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The real reason why the Supreme Court’s Obamacare ruling is so important

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The real reason why the Supreme Court’s Obamacare ruling is so important The Supreme Court handed the Obama administration a significant victory on Thursday, when it upheld a key provision of the Affordable Care Act that allows the federal government to keep distributing subsidies to help low-income Americans buy health insurance.

But the decision's ramifications go far beyond an immediate win for President Barack Obama and the law. The Supreme Court's ruling firmly entrenches the Affordable Care Act as the law of the land, leaving no room for a theoretical future Republican president to undo major pillars of the law in an executive fashion.

"The decision leaves no wiggle room for a future Administration that might have wanted to end the ACA’s subsidies," Larry Levitt, senior vice president at the Kaiser Family Foundation, told Business Insider after the ruling.

That's because the Supreme Court not only ruled the federal subsidies are legal under the Affordable Care Act, but it also did not leave any ambiguity that would allow a future administration to interpret the law differently.

"The court focused definitively and said, this is what the law means," said MaryBeth Musumeci, an associate director at the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured.

The challengers in the case, King v. Burwell, argued the way the law was written does not allow for the federal government to distribute subsidies to individuals in states that had not set up their own exchanges. They pointed to four words in the law that they argued meant exchanges should be "established by the state."

A brief history: In 2011, the IRS issued a regulation that interpreted a part of the law in question to mean that the federal government could issue the subsidies. But in its opinion Thursday, the Supreme Court majority said that decision should not be left up to a government agency to interpret, since Congress did not make that explicit in the Affordable Care Act.

Instead, the high court disregarded the agency's interpretation and ruled on the statute on its own. The IRS ruling, in effect, is null. The court said the decision should not be left up to the agency, which means a future administration cannot change that interpretation and alter the way subsidies are handed out under the Affordable Care Act.

"If the court had left in question about whether there should have been deference to the agency, that would have left the door open potentially for another administration running that agency to say, ‘OK, this is ambiguous language, and we have a different legal interpretation,'" Musumeci said.

Practically, this means that a theoretical future Republican president could not come in and say that the federal government cannot hand out subsidies.

That might not be a practical solution anyway: After all, by the time a Republican president could enter into office, millions of additional people would likely have access to subsidies as more people enroll in plans under the federal exchange. But there's no longer even an option: The Supreme Court has definitively determined that the federal government can provide subsidies under the law.

"Because the Court has provided its own, definitive interpretation of the ambiguous statute — and held that it will not defer to the agency’s interpretation — a subsequent presidential administration (say, a Republican Administration) cannot reinterpret the statutory provision to prohibit tax subsidies in exchanges established by the Federal Government," Chris Walker, an assistant professor at the Michael E. Moritz College of Law who clerked for Justice Anthony Kennedy, wrote on his blog Thursday.

Rick Hasen, a professor of law and political science at the University of California, Irvine, said the "biggest favor" Chief Justice John Roberts did for Obama was protecting the law's legal entrenchment well into the future.



The biggest favor CJ Roberts did in Obamacare case was not applying "Chevron deference," protecting interpretation from future President.

— Rick Hasen (@rickhasen) June 25, 2015


 

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NOW WATCH: This is the hardest part about being President Obama's personal chef Reported by Business Insider 21 hours ago.

What if you get sick while traveling abroad?

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*What if you get sick while traveling abroad?*

You’ve reserved your flights and hotels, got your passport, and maybe even selected your wardrobe. But if you’re traveling abroad, have you planned what you’ll do if you become sick or injured? Where you’ll go for medical treatment, how you’ll pay for it, and how quickly you’ll be able to get back home?

If you can’t answer those questions, you’re not alone, says Julie Loffredi of InsureMyTrip.com, a travel-insurance comparison site that recently surveyed 800 travelers. “Most people don’t know if their insurance covers them outside the U.S.,” she says.

The answers can be tricky. Though most big health insurers advertise coverage for emergency and urgent care abroad, “their standard policies offer only the bare minimum,” says Devon Herrick, Ph.D., a senior fellow and health economist at the National Center for Policy Analysis. “A life-threatening emergency visit may be covered,” he says, but you might have to return to the U.S. for follow-up care.

That’s why your trip preparations should include calling your health insurance carrier to find out what coverage you have overseas. Medicare generally doesn’t cover hospital or medical costs on foreign soil. And very few insurers will pay for a medical evacuation from a remote, resource-poor area to a hospital where you can receive adequate treatment or a flight back home. “Explain what kind of trip you’re taking,” says Damian Tysdal, founder of Travel Insurance Review. “Make a list of the gaps you’re concerned about.”

Depending on what you learn from your carrier, add the following to your to-do list:

Generally, there are two types: a travel health plan or a vacation package. Travel health plans are typically stand-alone policies that cover only medical emergencies and cost a few dollars a day. A vacation package, also known as a comprehensive plan, provides coverage that includes medical emergencies, trip cancellation, trip interruption, baggage loss or damage and flight cancellations. “The average comprehensive plan runs about 4 to 8 percent of all your pre-paid, non-refundable expenses, such as hotel, airfare, excursions and tours,” says Loffredi. Medical evacuation coverage can be purchased in conjunction with it, or separately to supplement your own health insurance.

You can compare policies and premiums on sites such as Squaremouth.com and InsureMyTrip.com, which provide links to full policy documents from dozens of carriers and numbers to call licensed agents who can answer questions.Examine policies closely and ask the agent to point out the words are that prove coverage. Be sure to inquire about exclusions for pre-existing conditions and injuries that are due to high-risk activities such as mountain climbing; preauthorization requirements for hospital admission or other services; and requirements for a second opinion.

Some countries that have subsidized national health care will provide free care to visitors; check with your host country’s embassy or consulate to find out. There are some countries where you’ll need proof of health insurance as an entry requirement, and others where medical facilities won’t accept health insurance at all. In that case, you will have to pay by cash or credit card and file for reimbursement later, so be sure to keep all paperwork.

The International Association for Medical Assistance to Travelers, or IAMA, is a nonprofit that advises travelers about health risks, provides information about vaccinations, and has a network of English-speaking doctors throughout the world who treat patients at a fixed rate. “If you’re not covered by travel insurance, or if travel insurance does not cover a pre-­existing condition, that’s where we might come in,” explains Tullia Marcolongo, the association’s director of programs and development. It provides a directory of hospitals and fees.

The cost of membership is a voluntary donation; the average is $30. Does that mean you don’t need insurance? Maybe. “Our doctors can take care of you,” Marcolongo says. “They have been trained in North America or Europe and have been vetted through our own inspections, references from other doctors, and our members.” She added that although the fees can be reimbursed by your travel-insurance company, “some have their own networks, and your claim may be denied if you don’t use one of their providers.”

Have your health-insurance ID and claim forms with you while traveling, as well as a letter from your doctor describing any condition you have and medications you take. Keep meds in their clearly labeled original containers; some countries have restrictions on medications lacking proper documentation.

Personnel there are available 24/7 to give emergency assistance to U.S. citizens, including transferring funds from the U.S. for out-of-pocket medical costs, help in getting appropriate medical services, and informing your family or friends.

*Consumer Reports has no relationship with any advertisers on this website. Copyright © 2006-2015 Consumers Union of U.S.*

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Michigan same-sex couples celebrate as they wed among activists and lawyers

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Families gain parenting rights and health insurance as supporters gather to mark the occasion, but they are prepared for challenges: ‘The struggle is not over’

Related: Same-sex marriage ruling's ripple effect – historic celebrations of love

Shortly after 10am on Friday, Chris Berghuis was barraged by texts from his partner, Derek Davis, asking: “Are you here yet?”

Continue reading... Reported by guardian.co.uk 17 hours ago.

Former Congressional Leaders React to SCOTUS Decision on ACA

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Above, watch the full conversation on the Affordable Care Act.

One day after the Supreme Court's ruling upholding the Affordable Care Act, an Aspen Ideas Festival Spotlight Health panel of former politicians and administration officials agreed that a lot more work lies ahead -- in terms of further implementation, improving health care quality, and especially the politics.

The good news, said former US Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, is that the 6-3 ruling was definitive, with no deferred decisions. "This was the strongest possible decision they could have made," she said. "They said, 'This is what the law says.'"

But while the battle over Obamacare has been won in the courts, "the battlefield is now going to be the political arena," said former Sen. Bill Frist (R-TN), who throughout the discussion reminded the audience that more people still disapprove of the law than approve of it. Yet the Supreme Court victory means that the Affordable Care Act has grown up and is here to stay, he said, that it now "has reached the stature of Medicare or Medicaid."

The panelists agreed with former Sen. Tom Daschle's (D-SD) prediction that congressional Republicans "are going to be under pressure to schedule one more repeal vote, because it's good politically for their base."

Daschle said that in the longer term, that strategy is not going to work, because Americans want to see Congress working together. Pointing to some bipartisan efforts in the health care arena recently, Daschle added, "once you get beyond this emotional debate of Obamacare, it's amazing how many things out there have the potential for reasonable dialogue and consensus."

Recently retired Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA) noted that Republicans "dodged a bullet" with the Supreme Court decision, because in red states, they would have had to contend with all their constituents who stood to lose or pay more for health insurance if the decision had gone the other way.

Not surprisingly, the Democrats on the panel doled more praise on the Affordable Care Act, while Frist, the lone Republican, argued that it would result in higher costs and other challenges, even though it has "good substance in it."

Calling it "miserably passed and messily written," Frist said the opportunity to fix or modify anything in the bill was taken away because of the partisan way it was passed.

"If it was passed in a partisan way, it's going to get increasingly more partisan, because we're electing more and more people that say, 'It's not my bill,'" he said. "We haven't been able to fix the bad things in it, because we haven't been able to work together."

Sebelius and Nancy-Ann DeParle, another Obama administration official involved in developing the Affordable Care Act, argued that while political divisions have been detrimental, the law has succeeded in bringing down health care costs and is beginning to improve quality of care.

"We have had the lowest health cost inflation in 50 years; we're finally in the ballpark of trending GDP with health inflation," said Sebelius, who added that what people don't like about Obamacare is Obama.

Daschle suggested that while the concept of Obamacare may still be unpopular, people generally admit that they like its specific components.

And Waxman reiterated that it's necessary to look beyond the propaganda:

"One of the objectives of the ACA was to reduce the number of uninsured; that's happened dramatically. We were told by Republican leaders in the House that more people would lose their health insurance. Not true. That more people would lose their jobs. Not true. That it would break the budget. Not true. At some point people will evaluate what's happened with this law, and by any measure, it's been a great success."

Waxman also noted that unlike Medicare and Medicaid, "The ACA intended to change the practice of medicine in this country. So we are putting in place an effort for government to give the right incentives, which are going to come from the private sector, with the right balance. All these things are happening right now. We're living in a very exiting time."

Still, there's plenty of work to do on the nitty gritty level. DeParle noted that unlike other legislation, there was no opportunity to work on specifics and fix things that were understood to be bad after the bill was passed, because of its partisan nature.

The cost of prescription drugs and the need for more states to pick up the Medicare option were identified as just two of the issues that still need to be resolved. And while the administration can work on such details without Congress's involvement, Sebelius pointed out that congressional Republicans are already starting to flag areas they're going to fight.

In terms of future areas of focus, Daschle said that while access -- getting people insured -- has gotten the bulk of the attention, "we still have mess out there with quality." Frist suggested that with 20 million people still uninsured in the United States, the access issue remains pertinent.

"We've got to have more enrolled to make this work," he said, adding that, "If government and the private sector work together, we can get this solved."

Yet Frist also said that of all the factors that impact good health, the Affordable Care Act -- and government involvement in general -- is a relatively minor one.

"If you want to have an impact on health, what we all need to do is go back to our homes, see what our counties are doing in terms of health, and challenge local community leaders to come together to say, for example, we want to go from being 15th in the state to No. 1 in the state," said Frist. "We're not going to address it all with the ACA or better doctors or hospitals."

Catherine Lutz is a contributor to the Aspen Idea blog.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 15 hours ago.

MARRIAGE EQUALITY: When Democracy Prevails

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Abolition didn't just happen; people made it happen. Women's suffrage didn't just happen; people made it happen. Civil Rights legislation didn't just happen; people made it happen. And marriage equality didn't just happen, either; people made it happen. It's a beautiful thing when democracy prevails.

Americans can be proud today that despite some horrific mistakes and wrong turns we've made throughout our history, there are moments like this when we course-correct. In the words of Winston Churchill, "Americans can always be counted on to do the right thing...after they have exhausted all other possibilities."

This week it's appropriate for all of us to breathe in this latest, historic civil rights victory, honoring the memory of all those over the years who have suffered homophobic treatment under the law and celebrating particularly within the LGBT community those who struggled and worked so hard to bring this victory about.

Then once the celebratory rituals have ended and we're all settled into this new, more enlightened reality for our LGBT citizens, let's turn our attention to our next great generational challenge: creating the most powerful response possible to the oligarchic order now threatening our democracy. For this one, we won't be able to turn to the Supreme Court, because unfortunately the Supreme Court got us here. For this, we need the only Constitutional route that overrides the Court: a Constitutional Amendment establishing public funding of all federal elections.

Nothing short of that will override Citizens United. Nothing short of it will amount to real campaign finance reform. Nothing short of it will triumph over the nefarious ways that money now exerts an undue influence on our government, and such a destructive influence on our democracy. Nothing short of it reasserts the will of the people and allows democracy to prevail.

There will be no sane gun control as long as the NRA can use money to influence so many politicians; there will be no fundamental environmental sanity as long as fossil fuel companies can use money to influence so many politicians; there will be no serious peace-making efforts as long as the military industrial complex can use money to influence so many politicians; there will be no universal health care as long as health insurance and pharmaceutical companies can use money to influence our politicians. And the list goes on. It's time for this generation of Americans to decide -- for our selves and for our descendants -- who America belongs to. At this point, our government isn't "of the people, by the people, and for the people" any longer. It's "of the corporations, by the corporations, and for the corporations." And that -- like inequities such as slavery, segregation, marriage inequality or any others -- will not change until we, the people, decide to change it.

The LGBT community waged a brilliant strategic campaign and won a well-deserved victory in America this week. May their win be a blessing on all citizens whose lives will improve because of this expansion of their democratic freedoms, and an inspiration to all of us for the work that still lies ahead. None of us are free until all of us are free, none of us are equal unless all of us are equal, and none of us are free as long as the money we can spend on elections is the determiner of just how equal we are.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 14 hours ago.

Snooty Breaks Record, Vibrio Vulnificus Deaths, Marriage Equality

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Patch Sarasota, FL -- Preaching sheriff, selfie-sticks at Disney, health insurance subsidies and other stories from Florida Patch. Reported by Patch 11 hours ago.

Hooray for Obamacare

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Was I on the edge of my seat, waiting for the Supreme Court decision on Obamacare subsidies? No — I was pacing the room, too nervous to sit, worried that the court would use one sloppily worded sentence to deprive millions of health insurance, condemn tens of thousands to financial ruin, and send thousands to […] Reported by Seattle Times 9 hours ago.

Sunday Roundup

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This week, in the words of President Obama, our union became "a little more perfect." On Thursday, the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 in favor of Obamacare, preserving health insurance for at least 8 million people. In dissent, Justice Scalia -- whose opinions increasingly read like he's shouting them from the Court's front porch at passersby -- accused the majority of "jiggery-pokery." The next day, the Court ruled 5-4 to make marriage legal nationwide for same sex couples. As cheers rang out across the country, the president hailed the courage of those who "slowly made an entire country realize that love is love." But amid the celebration there was also sadness, as Rev. Clementa Pinckney was laid to rest in Charleston... Read More.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 3 hours ago.

Where federal health insurance fails autistic children

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Employees are covered for the leading treatment only if they live in certain states.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Reported by USATODAY.com 23 hours ago.

Are You Making This Health Insurance Mistake?

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One study found that most people pick the wrong health insurance. Are you one of them? Reported by Motley Fool 20 hours ago.

New Canaan Police Sergeant to be Suspended

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Patch New Canaan, CT -- He was also ordered to repay the town thousands of dollars after he reportedly kept his ex-wife on his health insurance plan. Reported by Patch 16 hours ago.

Ten Days that Shook the Regressive World

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*Call Them What They Are: "Regressives"*It has been a bad couple of weeks for regressives (the accurate term that we all should start using for the people who inaccurately label themselves as "conservatives").

Indeed, the ten-day period from June 18 to June 26 has been such a disastrous time for regressives that it may be looked back upon as the time when it became clear that history has passed by the "Conservative Movement" and left it untenable.The series of earthquakes that have shaken the Regressive World's foundations began on June 18, when Pope Francis issued his encyclical on the environment and climate change, Laudato Si', and continued through the racist gunman's murderous terrorist attack on Emanuel AME Church in Charleston and the reaction to it, to the Supreme Court decisions on the Affordable Care Act and same-sex marriage on Thursday and Friday and President Obama's remarkable speech in his eulogy to Rev. Clementa Pinckney a few hours after the latter decision was announced.*Going Up Against Science and Religion*

The Pope's encyclical links destruction of nature with such other injustices as inequality, poverty, and hunger. He called upon people around the globe to hear "both the cry of the Earth and the cry of the poor" resulting from "compulsive consumerism" and the pursuit of profit above all else. He chastised "obstructionist" climate change deniers who "seem mostly to be concerned with masking the problems or concealing their symptoms."The encyclical amounts to a nearly complete condemnation of regressive economic and social policy.The Pope's words made climate change a religious, as well as a scientific, issue. It is a question on which regressive Republicans are totally identified with the other side. As leading Catholic commentator Father Thomas Reese put it: "Suddenly, you're not just doing it for the polar bears, you're doing it for God."Surely the Pope's powerful declaration will shrink further the number of Americans who agree with the climate change deniers. A Pew poll taken before the papal encyclical found that only 25 percent of Americans believe that global warming is not happening and a Gallup poll in March found that 55 percent of Americans believe we are already experiencing the effects of global warming. Yet Republican presidential candidates are obliged to reject both science and the Pope in order to appeal to the party's regressive base.*The "Southern Strategy" Has Become a Liability*
The Charleston horror left Republicans scrambling to distance themselves from the Confederate flag and other symbols of racism that many of them have been embracing since the 1960s. There is, though, no sign that they plan to ease up on their efforts to prevent minority people from voting. They understand that the emerging diverse America is not one in which they can win elections with their current positions--but the regressive base of their party insists that they stick with those positions. Republicans sold their soul to the devil in the late 1960s in a pact called the "Southern Strategy." It enabled the party to win several national elections. Satan is now demanding his payment.*"The Sixties" Have Won*

To put it another way, Republicans have identified themselves since 1968 as the "anti-Sixties party." Now, though, on one issue after another, the Sixties have won.Beyond the justice of the two huge Supreme Court decisions this week, they leave Republicans desperately trying to appease their base by embracing increasingly unpopular positions.*Opposing Obamacare Has Become a Political Liability*

The percentage of Americans who think the Affordable Care Act should be repealed has been noticeably declining in recent months, falling to 31 percent in a CBS News/New York Times in mid-June. That poll also found, for the first time, more Americans approving (47%) than disapproving (44%) of the healthcare law. And in this poll prior to Friday's decision, a stunning 70 percent of all Americans (and 70 percent of independents) said the Supreme Court should allow the government to "continue to provide financial assistance to help some low and moderate income Americans buy health insurance."That's right: *70 percent* of Americans support the Obamacare decision that every Republican presidential candidate denounced in the harshest terms. And it is almost certain that support for Obamacare will grow between now and the 2016 Election.*Equal Rights for ALL: An Idea Whose Time Has Come*What about Friday's decision? Recent polls consistently show that 57 percent or more of Americans (and, significantly, 59 percent of independents) favor same-sex marriage.And young Republicans, like young Americans in general, are overwhelmingly in favor of same-sex marriage and full equality for LGBT people. Yet Republican presidential hopefuls are furiously competing with each other to appeal to the party's regressive base and so digging themselves ever deeper into a hole out of which it will be exceedingly difficult for them to climb.Then there were President Obama's superb speeches following the SCOTUS decision on the ACA on Thursday and, particularly, at the funeral of Rev. Pinckney on Friday. If they, combined with the continually improving economy and the extraordinarily good week the President had, do not result in his popularity increasing, it will be very surprising.*A Bleak Political Landscape for Regressives*The political landscape on other major issues is similarly bleak for regressive Republicans. A CBS News/New York Times poll in May found that 66 percent of Americans believe that "the money and wealth in this country should be more evenly distributed among more people," 67 percent think "the gap between the rich and the poor in the U.S. is getting larger," and 65 percent believe that "the gap between rich and poor in this country is a problem that needs to be addressed now."On one major issue after another, Republicans have shown themselves to be regressives who want to go backward instead of forward. And they are out of step with growing majorities of Americans on every one of them.It was, as Judith Viorst would put it, "a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad" ten days for Regressives and the Republican party that they dominate. They find themselves on the wrong side of history on issue after issue and would have to change their positions across the board in order to have much hope of avoiding being consigned to the dustbin of history.
-----------------Robert S. McElvaine is the author of ten nonfiction books and is completing his first novel, "What It Feels Like."

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 15 hours ago.

Understanding short-term health policies

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After leaving a full-time job in Northern California earlier this year, Christine Morrison is without work-based health insurance for the first time since the age of 18. Reported by L.A. Times 8 hours ago.

Rebel Flags Coming Down and Progressive Patriotism Rising. Are Flag/ACA/Gay Issues Related?

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*LISTEN HERE:*

By Mark Green

This was the week when lame duck Obama became a political lion. Lowry and Reagan debate its impact on the country and '16. Can Rich find a pony in there somewhere? Key question: will GOP prospects promise new Justices to reverse ACA and gay marriage thereby keeping it a rallying issue for Democrats? (Fish gotta swim...)

**Aftermath of Charleston Massacre.* Ron Reagan (My Father at 100) asserts that the Confederate flag should never have flown originally on public property in the '20s because of the KKK or in the '60s because of Jim Crow. Lincoln scholar Rich Lowry (National Review) agrees that it should now come down because it's unarguably associated with a war based on the Confederate South wanting to retain slavery. But he adds that it's odious to compare it to a Swastika and to imply that all who buy flag are potential Dylan Roofs -- Roof being more a racist loner than someone inspired by his environment. He also reminds us that it was Lincoln who first showed empathy and charity to Southern soldiers and people. We should too.

Ron disagrees. If numerically Nazis were worse, both Holocaust and Slavery have much in common since both monstrously dehumanized millions. And the links are strong between racism and the GOP recently and historically -- look at Nixon's Southern Strategy.

Rich strongly pushes back, noting that the original "Southern Strategy" came from Ike who wanted to win some Southern States based on GOP principles -- and did when his party did well in wealthier suburban counties due less to race than economics. Ron strongly disagrees, noting how GOP avatar Lee Atwater explained that since his party "can't run around saying N*****, N*****, N*****, we talk about States Rights" as code.

The Host interrupts to note that more recently than Ike or Nixon was Gov. Reagan who announced his 1980 presidential campaign in Philadelphia, Mississippi, known only as the place where Cheney, Schwerner and Goodman were killed in 1963 -- and he included "States Rights" in his announcement. Lowry asks if the Host is saying Reagan was a "racist." No, only noting the fact and symbol of his announcement. Ron Reagan agrees that it was "wrong" of his father to start his campaign there, implying that it was the likely result of cunning aides.

What about the underlying substance behind the symbol -- racism? As Obama said on Marc Maron's podcast, the country is far better off since 1865 and 1965 but racism is "in our DNA". Ron explains that many people around world are racist because of their innate fear of people who look different. And there are policies that Democrats can push -- for judicial and education reform plus social programs alleviating poverty -- that can help reduce the pathology of racism.

Is it unfair for Democrats to link the GOP and Council of Conservative Citizens donations and and will it help them stir the Democratic base? "Yes and Yes," says Rich. "They'll wave this bloody shirt." And they'll accurately note, adds Ron, that white supremacists and anti-government terrorists take twice as many lives in the U. S. as 'Islamic Terrorists'.

**Supreme Court and Obamacare. *The presidency is up for grabs in 2016 but there's now been a decisive ruling on the ACA -- by 6-3, including a chief justice who advised Bush in his Florida recount, the Supreme Court ruled that the law does allow subsidies to all who join exchanges, whether state or federal. We listen to Sen. Ted Cruz, a constitutional lawyer himself, call the decision "lawless."

Lowry disagrees with majority for "saving Congress from the bad law it wrote, which is not their job." Reagan scoffs, saying that you don't deny millions health insurance because of a drafting error taken out of context.

Did The Court follow the "illiction returns" and not want to create chaos in the health insurance market? Both agree that likely played a role in the CJ Roberts opinion. He cared more about "the New York Times and elite law school opinion," concludes Lowry, when he should have applied Scalia's test of just looking at the words of Congress, not its intent.

Host: In fact, the standard conservative approach to determine a law's constitutionality is to defer to the legislature and look at the language in the context of the whole law, as Roberts wrote quoting Scalia. (Here, Rich graciously acknowledges that two weeks your humble Host predicted this 6-3 result because Roberts would engage in just such reasoning.)

I used to debate Antonin Scalia in the 1970s on issues of federalism before bar panels and don't recognize this angry, nasty man. Reading his dissents replete with "jiggery pokery... applesauce... nearest hippie... judicial putsch," I believe that "Justice" Scalia has reached the WTF period of his long court tenure. He is giving fresh meaning to 'going down in flames', to being a living argument for judicial term limits, and in raising the prospect that he'll soon just publish emoticons as dissents to save time.

**Supreme Court and Marriage Equality. *We all agree that public opinion has radically shifted in the past 15 years as more people came out and, says Rich, "they saw that their neighbors, family members and friends were gay." But he again disagrees with the decision because it shouldn't have forced the final 13 anti-marriage states to go along by judicial decree when the option of legislation was available.

"What about Loving v. Virginia," asks Ron, should it have not thrown all anti-miscegenation laws? Yes, Rich answers, because those laws were rooted in racial hatred and didn't fundamentally alter the concept of marriage. Also, the Court now risks the kind of blowback that obviously occurred after Roe v. Wade in 1973 "when conservatives were told to suck it up and go along... and they didn't." Ron responds that that unlike Roe, when conservatives could keep arguing about "dead babies," here there will be no arguable harm, other than the psychological damage of not being able to say your own marriage is no longer sacrosanct.

Red Holtzman of Knicks was once asked why Knicks lost five straight yet then won five in a row, and he said, "how the hell would I know?" Rich is asked if his team's defensiveness over losses on Indiana religious liberty, Confederate Flag, ACA, Marriage Equality, Pope-Climate is just an unlucky streak or a sign of a big problem. He jauntily says that it's at times like these "why the National Review is needed more than ever."

Host: He has a point -- Katrina vanden Heuvel would say same thing about The Nation under President Reagan. But there is an alternate analysis: in each of these defeats, the Hard Right over-reached and democracy struck back and said 'no-way.'

Will the GOP use these defeats to pivot in 2016 away from divisive losing issues, as Jonathan Martin asked in Sunday front page New York Times piece? Unlikely. Not with zero GOP presidential aspirants agreeig with the gay marriage ruling and with nearly all threatening tactics from appointing new justices to reverse the two decisions this week to electing the Supreme Court. The fever has not broken, apparently...

Mark Green is the creator and host of Both Sides Now.

You can follow him on Twitter @markjgreen

Send all comments to Bothsidesradio.com, where you can also listen to prior shows.

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-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 7 hours ago.

Cambia Expands Roles for Key Leaders

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Cambia Health Solutions recently announced enhancements to its leadership team. Mark Stimpson, John Attey, Gail Baker and Peggy Maguire will continue to strategically position the company for success in today’s dynamic market.

Portland, Ore. (PRWEB) June 29, 2015

Cambia Health Solutions is pleased to announce enhancements to its leadership team. These leaders have demonstrated Cambia’s values in their drive to transform the health care system to being economically sustainable and person-focused. Each of these leaders will continue to strategically position the company for success in today’s dynamic market:

Mark Stimpson Named Senior Vice President and Chief Human Resources Officer:
Mark joined the Cambia family in 1986 with one of Cambia’s regional health plans in Utah. He has led human resources functions across the Cambia enterprise since 2005. The expansion of his role overseeing Cambia’s employee culture, particularly in the areas of talent acquisition, strategic business partnering, and leadership development, will be key to Cambia’s accelerating commitment to consumer-centered solutions. Learn more about Mark on the Cambia website.

John Attey, Senior Vice President, Chief Legal Officer and Corporate Secretary:
John has provided leadership and strategic direction to Cambia’s legal and regulatory affairs as general counsel since 2008. As chief legal officer and corporate secretary, John will continue to demonstrate his effectiveness in providing legal advice and guidance to help the company achieve its objectives. Learn more about John on the Cambia website.

Gail Baker, Senior Vice President of Strategic Communications:
As the leader of Cambia Strategic Communications since 2012, Gail has elevated the importance of effective messaging to enhance the company’s reputation and support the company’s business goals and growth. In her newly expanded role, Gail will bring strategic counsel to the company’s senior leadership team, and will also oversee Cambia’s government affairs division. To learn more about Gail, visit the Cambia website.

Peggy Maguire, Senior Vice President of Corporate Accountability and Performance:
Peggy joined Cambia in 1997 as an associate general counsel and has held several posts, including vice president of legal services and most recently, chief of staff to the CEO. Her areas of accountability expanded steadily during seven years as chief of staff. With this promotion, she adds leadership over Cambia’s ethics and compliance programs to her existing areas of responsibility. In leaving her staff role, Peggy will bring increased visibility and force to the functions she continues to oversee, including planning and performance, enterprise risk management and corporate social responsibility, along with the newly aligned ethics and compliance teams. Peggy will also continue to serve as president and board chair of the Cambia Health Foundation, where she has been a champion of Cambia’s ground-breaking palliative care program. Learn more about Peggy on the Cambia website.

“I congratulate these leaders for their accomplishments,” said Cambia Health Solutions President and Chief Executive Officer Mark Ganz. “I look forward to working with them to continue to impact our health care system, transforming it into one that allows for a more seamless and frictionless health care experience for consumers.”

About Cambia Health Solutions
Cambia Health Solutions, headquartered in Portland, Oregon, is a health solutions company dedicated to transforming health care by creating a person-focused and economically sustainable system. Cambia’s growing family of companies range from software and mobile applications, health care marketplaces, non-traditional health care delivery models, health insurance, life insurance, pharmacy benefit management, wellness and overall consumer engagement. Through bold thinking and innovative technology, we are delivering solutions that make quality health care more available, affordable and personally relevant for everyone. To learn more, visit cambiahealth.com or twitter.com/cambia. Reported by PRWeb 1 hour ago.

Thomas Financial Names Former Ernst & Young Auditor as CFO

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Thomas Financial appoints Lindsey Hacker as Chief Financial Officer. With in-force insurance coverage approaching $5 billion, Thomas Financial consistently ranks as #1 in Florida and Top 10 in the country among firms that specialize in financial planning and insurance solutions for the ultra-affluent, family businesses and high-growth companies.

Tampa, Florida (PRWEB) June 29, 2015

Thomas Financial, one of the nation’s leading providers of insurance solutions to affluent individuals and high-growth companies, today announced the appointment of Lindsey Hacker, CPA as Chief Financial Officer.

As CFO, Ms. Hacker will be responsible for accounting and finance. She will work closely with the producers and case design analysts to create highly customized and sophisticated insurance solutions.

“We are proud to appoint Lindsey as our new Chief Financial Officer,” said Thomas Financial CEO Rick Thomas. “In the year that she has been with us, she has proven herself to be a leader who can both drive internal improvement and understand the complex requirements of our clients. Lindsey’s unique combination of big picture thinking and technical skill delivers value to our clients and to our bottom line.”

Before joining Thomas Financial, Ms. Hacker worked at Ernst & Young as a Senior Auditor and at Brookdale, where she served as the Regional Manager of Financial Planning and Analysis and the Director of Accounting.

“This is an exciting time to be part of Thomas Financial,” said Ms. Hacker. “As part of M Financial, we are able to leverage buying power equal to the sixth largest insurance carrier in the country and deliver proprietary products not available from most firms. That means our clients can grow their wealth, pay their estate taxes for pennies on the dollar and ensure the seamless transition of a family business from one generation to the next.”

“We have a dynamic culture and the ability to adapt to the ever-changing financial industry,” continued Ms. Hacker. "I am proud to be a part of an organization that stands for integrity, commitment to excellence and has a culture that is focused on the highest levels of client service. I am energized about where we are today and we are headed in the future.”

Ms. Hacker is a graduate of Florida State University, where she obtained both her Bachelor of Science degree (Magna Cum Laude) and her Master's degree in Accounting. She is a licensed CPA, a CGMA and also a member of the ACIPA, FICPA and the Tampa Bay Estate Planning Council. Aged 33, Ms. Hacker is one of the youngest CFOs ever appointed to an M Financial Member Firm.

About Thomas Financial
Thomas Financial specializes in life insurance, wealth transfer, business continuation, retirement planning, executive benefits and health insurance to meet the needs of the affluent and corporate markets. Combining deep expertise, product innovation, collective strength and legendary service, Thomas Financial has consistently performed at the top of its field for over 40 years. Reported by PRWeb 1 hour ago.

Just Released HIPAA All New Security Awareness Training and HIPAA Policies and Procedures Available for Physician Practices for Ensuring Rapid Compliance with HIPAA

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Flat Iron Technologies, LLC, leaders in the field of healthcare regulatory compliance, are now offering HIPAA security awareness training materials, along with HIPAA policies and procedures, for instant download today.

Houston, TX (PRWEB) June 29, 2015

Flat Iron Technologies, LLC, leaders in the field of healthcare regulatory compliance, are now offering HIPAA security awareness training materials, along with HIPAA policies and procedures, for instant download today. With the onslaught of compliance laws and regulations being pushed on to the U.S. healthcare industry, businesses are looking for cost-effective, yet high-quality solutions for today’s demanding legislative mandates.

The solution is Flat Iron Technologies, LLC, and the industry leading HIPAA Security and Privacy Compliance Toolkits (HSPCT), containing hundreds of pages of high-quality, professionally researched and authored policies, procedures, forms, checklists, templates, and so much more. The documentation, which is available for instant download, can save Covered Entities (CE) and Business Associates (BA) thousands of dollars and hundreds of operational man-hours, so visit hipaapoliciesandprocedures.com to learn more.

Regulatory compliance can be incredibly demanding, time-consuming, and incredibly expensive – no question about it – so turning to the experts at Flat Iron Technologies, LLC for cost-effective solutions is a step in the right direction. Visit hipaapoliciesandprocedures.com to learn more about the high-quality HIPAA Security and Privacy Compliance Toolkits (HSPCT), which are available for instant download today.

With many options to choose from, the HIPAA Security and Privacy Compliance Toolkits (HSPCT) are a perfect fit for any healthcare company seeking to become compliant with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) of 1996. Visit hipaapoliciesandprocedures.com to learn more about the products and services offered by Flat Iron Technologies, LLC, North America’s leading source for HIPAA documentation. Reported by PRWeb 23 hours ago.

Frontrunning: June 29

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· China’s Stocks Enter Bear Market as Rate Cut Fails to Stop Rout (BBG)
· Stocks Tumble Around the World on Greek Crisis (WSJ)
· Some say back to the drachma for a Greek reboot (Reuters)
· Greece Imposes Capital Controls as Fears of Grexit Grow (BBG)
· Panic Sets in Among Hardy Hedge Fund Investors Remaining in Greece (NYT)
· Euro off Greece-driven lows after SNB intervenes (Reuters)
· Western Union to close in Greece for rest of week (Reuters)
· European banks, bonds shaken by Greek turmoil (Reuters)
· Greece Tries to Defy History of Capital Controls Doomed to Fail (BBG)
· Bunds Surge Most Since 2012 as Greek Crisis Escalates (BBG)
· Supreme Court Term to End With 3 Rulings (WSJ)
· Texas attorney general says county clerks can refuse gay couples (Reuters)
· Gross Gets Personal: ‘I Just Wanted to Run Money and Be Famous’ (BBG)
· Musk’s Space-Taxi Vision Sustains Blow as SpaceX Rocket Blows Up (BBG)
· FBI Joins Local Investigations As Black Church Fires Spread Across 5 U.S. States (IBT)
· Iran Wish List Led Nuclear Deal Talks With U.S. (WSJ)
· Donald Trump Once Got Fleeced in Mexico, and He’s Still Very Angry (BBG)
· U.S. Panel Aims to Shield Planes From Cyberattack (WSJ)
· How a Bet on Rare Earths Flopped as Scarcity Was a Mirage (BBG)
· Unused Borders Gift Cards Spur Fight (WSJ)
· High-Profile Study Turns Up the Antitrust Heat on Google (BBG)

 

*Overnight Media Digest*

WSJ

* Greece shut down its banking system, ordering lenders to stay closed for six days starting Monday, and its central bank moved to impose controls to prevent money from flooding out of the country. (http://on.wsj.com/1dqzlXr)

* U.S. intelligence agencies believe there is a strong possibility the Assad regime will use chemical weapons on a large scale if Islamist fighters threaten Syrian government strongholds. (http://on.wsj.com/1drvcT7)

* After years of ratcheting back trading operations in favor of more stable businesses, Morgan Stanley is quietly plotting a comeback, pushing for more fixed-income trading business. (http://on.wsj.com/1g0kPYz)

* The new nationwide right to same-sex marriage resounded across the country Sunday, with the Supreme Court ruling fueling joyous gay-pride celebrations and denunciations from some pulpits, but also conflicting feelings for some about a rapid societal and now legal change. (http://on.wsj.com/1KoI5My)

* Iran secretly passed to the White House beginning in late 2009 the names of prisoners it wanted released from U.S. custody, part of a wish list to test President Barack Obama's commitment to improving ties and a move that set off years of clandestine dispatches that helped open the door to nuclear negotiations. (http://on.wsj.com/1NoFD6W)

* The Justice Department is gearing up for an exacting look at any proposed mergers among the nation's top health-insurance companies, amid questions inside and outside the department about whether industry consolidation could suppress competition. The five biggest health insurers have been circling one another for potential deals. Anthem Inc has made public a $47.5 billion bid for Cigna Corp, which Cigna has so far rejected. Aetna Inc, meanwhile, has made a takeover proposal for Humana Inc. (http://on.wsj.com/1CD4f5L)

 

FT

Italy's Masi Agricola, a company which produces wines from vineyards owned by the descendants of poet Dante Alighieri, will debut on the Milan exchange on June 30 with its shares priced at 4.60 euros ($5.05) apiece.

Credit Suisse Group and ING Group have indicated to Britain's Treasury that they are considering exiting some of their operations out of London.

Greece's financial stability council imposed capital controls on Sunday night to avoid financial chaos after bailout talks with its international creditors broke down. This means that Greek banks will now be shut for several days.

Activist investor Elliott has built up a stake equal to about 1.3 per cent of Alcatel-Lucent SA shares via equity swaps, according to a disclosure made to the French market regulator.

 

NYT

* Puerto Rico's governor, saying he needs to pull the island out of a "death spiral," has concluded that the commonwealth cannot pay its roughly $72 billion in debts, an admission that will probably have wide-reaching financial repercussions. (http://nyti.ms/1C0gSgr)

* Greece's Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras announced Sunday night that Greece's banks would be closed as of Monday, as the fallout from ruptured debt negotiations with the nation's creditors began inflicting pain on ordinary people while raising alarm in Washington, Brussels and Berlin. The emergency measures escalated the confused and unpredictable state of a crisis that some analysts say could ripple through global financial markets and undercut European unity. (http://nyti.ms/1RKejRk)

* China's central bank cut interest rates on Saturday and reduced the reserves that certain banks must hold. The two measures send a signal that the government may not be eager to see an abrupt end to a stock market rally that has seen prices more than double in the last 12 months. (http://nyti.ms/1edJnvM)

* Fiat Chrysler is telling the owners of about five dozen Jeep Grand Cherokees and Dodge Durango sport utility vehicles to immediately stop driving them. The vehicles, from the 2015 model year, have a suspension component that could fail, causing rear-end instability and possibly reduced braking power. (http://nyti.ms/1HqOLct)

* Asian stock markets slumped on Monday morning as Greece's temporary closing of its banking system and controls on money withdrawn from the country triggered worries of possible broader harm to the global financial system and economy. (http://nyti.ms/1GGKoDs)

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** Ontario's manufacturing-led economy has slipped into a productivity funk, caused by slumping exports and lost market share in the United States, concludes a new study being released on Monday by the Ottawa-based Center for the Study of Living Standards. (http://bit.ly/1JiSUfU)

** Canada will get more power to accredit its own medical schools, under an agreement that took years to negotiate and reduces the U.S. influence on the criteria used to review schools. Medical schools at the University of British Columbia and the University of Calgary will be the first up to be re-accredited under the new criteria. (http://bit.ly/1GKAjGv)

NATIONAL POST

** The second of two convicted murderers that had escaped from a New York State jail nearly a month ago was shot and wounded near the Canadian border on Sunday and is now in custody. A state police sergeant shot David Sweat near Constable, New York roughly 63 kilometers from the Clinton prison. (http://bit.ly/1InnDtI)

** Canadian author and environmentalist Naomi Klein, known for her opposition to capitalism and corporate globalization, is scheduled to join a Vatican committee that was formed to draw attention to a conference on the environment being held in Rome this week. (http://bit.ly/1HrO82q)

 

Britain

The Times

Britain's Bank for International Settlements says that central banks should use low inflation as an opportunity to raise interest rates as part of a radical overhaul of their policymaking. (http://thetim.es/1NrieBo)

The Financial Conduct Authority is preparing to crack down on complex credit card offers, threatening challenger banks such as Virgin Money and tarnishing their customer-friendly image. (http://thetim.es/1Jsjk1J)

The Guardian

The British foreign office has updated its advice for those travelling to Greece with a warning that access to banking services in the country may become limited at short notice. The change in advice comes as Greece teeters on the brink of defaulting on its debts, which could trigger an exit from the euro or the closure of the banking system. (http://bit.ly/1NrjsfP)

Barclays, which launched payment wristbands last year, is launching key fobs, an updated wristband and stickers, as contactless payment moves into newer wearable devices. The bPay devices can be bought online or in high street stores from next month. (http://bit.ly/1QXKem6)

The Telegraph

The finance director of Tesco has insisted that Britain's biggest retailer does not need to make an "immediate decision" about asset sales despite sitting on a debt mountain of 22 billion pounds ($34.55 billion). Tesco insists it does not face a liquidity crunch, which would force it to sell off assets. (http://bit.ly/1KokdIS)

A resilient health and beauty market has driven a sharp increase in profits for A S Watson , the owner of Superdrug, Savers, and The Perfume Shop in the UK. Sales rose 7 percent to 1.6 billion pounds while pre-tax profits surged from 44.7 million pounds to 64.4 million pounds according to 2014 accounts filed at Companies House for AS Watson (Health and Beauty UK). (http://bit.ly/1LD9haF)

Sky News

Britain's most influential business lobbying group the Confederation of British Industry(CBI) is poised to announce the appointment of its next director-general, whose term will be shaped by the looming referendum on the UK's European Union membership. CBI will say this week that its deputy director-general, Katja Hall, has not landed its top executive. (http://bit.ly/1LD7LFl) Reported by Zero Hedge 21 hours ago.

Obamacare Reconciliation

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The Supreme Court last week ensured millions of Americans retained their health insurance. Those who kept their coverage sighed with relief. Democrats cheered.

Republicans reacted with vitriol and recrimination. Even the GOP dissenters on the Supreme Court couldn’t stop themselves from responding with bitter sarcasm. Weirdly too, with language like “jiggery-pokery.”

For the entire five years since Democrats passed the Affordable Care Act (ACA), Republicans have relentlessly attempted to kill it – along with some of its most vulnerable beneficiaries who’d lack life-saving health care if the GOP succeeded. Some Republican legislatures and governors have jubilantly exploited a provision in a previous Supreme Court decision to deny the working poor in their states access to the ACA’s expansion of Medicaid. But the GOP has lost the bulk of two appeals to the Supreme Court. And Republicans have failed at 67 attempts to repeal all or part of the ACA. They need to call off their war on health care now. Declare a ceasefire. Stop trying to slaughter a law that’s helping millions.  

* Photo by Victoria Pickering on Flickr.  *

 

But if the colossal cadre of contenders for the GOP nomination for President is any indication, no armistice is in the offing. After the court announced the 6-3 decision Thursday, one Republican candidate after another railed against the majority on the Supreme Court and swore to take insurance from millions of Americans by repealing Obamacare.

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, whose announcement last week was overshadowed by the Obamacare and marriage equality decisions, tweeted, “President Obama and Hillary Clinton would like this to be the end of the debate on Obamacare, but it isn’t.”

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker tweeted: “Today's #SCOTUScare ruling means Republicans must redouble their efforts to repeal and replace this destructive & costly law.”

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio agreed, with Rubio telling CNN, "I remain committed to repealing this bad law.”

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush issued a statement saying that as President he would “work with Congress to repeal and replace this flawed law with conservative reforms.”

These responses are, as the GOP would say, bad and flawed. Republicans can deny it until the votes are counted in November 2016, but Obamacare works. Because of the ACA, a higher proportion of Americans are covered by health insurance now than at any time since the government began collecting statistics. More than 16.4 million Americans gained insurance under the ACA. Health care costs increases have declined to a record low. And untold millions of Americans value the law’s broad protections, including prohibitions against insurers denying coverage to people with pre-existing conditions and against cancelling coverage when policyholders become ill. 

Now, it’s true that nearly all of these Obamacare-loathing Republicans, like Jeb, contended they’d replace it after repealing it. But that’s what the GOP has said all along. And they’ve got nothin’. There’s no plan. There’s no strategy. There’s not even an outline.

And there’s a reason for that. The conservative Heritage Foundation developed a plan, including the now GOP-hated individual mandate. Mitt Romney piloted that market-based program successfully when he was governor of Massachusetts. Then, the U.S. House and Senate embraced the framework of Romneycare and passed it. That’s the Affordable Care Act – created by conservatives, adopted by Democrats.

America’s got the GOP plan A. Republicans don’t have a plan B. If they did, they’d have produced it sometime over the past five years. They keep talking like they’ve got something, but it’s as ethereal as individual health insurance plans for people with pre-existing conditions before Obamacare.

The GOP’s tactic of trying to destroy Obamacare in the courts has not served the party well. The first time around in the Supreme Court, the justices upheld the overall legality of Obamacare but did permit states to refuse the ACA’s Medicaid expansion. Despite that, a majority of states – 28 – as well as the District of Columbia covered their working poor by accepting the program.

Several Republican governors who opposed the expansion at first later reconsidered, mostly because infuriated hospital administrators pointed out that the refusal pushed their institutions toward bankruptcy as it forced them to continue providing uncompensated care to the uninsured. 

Rebuffing the expansion costs states jobs and economic expansion as well. The Kansas Hospital Association estimated that the state’s rejection of Medicaid expansion in 2014 and 2015 set it back $714 million in federal funding and 3,400 jobs. Still, Kansas is a holdout. That snub to businesses doesn’t seem very Republican.

The federal government threatened Kansas, Tennessee, Florida and Texas with loss of Medicaid money that pays some of the cost of care for the uninsured if those states continue to refuse the expansion. For Florida, that’s $1.3 billion. That would be a big hit to the state’s economy and health care system. Still it’s a holdout.

That’s how much Republicans hate that Democrats passed their conservative health insurance plan.

This time when Republicans tried to kill Obamacare by challenging it in court, they got nothing. In fact, they got less than nothing. They ended up worse off.

The GOP wanted the court to outlaw subsidies that the ACA awards low-income people who buy their health insurance on the federal exchange.   If the GOP had won, subsidies would have been denied to 6.4 million people who buy their insurance on the federal exchange because their states refused to establish their own insurance marketplaces.

But the majority on the Supreme Court declined to outlaw those subsidies. And it did so in a way that prevents a future Republican president from revoking the subsidies simply by changing an IRS rule. That’s a good thing for Americans receiving the subsidies.

But that doesn’t seem to be important to Republicans.

It should be. Here are two numbers those Obamacare-hating Republicans seeking the presidential nomination should keep in mind: While 1.8 million people who bought their insurance on the federal exchange live in counties that voted for President Obama, 4.5 million live in counties that voted for Romney.

Republicans may not want to be responsible for taking health insurance away from 4.5 million Republicans.

So they should stop trying. If they don’t like the Romneycare-inspired Affordable Care Act, they should try to fix it. Use some ingenuity to make it better. Arch conservative Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia illustrated that Republicans are capable of that kind of creativity in his dissent filled with Shakespearean allusions.

The GOP would benefit from reckoning with this loss and abandoning its failed “repeal and replace” refrain. The American people who need health insurance would benefit if the party showed the slightest amount of Scalia’s inventiveness in GOP offers to work with Democrats to improve Obamacare.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 20 hours ago.

United States: Will Increased Consolidation In The Insurance Industry Yield Opportunities Or Challenges For Investors? - McGuireWoods LLP

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A recent flurry of activity in the health insurance industry would seem to indicate that investors can expect significant consolidation in the managed care sector. Reported by Mondaq 21 hours ago.
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