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Obamacare Anniversary: Are You (and the Constitution) Better Off than Four Years Ago?

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Obamacare Anniversary: Are You (and the Constitution) Better Off than Four Years Ago? Today marks four years since President Barack Obama signed Obamacare into law. Although the impact on healthcare has been extensive, what he’s done since that day implicates every area of government and our national life. It’s time to shift our focus from rhetoric to results, and ask Ronald Reagan’s immortal question: Are you better off today than you were four years ago? And is the Constitution?

Obama signed the Affordable Care Act (ACA) into law on Mar. 23, 2010. It is 2,700 pages long, authorizes tens of thousands of pages worth of regulations that carry the force of law (with countless more coming), and effectuates a massive overhaul of one-sixth of the U.S. economy. It’s twin goals--as found in Section 1501 of the statute--is to ensure “near-universal” healthcare coverage, and to lower costs. The president has repeatedly claimed it would reduce average family costs by $2,500 per year.  

First, the facts today. As the first person to actually live in the White House, John Adams, once said, “Facts are stubborn things.” And they tell a story that’s markedly different from the story we get from current occupant of the White House.

Most of Obamacare’s major provisions went into effect on Jan. 1, 2014, so we’re only now starting to see the wide-ranging impact of this statute. First, the costs. When the ACA was enacted, healthcare was just over $2.6 trillion per year. Now it’s over $2.8 trillion, an increase of 4 percent. Even with U.S. population growth of 9 million in the past two years, that’s an increase of $500 to $8,900 per person--which comes to over $22,000 for an average family. That’s an increase, not a $2,500 decrease.

Then there is the number of uninsured. There are perhaps 35 million uninsured Americans. (Some say 50 million; they are rounding up the number 47 million, which includes at least 12 million illegal aliens. When specifically referring to the number of uninsured citizens, it’s 35 million.) Studies show approximately nine million of those have always been eligible for Medicaid and have never signed up, and most of the remaining millions either lack insurance for 90 days or less as they transition to a new job or new plan, or make over $80,000 a year and choose not to get insurance. The number of long-term uninsured who cannot obtain insurance is five to 10 million.

There are conflicting reports on the enrollment numbers under Obamacare. It seems millions that have signed up are for Medicaid, and includes those who normally sign up at the same rate as before the ACA. Neither the White House nor the Department of Health and Human Services have issued reliable numbers about how many are signing up because of Obamacare. Also since Medicaid is a government healthcare program paid for by all taxpayers, those enrollees draw resources out of the national healthcare system; they don’t reflect anyone who’s actually paying money into the system.

Further, we haven’t been given reliable numbers on (1) how many people have purchased health insurance, or (2) how many of those people have paid their premiums. We have been told that (3) only about 25 percent of those people are younger people, which is an enormous problem, because even the ACA’s supporters admit that 40 percent or so of those who join must be young and healthy in order for the system to have enough money to stay afloat. And even that 40 percent figure is wildly optimistic.

The lack of hard numbers suggests that the emerging facts are very troublesome for the administration. We have no choice but to wait a few more months until those numbers are confirmed before reaching conclusions.

One thing that is clear is that many of the newer policies have much higher deductibles--such as $5,000 for an individual or $12,000 for a family--before you start receiving major benefits. Those policies are no better than catastrophic coverage; the average family cannot afford that kind of massive out-of-pocket cost, nor will they consume that much in healthcare in any given year. And their monthly premiums are increasing at an alarming rate. Calling those people “insured” to subtract them from the 35 million is grossly misleading--a politician’s spin with semantic head-fakes, not any meaningful benefit to the American people.

That’s just in the first three months of the ACA being fully in effect. Then the White House used a reporting gimmick so that the new, higher premiums for many people will not be announced until this November--after the midterm elections. Expect massive sticker shock, with numbers far higher than are being admitted now.

The net result should be unavoidable. Costs will increase, and consequently the number of people without meaningful insurance will grow. The ACA will fail in both of its stated goals (near-universal coverage and decreased costs).

Then we have the implementation. The president has unilaterally refused to implement over 30 of the provisions in the ACA. Obamacare has 450 sections, some of which give discretion to the executive branch in terms of how to implement. But the provisions Obama has refused to put into effect--such as the employer mandate for one year, or the IRS corporate reporting system for one year, or suspending provisions on essential benefits to be included in every insurance policy--are all mandatory provisions of the law. Only Congress can make those changes. If the president does it, he’s breaking the law.

This is where the conversation shifts from healthcare to the Constitution. Ignoring provisions of federal law has become an alarming trend of this president. He has likewise refused to enforce certain provisions of federal laws regarding immigration, drugs, campaign finance, and racial discrimination, when they conflict with his political agenda. He refused to defend the constitutionality of the Defense of Marriage Act in court for the same reason.

And he violated the Recess Appointments Clause of the Constitution by declaring the U.S. Senate to be in recess when it was actually in session, filling several top government posts with nominees that the Senate refused to confirm. (Breitbart News reported on this case when it was argued before the Supreme Court on Jan. 13, 2014. The Court seems poised to strike down these appointments and rebuke the president. A decision is expected by June.)

As I explain with my coauthor in a scholarly legal work that will be in print this April in the Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, the Take Care Clause was specifically inserted into Article II of the Constitution to guarantee that no president could ever ignore the words of the Constitution or of federal law. Breitbart News has previously reported on why Obama’s actions are unconstitutional, and how the media is covering for him.

Speaking about Obamacare at CPAC earlier this month, national conservative leader Ken Blackwell posited that the root problem with the ACA is that it embodies a belief in the role of government vis-à-vis the American people that conflicts with the vision of the Founding Fathers, reflected both in the Declaration of Independence and then later in the Constitution.

Our national philosophy “celebrates the primacy of the individual and the supremacy of God,” in contract to the Far Left’s ideology, which asserts the “primacy of the collective good” and the “supremacy of the central government,” Blackwell told the assembled crowd. “Our fundamental rights are gifts from God, not grants from government,” Blackwell declared.

Obamacare went before the Supreme Court in 2012. Part of it was invalidated for violating the Constitution’s Spending Clause. The ACA’s individual mandate was sustained by a 5-4 vote, in which Chief Justice Roberts wrote that it was unconstitutional as written (as a regulation of interstate commerce), but that he would vote to sustain it as an optional tax; you can either buy insurance, or pay a tax. Matt Drudge was completely accurate in calling this a “Liberty Tax” that Americans are paying right now.  

Looking at the big picture, all of this goes to American exceptionalism. What Blackwell described is part of what makes America an exceptional nation. American exceptionalism also arises from our Constitution’s system of the division of power between federal and state governments, the separation of powers between Congress, the president, and the courts, and the checks and balances that each branch has against the others.

Obama has thrown into disarray these structural protections, which exist to safeguard the liberty of every American in every generation, regardless of your political beliefs or personal circumstances. It also impacts our long-term prosperity, as a central aspect of why America is a great place to do business is that we are a nation under the rule of law. Obama’s illegal actions have undermining the stability of the rule of law, which will negatively impact our economy.

America is at a fork in the road, and must make a decision as to the kind of nation we want to be, and what relationship we want between each individual and the federal government. So on Obamacare’s fourth anniversary, there’s a question worth asking, and publicly debating through the 2014 midterms and into the 2016 presidential election. Whether talking about healthcare or the nation as a whole: Are you and the Constitution better off than you were four years ago?

Ken Klukowski is senior legal analyst for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter @kenklukowski.

 
 
 
  Reported by Breitbart 4 hours ago.

Health insurance out of reach for some Oregonians

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Diedre Gibbons' disability income and her older husband's part-time job on a construction crew barely pay the bills. And though the Oregon couple need ongoing health care and qualify for subsidies on the state's insurance exchange, they remain uninsured. Reported by Miami Herald 3 hours ago.

March 31 Deadline Looms for Buying Individual Health Insurance

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Learn the details of the new open enrollment deadline for buying health insurance.
 
 
 
  Reported by Motley Fool 3 hours ago.

Rick Perry Blasts Obama for Latest Obamacare Delay

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Rick Perry Blasts Obama for Latest Obamacare Delay Texas Governor Rick Perry wasted no time in blasting President Obama’s latest executive decision to delay the Obamacare deadline for enrollment through April. According to the decision, individuals will be granted more time if they have not completed the sign-up process after the original date of March 31, 2014.

“Whether it’s deadlines or red lines, it’s clear we can’t trust President Obama to back up what he says,” Perry fired referring to recent health insurance and foreign policy decision.

Perry dug deeper, arguing: “In every policy decision he makes we see a feckless, meandering and muddled strategy that ultimately leaves the administration, and increasingly the United States, embarrassed by the lack of conviction and discipline we expect and deserve from the leader of the free world.”

Governor Perry’s rhetoric continues amid increasing pressure from left-of-center advocacy groups pressing states that resisted the expansion of Medicaid in the Obamacare roll-out to change their policies. The Commonwealth Fund recently authored a report arguing that resistant states tend to bear the largest portion of responsibility for those in need, according to The Hill.

In an email statement to Breitbart Texas, Perry’s office rejected any notion that Medicaid expansion was still necessary.

“President Obama himself has called Medicaid a broken program, and Medicaid expenditures already take up 1/3 of Texas’ budget,” the statement read. “Expanding Medicaid in Texas would only lower the uninsured rate by three percentage points, while straining an already struggling program and consuming billions of additional taxpayer dollars. The governor continues to call for flexibility to implement state-based reforms to the existing Medicaid program.”

Follow Logan Churchwell on Twitter @LCChurchwell

 
 
 
  Reported by Breitbart 6 hours ago.

Colorado Senate committee stops expanded audit of health care exchange

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A Colorado Senate committee Wednesday morning indefinitely postponed a House bill for an expanded performance audit of the new state health-insurance exchange. Reported by Denver Post 5 hours ago.

MNsure site has enrollment surge, a few problems as deadline nears

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With the enrollment deadline nearing, MNsure is seeing a surge in interest among people seeking health insurance -- and experiencing a few more problems with its website as a result. Reported by TwinCities.com 5 hours ago.

The Most Miserable Cities In America

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Gallup is out with its latest Well-Being Index, a look at how Americans in various metropolitan areas perceive their own wellbeing based on a variety of factors, including health, work environment, and access to basic necessities.

This year, Provo-Orem, Utah, ranked highest for wellbeing, followed by two cities in Colorado, and Honolulu.

On the other end of the spectrum however, are communities whose residents feel they lack many of the factors that go into wellbeing. Last year, Charleston, W. Va. came in last. This year, it was displaced by Huntington-Ashland, W.Va-Ky.-Oh., which was second-from-the-bottom on last year's index.

Gallup ranked all 189 U.S. metro areas, as defined by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget, by conducting 178,000 interviews nationwide. It asked people to consider a set of six sub-indexes, which examine life evaluation, emotional health, work environment, physical health, healthy behaviors, and access to basic necessities.

*The map below shows the metropolitan areas that fell in the bottom quintile on this year's ranking. *
According to Gallup, Americans’ life evaluations have improved, emotional health and healthy behaviors have remained stable, and basic access, physical health, and work environment have declined over the six years it has tracked wellbeing.

Gallup noted three major trends:

· *A decrease in the rate of Americans with health insurance.* This is partially due to higher rates of unemployment, thought it has continued even as the labor market has recovered. Personal doctor usage has also decreased over time, according to Gallup.

· *An increased rate of obesity. *Physical health reached its lowest point in six years in 2013, and obesity rose at an "alarming" rate, according to Gallup. The company also noted national decreases in rates of healthy eating and exercise.

· *Declining perception of work environment.* "Working Americans are making it clear that a weak labor market has had an adverse impact on managerial and labor relationships," the report said.

*On the other end of the spectrum, these are the communities that reported the highest levels of wellbeing:*
*And this map shows how all 50 states fared in Gallup's latest index:*

For more detailed methodology and a complete ranking of states, congressional districts, and communities based on wellbeing, you can download Gallup's full report here.

*SEE ALSO: The 25 Richest Neighborhoods In America*

*FOLLOW US: Business Insider Is On Instagram*

Join the conversation about this story »

 
 
 
  Reported by Business Insider 4 hours ago.

"Last Chance" to Sign Up for Health Care

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CHICAGO, March 26, 2014 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Two days before the March 31 deadline to enroll in quality health coverage through the Health Insurance Marketplace, Get Covered Illinois is partnering with Get Covered America, Be Covered Illinois, and Enroll Chicago! to co-host... Reported by PR Newswire 5 hours ago.

That Health Insurance Deadline Now Comes With Wiggle Room

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President Obama often said that March 31 was the hard deadline to sign up for individual health insurance. But it turns out it's not so hard. Here's the latest on that slightly squishy deadline. Reported by NPR 5 hours ago.

WellPoint Threatens "Double-Digit Plus" Rate Increases But New CA Ballot Measure Will Force Health Insurers to Publicly Justify Their Rates Next Year, Says Consumer Watchdog Campaign

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SANTA MONICA, Calif., March 26, 2014 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Health insurance giant WellPoint this week threatened "double-digit plus" rate hikes next year, but won't get away with unjustified increases if voters approve a California ballot measure to increase health insurance... Reported by PR Newswire 4 hours ago.

Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan urges uninsured people not to wait until March 31 to get covered

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DETROIT, March 26, 2014 /PRNewswire/ -- Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan doesn't want people to go without health insurance, and the best way for uninsured people to ensure they are covered is to start an enrollment application before March 31. "We are here to help people with... Reported by PR Newswire 4 hours ago.

Peace of Mind for 30 Cents

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Thirty cents. What is mere pocket change to some bought an insurance card, and with it, peace of mind for one of many families.

As the Affordable Care Act's (ACA) first open enrollment period winds down, critics continue their attempts to repeal the law. But the reality of life under "Obamacare" is different. Health care reform created a sea change for many people -- five million as of this month and counting -- and Bishnu Kamar is one of them.

Bishnu spends her days as a social worker, working alongside her Philadelphia neighbors. No matter how strong her work ethic, before the ACA, she and her husband were priced out of health insurance coverage. They were caught in an all too common predicament: not "poor enough" for Medicaid, but too poor to afford a private plan in the open market. Although they worked hard, played by the rules and aspired to achieve the American Dream like many other immigrants, they could not afford basic health insurance in the country they now called home.

And the Kamar's were not alone. They were part of the ranks of nearly 50 million other Americans who could not afford health insurance.

The ACA changed all that and helped level the playing field for the Kamar's and other Americans. For the first time, low- and middle-income Americans can get help buying insurance. With it, Bishnu got a high-quality private health plan for a price tag of $0.30 a month, thanks to the law's tax credit. This was unimaginable in the days before the ACA. Despite the online technology glitches, Bishnu worked through the application process with the help of a dedicated application counselor. When her insurance card arrived at her home, Bishnu's happiness was palpable.

Having access to affordable, preventive care helps healthy people stay that way and prevents a multitude of illnesses and chronic conditions down the road. Insurance coverage means no longer living in fear of falling ill, or letting treatable conditions worsen to the point of needing an expensive emergency room visit in the wee hours. Lack of health insurance takes a considerable physical, mental and financial toll.

When Bishnu was uninsured, she had the unfortunate luck of having a medical emergency. Her friend raced her to the emergency room with dangerously low-blood pressure. While her body healed, her pocketbook took a hit -- to the tune of $7,000 for just four hours of emergency care. Without health insurance or Medicaid assistance, Bishnu and her family found themselves with an astronomical bill. Fortunately, they received assistance and were able to reduce the amount and eventually paid it off.

But each year, millions of other American families are not so lucky. Medical bills are one of the top causes of personal bankruptcies. The uninsured often receive bills for emergency care that are several times higher than their monthly rent. This is enough to strike fear into anyone, even more so for those just living paycheck to paycheck.

Maximizing access to health insurance is not controversial. It is good medicine, good policy and good for the nation.

When the dust settles on the Obamacare battles, stories like Bishnu's will be told across the country. The health care law may not be perfect; most major pieces of legislation are not. But the ACA is a vast improvement to our existing health care infrastructure.

Four years after President Obama signed his signature achievement into law, what matters is that millions of people now have coverage they can count on. That's what the ACA will be remembered for. Reported by Huffington Post 3 hours ago.

HHS grants extra time to enroll for health care

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Trying to avoid sending thousands away empty-handed, the Obama administration has announced that people who started applying for health insurance but aren’t able to finish before the Reported by Harrison Daily 4 hours ago.

How A Pot-Worshipping Church Could Play Into The Hobby Lobby Case

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WASHINGTON -- A federal government operation that placed an undercover agent in a small church in Hawaii wound up shutting down the institution, led to the loss of thousands of dollars worth of "sacramental" items, and will likely put a minister and some members of his congregation behind bars for years.

That case also demonstrates why it would be OK to exempt Hobby Lobby from a federal regulation requiring for-profit companies to provide health insurance that covers birth control, according to lawyer Paul Clement. The former solicitor general made the craft store chain's case before the Supreme Court during Tuesday's oral arguments.

The church in question, THC Ministry, wasn't your average place of worship. It was, the feds alleged, a front organization that tried a creative method for possessing and distributing marijuana while avoiding prosecution on religious grounds.

Trying to refute the argument that a win for Hobby Lobby would encourage businesses to just make up religious beliefs to avoid federal laws, Clement on Tuesday pointed to cases in which federal courts have rejected arguments that defendants' marijuana use should be protected by the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, the very law that Hobby Lobby is citing in its challenge to Obamacare.

"You have people who are arrested in possession of large quantities of marijuana and they assert that they belong to the church of marijuana, and those cases do get litigated and they get rejected," Clement said.

Even if Hobby Lobby prevails and corporations are allowed to avoid certain government requirements because of the religious beliefs of their shareholders, Clement argued, judges will still be able to test the sincerity of those beliefs.

The sincerity argument is exactly where THC Ministry ran into trouble.

In a 126-page memo last May, federal prosecutors spelled out why they believed that the religious claims of THC Ministry founder Roger Christie and his wife were bogus, and argued that the couple shouldn't be able to use a Religious Freedom Restoration Act defense during a jury trial.

"The only difference between that aforesaid, typical drug trafficker and the Christies herein is that the latter operated their trafficking activities and realized their profits through the Ministry," prosecutors argued.

Before the feds took down the organization in 2010, the THC Ministry setup was to accept suggested "donations" for certain amounts of the "sacrament." One of the ministry's mistakes appears to have been practically spelling out the fact that it was a cover for a marijuana operation on its website.

"Among other wonderful things, our Ministry helps to protect you from arrest, prosecution and/or conviction of ‘marijuana’ charges -- wherever you live -- starting as soon as you sign-up, become ordained and receive your ministry documents," the website stated. "We provide a legitimate religious ‘defense to prosecution’ for sincere practitioners over 21 years old."

Prosecutors said that the Christies' conduct showed they weren't serious about their stated beliefs. "The bottom line is that from their own actions, there is no reason to believe that the Christies themselves sincerely believed what they have propounded as a matter of religion," the prosecutors argued.

The Christie prosecutors pointed in turn to a 1989 decision, Olsen v. Drug Enforcement Administration, handed down by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. Then-Circuit Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg wrote that the DEA "cannot accommodate Olsen’s religious use of marijuana without unduly burdening or disrupting enforcement of the federal marijuana laws."

In the case of THC Ministry, U.S. District Judge Leslie Kobayashi noted in the December 2013 final order that there was evidence suggesting "increasing recognition in the medical community of the benefits of marijuana and that there is increasing political sentiment that the federal government’s war on drugs, and criminal justice system in general, should be focused on crimes other than marijuana-related crimes." But that wasn't a decision for the courts to make, the judge wrote, and the government had an interest in enforcing marijuana laws.

Kobayashi, who was appointed by President Barack Obama, ultimately found that an "express service" set up by THC Ministry undermined the Christies' religious claims, since they had no means of ensuring that people who presented ministry ID cards were actually members of the ministry.

"Moreover, although Defendants themselves may have emphasized the requirement of sincerity in the use of marijuana as a religious sacrament, the majority of the persons who obtained marijuana from the THC Ministry did so through the express service, which did not require them to meet with either of Defendants," Kobayashi wrote.

The Christies pleaded guilty in the fall and are scheduled to be sentenced next month. A video about the ministry is posted below. Reported by Huffington Post 3 hours ago.

HUFFPOLLSTER: Most Americans Are Tired Of ACA Debate

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A majority of Americans appear to be weary of the political debate over Obamacare. A new CBS News poll finds a big GOP enthusiasm advantage for 2014. And Gallup notes that seniors have grown more Republican during the Obama years. This is HuffPollster for Wednesday, March 26, 2014.

*MANY UNAWARE OF HEALTH CARE DEADLINE* - Kaiser, reporting on a poll taken before the Obama administration announced an extension of the sign-up period for health care enrollment: "In the final days of open enrollment for new health insurance options under the ACA, substantial shares of the uninsured remain unaware of the law’s individual mandate and the looming deadline to sign up for coverage. A third of those who lack coverage as of mid-March are unaware that the law requires nearly all Americans to have health insurance or pay a fine. When it comes to the specifics, *four in ten of the uninsured (39 percent) are aware that the deadline to sign up for coverage is at the end of March, leaving about six in ten unaware of the March deadline.* When reminded of the mandate and the deadline, half of those without coverage as of mid-March say they think they will remain uninsured, while four in ten expect to obtain coverage and one in ten are unsure." [Kaiser

*Favorable rating of ACA tips back up* - More from Kaiser: "As the ACA turns four years old, overall public opinion on the law shifted in a more positive direction this month, though unfavorable views still outnumber favorable ones. In March, 46 percent say they have an unfavorable view of the law (down 4 percentage points since January), while 38 percent say they have a favorable view (up 4 percentage points since January). *The gap between unfavorable and favorable views is now eight percentage points, down from a recent high of 16 points in November and January*." [ibid]

*Most ready to move on* - Kaiser: "[M]any Americans appear to be weary of the national debate about the law. Just over half the public (53 percent) say they’re tired of hearing about the debate over the ACA and want the country to focus more on other issues, while about four in ten (42 percent) say they think it’s important for the country to continue the debate...Perhaps reflecting this sense that the debate has gone on long enough, *more of the public would like to see Congress keep the law in place and work to improve it (49 percent) or keep it as is (10 percent)* rather than repeal it and replace it with a Republican-sponsored alternative (11 percent) or repeal it outright (18 percent)." [ibid]

*Can anything move Obamacare's ratings?* - Chris Cillizza: "Opinions about Obamacare are virtually set in stone at this point. If you like the law, there's no one piece of information that is going to change your mind. And, if you hate the law, nothing that happens is going to make you hate it. any more. The Kaiser Family Foundation has been conducting polling on the law for the last several years and its data shows the remarkable consistency of support and opposition to the law….'*Attitudes toward the ACA are pretty much baked in*,' acknowledged prominent Republican pollster Neil Newhouse." [WashPost]

*GOP HAS MIDTERM ENTHUSIASM EDGE* - Sarah Dutton, Jennifer De Pinto, Anthony Salvanto and Fred Backus: "Republicans begin the midterm campaign cycle with an edge in voter enthusiasm and attention - much of which seems driven by the chance to voice opposition to President Obama. *Seventy percent of Republican voters are already enthusiastic about voting in November (including 27 percent who are very enthusiastic), compared to 58 percent of Democrats.* Meanwhile half of independents and four in 10 voters overall say they are not excited….Although he won't be on the ballot in November, most Republican voters (52 percent) see the upcoming midterm elections as a chance to vote against the president. By contrast, fewer Democrats (43 percent) see 2014 as a chance to support President Obama. For most independents (55 percent) the president isn't a factor at all - but those who see a connection are breaking more than two-to-one against him. In September of 2010, by contrast, things were more even, with 23 percent of voters looking to cast a ballot for President Obama and 25 percent against him. Leaving enthusiasm and attention aside, Republicans and Democrats are even (39 percent each) in the "generic ballot" test." [CBS]

*OBAMA'S FOREIGN POLICY RATING LOOK BLEAK* - Connie Cass and Jennifer Agiesta: "Foreign policy used to stand out as a not-so-bleak spot in the public’s waning assessment of Barack Obama. Not anymore. He’s getting low marks for handling Russia’s swoop into Ukraine, and more Americans than ever disapprove of the way Obama is doing his job, according to a new AP-GfK poll. Despite the poor performance reviews, Obama’s primary tactic so far — *imposing economic sanctions on key Russians — has strong backing*. Close to 9 out of 10 Americans support sanctions as a response to Russia’s annexation of the Crimean Peninsula, the poll indicates. About half of that group says the U.S. sanctions so far are about right, while the other half wants to see them strengthened, the Associated Press-GfK poll found. [AP]

*GALLUP SEES 'REALIGNMENT' AMONG SENIORS* - Jeffrey M. Jones: "U.S seniors -- those aged 65 and older -- have moved from a reliably Democratic group to a reliably Republican one over the past two decades. From 1992 through 2006, seniors had been solidly Democratic and significantly more Democratic than younger Americans. *Over the last seven years, seniors have become less Democratic, and have shown an outright preference for the Republican Party since 2010.* In 1992, 53% of senior citizens, on average, identified as Democrats or said they were independents but leaned Democratic, while 39% identified as Republicans or leaned Republican, resulting in a 14-percentage-point Democratic advantage in seniors' party affiliation. Last year, 48% of seniors identified as or leaned Republican, and 45% Democratic, a three-point Republican advantage." [Gallup, HuffPost]

-Bloomberg's Jonathan Bernstein: "Gallup really shouldn't say that 65-99 year olds in 2013 are the same group as 1993 45-79 year olds" [@jbplainblog]

*HUFFPOLLSTER VIA EMAIL!* - You can receive this daily update every weekday via email! Just click here, enter your email address, and and click "sign up." That's all there is to it (and you can unsubscribe anytime).

*WEDNESDAY'S 'OUTLIERS'* - Links to the best of news at the intersection of polling, politics and political data:

-76 percent of Americans rate Pope Francis favorably. [Gallup]

-Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) has a 7-point lead over challenger Mary Burke. [Marquette]

-A plurality of Virginia voters approve of Gov. Terry McAuliffe's (D) job performance. [Quinnipiac]

-Most Americans say that it's more important to maintain good relations with Russia in order to keep their cooperation on Iran, than it is to punish them for their actions in Crimea. [YouGov]

-Americans are divided over the fairness of the justice system. [Rasmussen]

-Harry Enten says Hillary Clinton potential dominance in the Democratic primaries may give her a general election advantage in 2016. [538]

-Jonathan Bernstein sees a "serious flaw" in Enten's argument. [Bloomberg]

-Mark Mellman (D) revisits the argument over independent leaners and notes that many "swing voters" are not pure independents. [The Hill]

-David Hill (R) wonders if "persistent wrong-track sentiment could burst the bubble of political stability." [The Hill]

-The Washington City Paper offers interactive crosstabs based on recent PPP (D) poll of Washington, D.C. [WCP]

-Pew Research releases its State of the Media report for 2014. [Pew Research]

-Pew's Lee Rainie answers questions about the Internet Project's research on Reddit. [Reddit] Reported by Huffington Post 3 hours ago.

My Faith Is Offended by Inequality, Not Birth Control

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On a cold rainy day, during what felt like one of winter's last tantrums, the Supreme Court heard from Hobby Lobby's owners, Steve Green and his family, whose Southern Baptist beliefs apparently conflict with the Affordable Care Act's requirement that contraception be offered in every health insurance plan's list of women's preventive health services. Among the questions before the court is whether this requirement puts an undue burden on the conscience and religious freedoms of Hobby Lobby (which may or may not be a person, despite its absence in medical school curricula). In addition to remembering the critical role contraception plays in women's health, I ask my fellow Americans to search their consciences about a REAL moral burden: millions of working poor families are being denied health insurance because of where they live.

Now, I hate to be yet another male commenting on birth control and women's health, but as a physician and a member of the public health community, there are basic facts about contraceptives that are worth remembering. As physicians, we prescribe these medications for a variety of conditions that have nothing to do with family planning: ovarian cysts, painful periods, and endometriosis are just a few examples. This is basic health care, backed by evidence-based research, that has proven effective for millions of women. When combined with the women who are using contraceptives for family planning, it is understandable how 99 percent of teenagers and women aged 15 to 44 have used contraception.

Besides being quite effective, birth control is also quite expensive, especially for low-income women. In addition to having to pay for clinic office visit co-pays, a woman can face $60 per month for generic contraception. More than half of women ages 18 to 34 reported the cost of birth control as a challenge to using it consistently. In order to promote basic health care for women and eliminate financial barriers to that care, the Affordable Care Act requires all new health insurance plans to cover all FDA-approved methods of birth control without cost-sharing. Nationwide, 27 million women are covered by this benefit.

This particular benefit has the added potential for uplifting women's lives and giving Americans opportunities for personal growth and development. By empowering women to safely control their reproductive destiny, birth control has allowed mothers, daughters, sisters, and friends to attain education and career goals. This value of birth control in modern society does not conflict with our morals or spiritual values. After all, in 1966 the leaders of Planned Parenthood bestowed its first Margaret Sanger Award on a Reverend who understood the relationship between family planning, poverty, and enlightening the soul of a nation that had been indifferent towards its inequalities. In his acceptance speech, Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. offered wisdom that our Supreme Court Justices could learn from:
"There are mountainous obstacles still separating Negroes from a normal existence. Yet one element in stabilizing his life would be an understanding of and easy access to the means to develop a family related in size to his community environment and to the income potential he can command."
For a 2014 reader, there are some serious questions posed by this speech from 1966: How are we still arguing about the importance of birth control in modern society? How can one of the most important spiritual leaders of American history value contraception's impact on the nation's poorest communities, but today's business leaders are opposed to it for "religious" reasons? Is birth control really the American conscience's top priority in health care?

The Supreme Court's 2012 ruling on the Affordable Care Act made the expansion of Medicaid for any state optional. Because half the country's governors have opted for ill-advised political stands against expansion, there are now almost 5 million Americans who are stuck in the "coverage gap." Basically, these are families whose incomes are too low to buy health insurance through the Affordable Care Act's marketplace exchanges, but they earn too much to be eligible for their state's Medicaid program. For example, in Oklahoma, where the Medicaid program is not being expanded, and where the owners of Hobby Lobby happen to live, there are 144,480 Americans in the coverage gap. Ninety percent of these uninsured Oklahomans earn $11,490 per year or less as individuals, or $23,550 per year for a family of four (that's 100 percent of the federal poverty level). If they lived in neighboring states like New Mexico or Colorado, they would have access to Medicaid because these states are expanding the program. Where is the moral outrage of the owners of Hobby Lobby for the millions of Americans without health insurance for no other reason than they are poor in the "wrong" state? Does this not wound their consciences?

A few months prior to receiving Planned Parenthood's Margaret Sanger Award, Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr spoke at the Second National Convention of the Medical Committee for Human Rights in March 1966. There he called upon the American soul to recognize that, "Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health care is the most shocking and inhumane." As an American-born Hindu, and as a pediatrician, I believe we are all children of God, with the same divine spark within each of us, regardless of where we live. If we are to have any moral or spiritual objection to the Affordable Care Act, it should be directed towards the political obstruction of the law leaving millions of our brothers and sisters without the dignity of basic health care. Reported by Huffington Post 3 hours ago.

New insurance deadline set with more help available

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New insurance deadline set with more help available Anyone who starts the application process of enrolling in the government's health insurance plan by the end of March, but doesn't complete it, will get extra time to finish. Reported by WTHR 3 hours ago.

Union alleges Spirit used health info in layoffs

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The union representing engineers at Spirit AeroSystems Inc. accused the aerospace company Wednesday of terminating hundreds of workers last year because they were too old and a burden on health insurance costs, claims that the company vehemently denies. Reported by ajc.com 3 hours ago.

State: Deadline to enroll for health insurance not extended, but not hard-and-fast either

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New York state is sticking to the original March 31 deadline for residents to obtain health insurance via the state's online marketplace, called an exchange. That said, for some individuals and small businesses, there is wiggle room. The exchange was created by the federal Affordable Care Act, and its success is vital to the law's goal of sparking the most extensive expansion of health insurance since Medicare and Medicaid were created nearly 50 years ago. CDPHP, a health insurer in Albany, NY,… Reported by bizjournals 3 hours ago.

Cover Oregon deadline extended to April 30

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Oregonians will have an extra month to sign up for subsidized health insurance, and the state's health insurance exchange is planning a $1 million push to get the word out, officials announced Wednesday. Reported by Miami Herald 2 hours ago.
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