. He is now on record saying he has nothing to hide. And that happened before the Sunday Talking Heads picked it up.
Good for him
Whew!!!
Obama was feeling lucky yesterday @ Google.
The best part is the Q and A session; skip the 12min speech and go on to the Q and A. Update: I take up the challenge of one of the commenters. I was there and it was an opportunity for him to make a very compelling case for his candidacy. He spoke extensively about what would distinguish his approach to governance from the others and made a strong case for a government that adapts to technology. Most of the Questions were very pointed so we got clear responses out of him. See for yourself.See for yourself, Tech-President Obama in Action:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m4yVlPqeZ wo
The Embed code isn't working. don't know whyyyyyyyyyy.
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