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Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey Announces Premium Payment Extension for Members Who Have Enrolled for Coverage Beginning January 1, 2014

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Extension Intended to Ease Enrollment Challenges from ACA Rollout

Newark, NJ (PRWEB) January 10, 2014

Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey (BCBSNJ) announced today that it will, again, extend the time period for members, who enrolled for individual coverage beginning on January 1, 2014, to pay their first month’s premium and make their health insurance coverage effective. The current deadline for the payment of a member’s first month’s premium was today, Friday, January 10, 2014, but will be extended by one week to Friday, January 17, 2014.

“Due to the extension of deadlines to purchase coverage and the significant increase in calls we are receiving, we want to provide our members purchasing individual coverage with additional time to make their first premium payment and make their coverage effective,” said Christopher M. Lepre, Senior Vice President of Market Business Units for Horizon BCBSNJ. “The rollout of the Affordable Care Act has been a challenge for consumers and with this extension of time to make their first month’s premium payment, we are trying to reduce stress on our members.”

Horizon BCBSNJ noted that 56% of its enrollment from the federal Marketplace, which opened on October 1, 2013, took place from December 15 through December 24, 2013. This compressed time for enrollment has increased the call volume, in the past few weeks. Horizon BCBSNJ experienced its largest ever one-day call volume during the week of January 6, 2014.

Horizon BCBSNJ members can make premium payments by mailing a check or money order to: Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey, PO Box 10193, Newark, NJ 07101-3117, or by calling Member Services at (800)355-BLUE (2583), Monday through Wednesday and Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., and Thursday from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.

Members are also encouraged to go to HorizonViewPoints.com, the company’s blog, to obtain answers to frequently asked questions that may reduce the need to call Member Services.

About Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey

Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey, the state’s oldest and largest health insurer, is a tax-paying, not-for-profit health services corporation, providing a wide array of medical, dental, and prescription insurance products and services. Horizon BCBSNJ is an independent licensee of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association, serving 3.7 million members with headquarters in Newark and offices in Wall, Mt. Laurel, and West Trenton. Learn more at http://www.HorizonBlue.com. Reported by PRWeb 6 hours ago.

'Orphaned' Insurance Files Plague ObamaCare

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'Orphaned' Insurance Files Plague ObamaCare A dispute over health insurance “orphaned files” has erupted between insurance companies and the Obama Administration, with the insurers saying there is a major problem looming ahead while the feds say not to worry. 

Orphaned files occur when customers enroll with the government but the insurance companies have no record of the files. Because customers of ObamaCare start their insurance coverage this month, the problem has begun to surface.

Insurers are finding cases where the government has assigned the same identification number to different customers and also "ghost" files, the opposite of orphan files, in which the insurer has the record of enrollment but there is no record or file with the government. The reason “orphan” files are so problematic is because insurers have to check their records against the governments’ manually, something Aetna spokeswoman Susan Millerick said will not work as a permanent solution. Insurers expect the problem to get worse with the inclusion of numerous December enrollees in ObamaCare.

Robert Zirkelbach, a spokesman for the industry trade group America's Health Insurance Plans, said, "It's an ongoing concern. Health plans can't process enrollments they haven't received from the exchange."

Insurance industry consultant Bob Laszewski said the problem arose because the government gave the green light for enrollees in ObamaCare without fixing the technology first. He added that because insurance cards have been late getting to customers, there will be more reports of orphaned files. He said, “As we go through the month, you bet this is going to be a problem," he said.

But Julie Bataille, communications director for the federal health care rollout, does not agree that there is a problem, claiming, "We have fixed the issues that we knew were a problem, and we are now seeing nearly zero errors in the work moving forward.” She added that the administration is trying everything to fix the problem.

Blood cancer survivor Sharon Van Daele of Tucson, Arizona, was a victim of the “orphan file” syndrome; her confirmation from her insurer failed to arrive despite the fact that the HealthCare.gov website said on Dec. 22 that she had successfully enrolled. She lamented, "I made all the deadlines, and then I tried to make my payment, but they wouldn't take it.” An official from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services finally contacted Van Daele directly after the Associated Press started questioning what was going on. 

Van Daele’s previous coverage ended on Dec. 31, and when no notice came that she was covered, she got instructions from her husband: "My husband told me I shouldn't leave the house," she said.

 
 
 
  Reported by Breitbart 5 hours ago.

Who’s making money on Obamacare?

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The open enrollment period for the Affordable Care Act provided a boost to Health Insurance Innovations Inc. The Tampa-based company, which develops and administers cloud-based individual health insurance plans and ancillary products, said it expects to report that growth in premium equivalents totaled 30 percent to 32 percent for the year ended Dec. 31. That’s in the upper end of the company’s guidance range, a statement said. Premium equivalents are a financial measure used by the company… Reported by bizjournals 6 hours ago.

FCCI Announces Officer Promotions

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Sarasota-based FCCI Insurance Group (FCCI), announces the promotion of six key officers.

Sarasota, Fla. (PRWEB) January 10, 2014

Sarasota-based FCCI Insurance Group (FCCI), announces the promotion of six key officers:

Rupert Willis is promoted to Executive Vice President & Chief Operations Officer. Willis joined FCCI as a Regional Vice President in 1999 and became Chief Regional Officer in 2007. Willis has played a major role in leading FCCI’s growth and expansion, and he will continue to develop strategies that position the organization for sustainable growth and success.

Lisa Krouse is promoted to Executive Vice President & Chief Human Resources Officer. Krouse joined FCCI in 2005. As Senior Vice President of Human Resources and Support Services, she has led efforts to mitigate health insurance costs and promote health and wellness, training and development, and performance accountability. She will continue these initiatives in her new role.

Tom Koval is promoted to Executive Vice President & Chief Legal Officer. Koval came to FCCI in 1997 in the role of General Counsel. He oversees all legal department functions for the company, including in-house counsel, outside retained counsel and corporate legal matters. He also leads FCCI’s government affairs operations, including legislative and regulatory activities.

Scott Paice is promoted to Vice President of Surety. Paice joined FCCI in 2010 to establish and build the company’s surety bond organization. His focus is on partnering with select independent agents to reach new bond customers and continue to drive growth of the FCCI Surety unit.

Mike Noble is promoted to Vice President of Underwriting, Gulf Coast Region. In 2009, Noble joined FCCI’s Home Office in Sarasota, Fla., and in 2012, he transitioned to the Gulf Coast Regional Office in Ridgeland, Miss., as Assistant Vice President of Underwriting. Noble oversees underwriting operations for the region, which has grown from two states to five in the last two years.

Ann Driscoll is promoted to Vice President of Human Resources. Driscoll joined FCCI in 1997 as a recruiter and has most recently served as Assistant Vice President of Human Resources. She has nearly 30 years of experience in the human resources industry, and she will continue to lead programs that support FCCI’s business goal to attract, retain and develop highly skilled employees.

Craig Johnson, FCCI President & Chief Executive Officer, announced these changes as part of FCCI’s commitment to providing exceptional commercial insurance products and customer service, while maintaining the financial strength and stability and strong internal infrastructure that make FCCI a dependable carrier. “These individuals have been instrumental in helping us achieve our 2013 corporate goals as well as our longer-term strategic objectives, and we are proud to recognize their contributions to our collective success. We look forward to their continued leadership and the value they will bring to FCCI and our customers,” said Johnson.

###

About FCCI – Working through independent agents in 18 states, FCCI provides commercial property and casualty insurance to nearly 18,000 policyholders and commercial and contract surety to more than 10,000 bonded principals. Established in 1959 and rated A (Excellent) by A.M. Best Company, FCCI is headquartered in Sarasota, Fla., and has regional offices in Duluth, Ga.; Indianapolis, Ind.; Ridgeland, Miss.; and Richardson, Texas. For more information, please contact 800-226-3224 or visit http://www.fcci-group.com. Reported by PRWeb 5 hours ago.

$292 Million Down The Drain: White House Fires Main Obamacare IT Contractor

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$292 Million Down The Drain: White House Fires Main Obamacare IT Contractor Proving once again that if you want something done wrong, and preferably at massive cost overruns, then just leave it to the government, moments ago news broke that the main IT contractor behind the embarrassment that is healthcare.gov - CGI Federal - has been fired. Who could possibly foresee this? Well, anyone who had actually done some diligence on the clusterfuck that is CGI Federal, and which as WaPo profiled some time ago, "*is filled with executives from a company that mishandled at least 20 other government IT projects, *including a flawed effort to automate retirement benefits for millions of federal workers, documents and interviews show." Make that 21. "A year before CGI Group acquired AMS in 2004, AMS settled a lawsuit brought by the head of the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board, which had hired the company to upgrade the agency’s computer system. *AMS had gone $60 million over budget and virtually all of the computer code it wrote turned out to be useless, according to a report by a U.S. Senate committee.*" Sounds like the perfect people to hire in order to make a complete disaster out of the Obamacare portal - almost as if by design.

But the best news? Obama's little tryst with CGI Federal cost US taxpayers only $292 million. As Vanity Fair revealed recently, "According to congressional testimony, *CGI stands to be paid $292 million for its work on healthcare.gov*." And since the CGI replacement will eventually redo everything from scratch, this is $292 million that Obama may have as well burned.

We jest, but the incest between the Obama administration and CGI will one day be probed. According to recent revelations the ties run deep:



That lack of expertise explains why in building healthcare.gov, the government turned to industry contractors; in particular, to CGI Federal, a subsidiary of CGI Group, a Canadian company. To those uninitiated in the dark art of government contracting, it seems scandalous that CGI, a company most Americans had never heard of, a company that is not located in Silicon Valley (where President Obama has plenty of Internet superstar friends who could have formed a dazzling brain trust to implement his signature legislation) but rather in Montreal, could be chosen as the lead contractor for the administration’s most important initiative. *While right-wing news outlets have focused on the possible relationship between Toni Townes-Whitley, senior vice president for civilian-agency programs at CGI Federal, and Michelle Obama, both of whom were 1985 Princeton graduates, CGI’s selection is probably more an example of a dysfunctional system than it is a scandal*. “A lot of the companies in Silicon Valley don’t do business with the government at that level [the level required for federal contracting],” explains Soloway. “It is very burdensome, and the rules make it very unattractive.” Indeed, government contractors have to meet a whole host of requirements contained in a foot-thick book, including cost accounting and excessive auditing, to prove that they are not profiting too much off the American taxpayer. Hence, there tends to be a relatively small, specialized group of companies that compete for this work, even on such critical matters as healthcare.gov.



Actually it is a scandal. And it is a bigger scandal that at least $292 million in taxpayer cash was literally flushed down the drain and all we have to show for it is a website that crashes when the seemingly impossible happens, and more than a few hundred people try to log in at the same time. Then again perhaps, since it's no longer 1993, someone in the administration should take responsibility for this? Or maybe it was just Bush's fault again (and it snowed in December).

Keep in mind, CGI's coding disaster was so epic, there actually is a flowchart indicating just how many errors in healthcare.gov there are.

So with CGI out of the picture, who will take over administration of the Obamacare portal? WaPo has the answer: "Federal health officials are preparing to sign a 12-month contract worth roughly $90 million, probably early next week, with a different company, Accenture, after concluding that CGI has not been effective enough in fixing the intricate computer system underpinning the federal Web site, HealthCare.gov, the individual said."

And this pearl: *"Because of time constraints, CMS is awarding the Accenture contract on a sole-source basis, according to the person familiar with the decision."*

So is that what kickbacks to Michelle Obama are called now?

We can be sure of one thing: this replacement will be an even more epic disaster and will ultimately result in over a billion taxpayer dollars being spent on a program that was doomed to failure from the beginnin regardless.



Accenture, which is one of the world’s largest consulting firms, has extensive experience with computer systems on the state level, and it built California’s new health insurance exchange. But it has not done substantial work on any federal health-care program.



There is a small chance Accenture won't be as much of a debacle as CGI. Keep in mind that the government is very familiar with the consulting company's skill se: after all the DOJ itself sued it!



The decision to turn to Accenture puts the project in the hands of a government contractor that has significant technological expertise but also signed a high-profile legal settlement with the Justice Department less than three years ago over its contracting practices.  *Accenture had one contracting dispute with the federal government that ended up in court, agreeing in September 2011 to pay $63 million to settle a Justice Department lawsuit alleging that it improperly benefitted from recommending specific hardware and software as part of government contracts, as well as inflating prices on contracts and distorting the federal bidding process. *



In retrospect who are we kidding: Accenture is certainly the best replacement to CGI...  if the intention is to keep bleeding the government's taxpayer funded coffers dry. And why not: if said coffers run out of money, the Fed can just print some moar. Which, as it turns out, is the endgame: as we reported earlier, Jeffrey Lacker explicitly said that the Fed is now looking at the impact on the economy from Obamacare... *or else QE5. *

Not to be confused with Q.E.D. Reported by Zero Hedge 5 hours ago.

New Broker Survey: Private Health Insurance Rates Set To Rise "Significantly" In 2014

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Get ready for higher healthcare costs. A new survey of health insurance brokers shows that commercial insurance rates are going to rise “significantly” in 2014. Reported by Forbes.com 4 hours ago.

New Survey: Private Health Insurance Rates Set To Rise "Significantly" In 2014

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Get ready for higher healthcare costs. A new survey of health insurance brokers shows that commercial insurance rates are going to rise ?significantly? in 2014. Reported by Forbes.com 5 hours ago.

U.S. to Dump HealthCare.gov Contractor CGI

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U.S. to Dump HealthCare.gov Contractor CGI Filed under: Health Care, U.S. Government, Internet, Barack Obama, Health Insurance

*U.S. Department of Health and Human Services/AP*

WASHINGTON -- The federal government will end its contract with CGI Federal for the error-plagued HealthCare.gov website, instead signing a contract with Accenture, The Washington Post reported Friday in its online edition.

U.S.-listed shares of CGI Group (GIB), the parent of CGI Federal, were down 3.5 percent at $31.36 in late trading on the New York Stock Exchange.

HealthCare.gov's technology failures in the weeks after its Oct. 1 launch created a political crisis for President Barack Obama, threatening the rollout of his signature health care law to consumers and emboldening its foes among Republican lawmakers to call for its delay.

CGI has been immersed in the effort to repair the site, which began working more smoothly for hundreds of thousands of consumers in December, allowing them to enroll in new health insurance plans offered under Obama's Affordable Care Act.

But the government's dissatisfaction over the website's early crash,
as well as aspects of the site that still do not work, are behind plans to sign a one-year contract with Accenture (ACN) instead, the Post report said, quoting a person familiar with the matter.

CGI's current contract for the work ends in late February, and the new 12-month agreement with Accenture is valued at about $90 million, the Post said.

Officials at Accenture and CGI weren't immediately available for comment.

The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the government agency overseeing the Obamacare rollout, wouldn't confirm or deny that it planned to end its contract with CGI.

"We are working with our contract partners to make a mutually agreed upon transition to ensure that HealthCare.gov continues to operate smoothly for consumers," a CMS spokeswoman said in an emailed statement.

More than 1 million people in 36 states have enrolled in health plans through HealthCare.gov, most of them in December. Another 1 million people enrolled through websites run by individual exchanges in the other 14 U.S. states.

-Washington breaking news team; additional reporting by Caroline Humer and Lewis Krauskopf in New York.
 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments Reported by DailyFinance 4 hours ago.

Aetna CEO Embraces Alternative Healthcare

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Aetna CEO Mark Bertolini surprised many Techonomists at our conference in Tucson last month with his frank talk about alternative therapies and the need for the current health system to be ?creatively destroyed.? Who would have thought the top man at one of the nation?s largest health insurance companies would be an advocate for craniosacral therapy and meditative chanting? Bertolini?s onstage interview with David Kirkpatrick focused mostly on his innovative approaches to apps and technology at the company. But in a later on-camera conversation, Bertolini described how his progressive personal health practices jibe with his company?s mission. Reported by Forbes.com 3 hours ago.

Obamacare Glitches Forced Woman To Postpone Cancer Surgery

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Red tape and echoes of Obamacare's early technological failures have created a potentially life-threatening crisis for a Connecticut woman forced to postpone surgery because her insurance coverage is in doubt.

K.C. Handler, 43, of New Canaan got troubling news from her doctor in early December: Tests revealed a growth on her left lung that might be cancer, and she needed an operation as soon as possible to have it removed. Handler had an appointment Thursday at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York. She couldn't keep it.

Anthem BlueCross BlueShield, a unit of the Indianapolis-based insurance giant WellPoint, has been unable to confirm her enrollment into a new policy she purchased with the help of an insurance broker through her state's insurance exchange, AccessHealth CT, in December. The delay in her treatment has been made worse by the bureaucratic nightmare Handler has endured in the long days since she signed up and paid her premium.

"Six weeks after I was told what the protocol should be and what I needed to have done, I still have not had surgery; and, you know, with cancer, every day counts. So I am beyond frustrated," Handler said. "I was very anxious that I was waiting this long, and then to have it postponed is devastating to me."

Handler's family history supports her urge to get treated in a hurry: "Both my parents had lung cancer. My father passed away, and my mother had the surgery that I'm having and survived because she had the surgery right away," she said.

Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center is holding open a time slot for the operation to remove the growth, and possibly more of her lung, on Jan. 16. But as of Friday morning, less than a week before that scheduled surgery, the hospital hadn't received confirmation that her procedure will be covered by insurance. And Handler doesn't want to risk a six-figure hospital bill by going through with the surgery while her coverage is uncertain.

More than 2 million people nationwide signed up for health insurance through the exchange marketplaces established by the Affordable Care Act for policies that took effect Jan. 1. Health insurers are scrambling to process a high volume of enrollments, especially those made close to the late-December deadline for January coverage in most states. Insurers are also still contending with faulty data about their would-be customers they got from federal and state exchanges. In the meantime, an untold number of people have fallen between the cracks.

Handler pins the blame on her insurance provider: "I fully, wholeheartedly believe the breakdown is at Anthem, because every single time I've called Anthem or the broker's called Anthem, we've gotten a different response," she said. Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center has encountered similar problems, Handler added.

Anthem spokeswoman Sarah Yeager declined to comment, citing federal patient privacy law. Anthem received about two-thirds of the roughly 34,000 enrollments in Connecticut and is working with customers to get problems resolved, the Connecticut Mirror reported Wednesday.

AccessHealth CT CEO Kevin Counihan told The Huffington Post he would personally work with Anthem and the state's insurance department to resolve Handler's problem and ensure that she gets her lung surgery as scheduled. Handler subsequently contacted Counihan, who telephoned David Fusco, president of Anthem BlueCross BlueShield in Connecticut, to press for a resolution, Handler said.

"I want to do everything that we can to facilitate this. I think she has to be able to keep that scheduled appointment," Counihan said. "Our No. 1 priority is to do everything we can to get people into the Anthem system, to get them ID cards and to get them treatment," he said.

"This could theoretically happen for a number of folks. We just don't know," Counihan said. "There are going to be issues. Hopefully, very few of them will be as dramatic as this one," he said. Problems with enrollments could persist for months and will vary by insurance company, he said. "All the carriers I know have their hearts in the right place, I think some are just maybe a little better prepared."

Enrollments into Anthem plans have been more problematic than those for other insurance companies in Connecticut, Counihan said. "We're having more issues with Anthem than anybody else," he said. "I think that they're kind of overwhelmed." Anthem is having similar problems in California, the Los Angeles Times reported Friday.

Connecticut exchange and insurance department officials met with Anthem executives Wednesday, and AccessHealth CT will email and telephone 25,000 Anthem customers Friday with information on how to pay their premiums and get temporary ID cards, Counihan said.

The trouble for Handler began even before her possible cancer diagnosis last month. In the fall, she got notice from Anthem that her previous policy wouldn't be renewed for 2014 because it didn't meet the Affordable Care Act's standards, Handler said. Anthem offered a replacement that was costlier and carried a higher deductible, which Handler didn't believe was acceptable.

Then, Handler applied to Anthem for a different policy, not available on Connecticut's exchange, that was subject to a review of her medical history -- a practice that became illegal as of Jan. 1. The company rejected her application and refused to provide an explanation, she said. Finally, Handler turned to an insurance broker for help navigating AccessHealth CT and selected a gold-level plan, the second-most generous variety, that was supposed to take effect at the beginning of the year.

Handler's new plan includes out-of-network coverage, which was vital to her because she wanted to have her surgery at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, which isn't in Anthem's network of providers. But she is displeased that the policy costs $518 a month, or $150 more than the plan that was canceled, which had similar benefits, Handler said.

But at least she had coverage -- or so she thought. Anthem provided Handler with an application number the company said would be sufficient to confirm her coverage to the hospital and get pre-authorization for the surgery. That wasn't good enough for Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, which also told her that Anthem contended her policy didn't provide out-of-network benefits. The hospital agreed to hold open her appointment for next week as long as possible, she said.

On Jan. 3, Handler was forced to give up a surgical appointment that had been scheduled for the following week. In the meantime, she has been told a lot of conflicting and incorrect information: for example, that she enrolled in a different policy than the one she actually chose and that Anthem had no record of her enrollment despite receiving her premium payment.

Handler received a policy identification number, but it was wrong. After getting the same number again from a different Anthem representative on Thursday, Handler provided it to Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center's financial department. As of Friday afternoon, the hospital still hadn't gotten word from Anthem.

"I'm not asking to have a cosmetic procedure, or I don't have a hernia that has to come out at some point, or I don't need an operation because I have a stress fracture," Handler said. "This is a major surgery and a necessary one, and one where timing is of the essence. So to be denied this kind of surgery because Anthem is running behind in getting their act together is outrageous." Reported by Huffington Post 3 hours ago.

Senate Republicans Have Introduced Their Own ObamaCare Security Bill

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In response to House Passes ObamaCare Security Bill 291-122 :

Yesterday, U.S. Sens. Mike Johanns (R-NE) and John Barrasso (R-WY) introduced legislation in the Senate that is similar to the bill that just passed the House.  



The Health Exchange Security and Transparency Act requires the Secretary of Health and Human Services to notify Americans within two business days if their personal information has been stolen due to a breach of security on the insurance exchanges included in the President’s health care law.



“Personal information is just that – personal and private,” Johanns said. “Americans are being forced to submit a great deal of sensitive data when they sign up for Obamacare, despite misgivings about the website and reports that it is susceptible to hackers. They have a right to know if their private information has been compromised. Our legislation provides that extra layer of protection.”
 
“After forcing so many people to buy health insurance through the government, the Administration has the highest level of responsibility to protect Americans’ personal health information,” Barrasso said. “When Americans fall victim to fraud and identity theft after using the health care exchange, they need to know immediately so they can protect themselves. If President Obama is really prepared to support good ideas about his health care law, he’ll embrace our bill immediately.”Senators Tom Coburn (R-OK), Thad Cochran (R-MS), Johnny Isakson (R-GA) and Jerry Moran (R-KS) have introduced additional legislation that requires the Obama Administration to disclose detailed information about the performance of the Obamacare health insurance Exchange website, HealthCare.Gov.



The Health Exchange Security and Transparency Act mirrors legislation introduced in the House of Representatives on January 6th by Representative Joe Pitts (R-PA).  The House of Representatives is expected to vote on this legislation on Friday, January 10th. 


I see no reason why Senate Democrats wouldn't join Republicans in voting for these common sense measures.   

 
 
 
  Reported by Breitbart 3 hours ago.

3 more health insurers extend payment deadlines

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Giving Illinois customers more leeway, three more health insurance carriers extended payment deadlines Friday for people who signed up in the December rush for coverage under President Barack Obama's health care law. Reported by ajc.com 4 hours ago.

"We Can Afford to Live Again" - 10 Americans Who Got Covered

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The very best people to describe what having new health insurance means -- what it feels like -- isn't me or any White House policy staffer. It's not even the President.

It's anyone who woke up on the morning of January 1st with the peace of mind, security, and quiet dignity that comes with taking your health care into your own hands. It's you. Or your neighbor, coworker, sister, or partner. We've been hearing from a lot of those people. The stories are powerful, and they keep coming in.

There's been a lot of media chatter about the rollout of the Affordable Care Act, but to understand what it really means to millions of Americans, read what these 10 had to say about how it's changed their lives and their families' - and if you want, join them and share a story of your own.

*JoAnn S., Florida*
"I haven't had insurance in years and my husband had a shared insurance junk-type policy. The day I signed up on Dec 10, I actually cried when the application went through. I got my first premium notice in the mail yesterday and was never so happy to see a bill before."

*Gayla W., New Hampshire*
"I lost my job last April. My partner and I both have pre-existing conditions so our only option was to COBRA my employer-provided plan -- at a cost of $1,676 a month. It was a good plan, but now we have a comparable plan through the ACA for $87 a month. I can't describe just how life changing this is for us. We can afford to live again."

*Stella R., California*
"For me this makes all the difference between having good health or not. I recently had a CAT scan (which I had to pay out of pocket for) because I was losing a lot of weight. It turns out that something was found and now I will need to see specialists and have further procedures done to make sure it is not cancer. My first appointment is on January 6 with a specialist. If I did not have health insurance, I would not be able to see a specialist. It would wipe out any savings I have and leave me medically at high risk."

*Brian F., Florida*
"I have not had Insurance for over 10 years. I had a pre-existing condition that made me uninsurable -- even though I was perfectly healthy. The last quote I got was in 2008: It was $1,750 a month with a $10,000 deductible. There was no way to ever afford that. ...This insurance changes everything for me. I do not have to worry anymore when I get a sore throat or an infected cut that I will have to go to the emergency room -- run up thousands in bills and then have to file bankruptcy. This is a great day. Thank you for the ACA. It is a life changer."

*Elina K., Colorado*
"My mom, who is 61 and works as a freelance Russian interpreter in Denver, went to the ER in November. She, her partner and myself are uninsured. Tests confirmed she had a major blockage and would need surgery. The mass appears to be cancerous and is pushing down on her internal organs. She has been in severe pain for weeks. ... Last night, around 3 a.m., she was admitted to the hospital and will be having surgery which she had to put off until her ACA policy kicked in at midnight. She now has expert care in a facility that in less than 24 hours changed her medication and treated her symptoms with noticeable results. When my stepdad came home tonight, exhausted after spending all day at the hospital, all he could say was 'thank god for Obamacare' ...It may well end up saving her life."

*Kendra S., Oklahoma*
"Just this past October, my husband was diagnosed with stage IV lung cancer. This devastating news was compounded by the fact we were not insured, my husband could no longer work, and the rapid medical procedures that occurred quickly ran up thousands of dollars that we don't have the money to pay. We quickly began researching the ACA, made an appointment with a local Community Care office and after many hours of research, to determine the coverage that we could afford. We are so greatful for the ACA. With the incredibly terrible stress that has befallen upon our family, at least now we know his medical expenses are covered."

*Rachelle L., Florida*
"My 28-year-old daughter was able to get healthcare coverage on her own for the first time through the ACA. She has a pre-existing condition, a genetic kidney disease that prevented her from getting coverage in 2009 at the age of 24 when she had to come off of our policy due to the age requirement. Her Cobra payments were $650 a month because she could not get more reasonable private coverage due to her pre-existing condition. In 2010, she was able to come back on our BCBS plan because of the ACA and was able to remain there until she finished school. We signed her up through the website and paid for her plan directly through Cigna on December 2: $298/month for a silver plan with a $0 deductible!!! She received her new insurance card on December 27th for coverage starting Jan 1!!!! We now have peace of mind that all of her medical needs will be covered at a reasonable cost."

*Curtis D., Washington*
"Our new coverage has begun. I am 62, and my wife is 55. We are both self employed and neither of us have had coverage for the past seven years. Thankfully we are both pretty healthy, but it feels good to know we can schedule a checkup and take care of any lingering issues we've been putting off. Thank you for making improvements to the health care of the country."

*Kelly M., Maryland*
"I have a new plan. I haven't had insurance for years. When I applied for insurance before, I was denied for pre-existing conditions, even for plans with huge deductibles. I signed up on the Maryland Healthcare Exchange back in October, and by January 1st, I was holding an insurance card from Carefirst Blueshield and have already had my first doctor's appointment. It works. I am proof. And I'm so grateful that I can take care of myself with dignity without having to go to the ER whenever I'm sick or have to spend half of my paycheck at an urgent care center. I can do all of the preventative measures that I have been putting off, and get back on the road to health. It's a good feeling."

*Kate S., Connecticut*
"This healthcare reform is a life changing event for my family. My husband and I have had to carry our own insurance for the past 25 years and, with the family insurance we had, we were paying $2500.00 a MONTH for coverage, which we could not afford. Once the children graduated from high school, we had to take them off our policy because we could not afford it anymore. ... We have never been high wage earners and the costs of our insurance have for years been an impossible burden. Now that the system is fair and goes by our income, we finally may be able to set money aside and save for our future."

Simply put, for millions of Americans: Health reform matters. Reported by Huffington Post 3 hours ago.

Oregon Governor Walks Out Of Interview Over Questions About State's Health Care Website

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KATU News' exclusive one-on-one interview with Democratic Gov. John Kitzhaber ended abruptly Thursday when the station's interviewer asked about problems with the Cover Oregon website.

Kitzhaber's staff walked him out only four minutes after the interview began when the governor was asked whether he knew about problems with Carolyn Lawson, the chief information officer for Cover Oregon.

Lawson was responsible for the technical development of the Cover Oregon website, a state-run online marketplace where Oregonians could find and purchase health insurance. She resigned for “personal reasons” in November. Rocky King, the exchange's executive director, submitted his resignation last week.

Kitzhaber's staff suggested the station call Cover Oregon’s public-relations staff.

KATU has reported that an email sent in December 2012 from state Rep. Patrick Sheehan (R) to the governor's legislative director, warned of problems with Lawson. Sheehan, a member of the legislative oversight committee for Cover Oregon, accused Lawson in the email of presenting fraudulent testimony in a legislative hearing and speculated about her ties to the company building the website. Kitzhaber denied having seen the email, even though his legislative director responded to it, and claimed he didn’t know of problems with Lawson until late last year.

Kitzhaber was open to discussing Cover Oregon’s new enrollment numbers, though he acknowledged that the exchange’s website is unlikely to work for the foreseeable future. It was scheduled to go live Oct. 1, but still hasn't enrolled a single person online.

The governor claimed the exchange is actually beating expectations. “We figured that this would be a two-year process,” Kitzhaber said. “What we didn’t anticipate was actually this many [people enrolling]."

Oregon was the recipient of $1.9 billion in federal grants to improve the process it uses to provide health care to low-income individuals through the state's Medicaid program. According to Cover Oregon, about 170,000 people signed up to begin health insurance in January through Cover Oregon or the Oregon Health Plan. But because of the website's problems, the state had to hire hundreds of staff to process health insurance applications by paper and through call centers.

At a news conference this week in Portland, Kitzhaber said the state has hired a firm to conduct an independent review of what went wrong with the website.


Starting press conference on @CoverOregon and health insurance coverage across state. pic.twitter.com/RRCNJ47xOf

— John Kitzhaber (@GovKitz) January 9, 2014


170,000 Oregonians starting year w/ health care coverage a good reminder that we won't let barriers become blockades: http://t.co/52CBnn0sUL

— John Kitzhaber (@GovKitz) January 8, 2014

State officials said Thursday that a technology team has until March to fix the website. At that point, the state will consider other options.

Kitzhaber is running for reelection this year. Reported by Huffington Post 2 hours ago.

Health Republic Insurance of New York Extends Deadline for Initial Payment

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NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Health Republic Insurance of New York, a new not-for-profit Consumer Operated and Oriented Plan (CO-OP) offering health insurance coverage in New York State, today announced that it has adjusted the payment deadline to January 15, 2014 for customers who enrolled before December 25, 2013 for health insurance coverage with a January 1, 2014 effective date. Debra Friedman, President and CEO of Health Republic Insurance of New York, said, “Health Republic Insurance of New Reported by Business Wire 2 hours ago.

Dem senator under fire for pressuring agency to change insurance cancellation stats

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Democratic Colorado Sen. Mark Udall is under fire following reports that his staff pressured the Colorado Division of Insurance to walk back its claims that 250,000 people in the state had their health insurance canceled due to ObamaCare. Reported by FOXNews.com 2 hours ago.

HUFFPOST HILL - Chris Christie's Fleece Conspicuously Absent: What Did It Know?

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Utah's conservative establishment is upset that Washington will recognize its 1,300 gay marriages, because if there's one thing Utah's conservatives never do, it's meddle in another state's LGBT politics. Eric Cantor doesn't want to focus on unemployment because it's a bummer -- though his proposal to send Upworthy links to the jobless doesn't seem like a suitable alternative. And a new poll is so devastating for Chris Christie that he might finally know what it feels like to be all those people he publicly berates. This is HUFFPOST HILL for Friday, January 10th, 2014:

*President Darrell Issa could investigate the West Wing so easily*: "House Oversight Committee Chairman Darrell Issa is headed to New Hampshire, the destination for top presidential contenders and long shots alike leading up to 2016′s presidential season. Issa will speak at the Lincoln Day Dinner for the Concord Republican City and Merrimack County committees on February 7, U-T San Diego reported." [Daily Caller]

*EARL BLUMENAUER IS SUCH A HIPSTER* - How he has enough time off from making fruitcakes to even watch a TV show, we don't know. Lucia Graves: "Rep. Earl Blumenauer has never dabbled in satirical television, but if he did, his show would be Portlandia. At a blogger roundtable on Capitol Hill, he confided to National Journal that the show has rapidly grown on him. '*I watched the first three episodes before I realized it was a comedy and not a documentary*,' he said in an aside. 'I mean, these are my people.'" [National Journal]

*HOUSE GOP WOULD LIKE TO FOCUS ON SOMETHING MORE POSITIVE THAN UNEMPLOYMENT* - Even if the U.S. Senate were able to pass a bill renewing long-term unemployment insurance, it would face uncertain prospects in the GOP-controlled House of Representatives. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) underscored that Friday when he said Republicans would rather focus onemployment than unemployment. Rep. Steny Hoyer (D-Md.), a member of Democratic leadership in the House, had pleaded with Cantor for a reauthorization of long-term unemployment insurance, which expired in December for more than a million Americans. "*We have been trying to focus this Congress on getting back to a more optimistic view of what the economy can do," Cantor said in response. "It is about jobs. It is about growth. Our focus is about wanting people to get a job. It's on employment, not unemployment*." [HuffPost]

*NOT EVEN HOUSE DEMS LIKE WHAT HARRY REID'S DOING ON UNEMPLOYMENT* - Sam Stein: "Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) is putting together a bill to extend unemployment insurance, but the measure is already facing skepticism from Senate Republicans and stern opposition from Republicans in the House. Now, it appears, House Democrats aren’t entirely on board. *From leadership on down, House Democratic lawmakers said Friday that they had reservations with the policies being proposed by Reid and Senate Democrats to cover the cost of the 11-month unemployment insurance extension*. When asked if he was supportive of provisions in the Senate Democratic offer that would use cuts elsewhere to offset cost, House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) said no. In particular, the Hoyer said he was disturbed that the party would extend sequestration cuts to mandatory spending as a means of finding savings. 'I’m not happy with the sequester at all, as you know,' Hoyer said. 'I’m a big opponent of the sequester. I think the sequester is a mindless way to get to fiscal discipline… The premise that the sequester is a policy on which we ought to fund things I think is not a good one, whether it is 2024 or 2014.'" [HuffPost]

*DAILY DELANEY DOWNER* - Without the federal unemployment benefits, workers are eligible for only 26 weeks or fewer of state benefits. The Labor Department reported Friday that in December, the average unemployed person had been out of work for more than 37 weeks. Mary Murphy of St. Charles, Mo. said she's been out of work since losing her medical billing job in a mass layoff last April. She said her husband is still working and her kids are grown, but she's still got bills to pay and the job search has been difficult. *"I have looked for everything," said Murphy, 56. "I have looked in the medical field. I have applied at restaurants. I have applied at funeral homes. Reception jobs."* She said she resented that some members of Congress think the benefits are a disincentive to work, but even more that lawmakers haven't worked urgently to address the issue. "They knew it was coming and I think they should've have worked on it before they went home for the holidays," she said. You'd think. [HuffPost]

Does somebody keep forwarding you this newsletter? Get your own copy. It's free! Sign up here. Send tips/stories/photos/events/fundraisers/job movement/juicy miscellanea to huffposthill@huffingtonpost.com. Follow us on Twitter - @HuffPostHill

*BRUTAL NEW POLL FOR CHRIS CHRISTIE* - Brutal. Really brutal. Like, he should go sit on a stool, have Mickey tell him to hold his punches more, spit in a bucket and have someone cut open his wounds brutal. Rasmussen: "*Most New Jersey voters think it’s likely Governor Chris Christie was aware of the Fort Lee traffic lane closures before they happened and should resign if this is proven*...A new Rasmussen Reports telephone survey finds that 54% of Likely New Jersey Voters believe it’s at least somewhat likely that Christie was aware that traffic lanes onto the George Washington Bridge were being closed as retaliation for the mayor of Fort Lee’s refusal to support the governor’s reelection. Thirty-six percent (36%) think it’s unlikely Christie was aware beforehand. This includes 30% who say it’s Very Likely he was aware and 17% who say it’s Not At All Likely...*Fifty-six percent (56%) of New Jersey voters believe Christie should resign if it is proven that he approved of retaliation against an elected official who refused to support him*. Just 29% disagree, while 15% are not sure. Not surprisingly, 75% of Democrats think it’s likely Christie, a Republican, was aware of the Fort Lee retaliation beforehand, but just 34% of GOP voters and 46% of unaffiliated voters agree." [Rasmussen]

*DARRELL ISSA IS NOT BEING VERY HELPFUL* - Jen Bendery: "House Republicans are kicking off the year with more votes on Obamacare bills, this time pushing a measure they say will help protect people from security breaches of HealthCare.gov. But there is some irony in their latest whack at the Affordable Care Act.The GOP bill set for a Friday vote would require the Health and Human Services secretary to tell people if their private data was compromised in a security breach, but, as laid out in a Democratic committee memo issued Thursday, HHS is already required to do that, and there haven't been any successful breaches thus far anyway. *Not only does the bill target a nonexistent problem, but the most credible threat to the website's security may be the loudest critic of the website's security: Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee*. HealthCare.gov could clearly be compromised if, say, sensitive documents were leaked to the public that included software code or other technical information that provided hackers with a road map for vulnerabilities in the site. Such documents currently reside with Issa, who obtained them last month -- unredacted -- after subpoenaing them from MITRE Corporation, the federal contractor overseeing security of the website." [HuffPost]

*WHITE HOUSE TIRED OF IRAN HAWKS NOT OWNING UP TO IT* - The president wants Bob Menendez to either show up at the Security Council with a vial of anthrax... or get off the pot. Grim: "The White House on Thursday challenged a group of senators to admit they are working to push the country toward war with Iran, upping the tension between the administration and Senate advocates of tough new sanctions amid nuclear negotiations. '*If certain members of Congress want the United States to take military action, they should be up front with the American public and say so,' Bernadette Meehan, National Security Council spokeswoman, said in a statement*. 'Otherwise, it’s not clear why any member of Congress would support a bill that possibly closes the door on diplomacy and makes it more likely that the United States will have to choose between military options or allowing Iran’s nuclear program to proceed.' The 'certain members' the White House is referring to are led by Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Menendez (D-N.J.), who is pushing legislation, backed by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, that would tighten sanctions on the Iranian regime despite the ongoing negotiations. Advocates of a peace deal with Iran warn that toughening sanctions now strengthens the hand of hard-liners in Iran who can argue the U.S. is not negotiating in good faith." [HuffPost]

*RNC POLLING ON 2016 CANDIDATES* - Herman Cain is among the politicians included in the Republican National Committee's polling, meaning he has surely found a way to un-harass all those people? Sabrina Siddiqui: "The Republican National Committee has begun polling potential nominees for president in 2016, telling its supporters, 'The battle for the White House has already begun.' The group sent an email Friday to a select number of its subscribers and asked them to pick their top three choices among a vast array of possible 2016 presidential candidates. *While the field of 32 Republican lawmakers mostly included the usual suspects, such as New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Sens. Rand Paul (Ky.), Marco Rubio (Fla.) and Ted Cruz (Texas), it also presents a few unusual options, such as former Florida Rep. Allen West*. A handful of previous GOP presidential candidates also made the cut: Texas Gov. Rick Perry, former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, former Texas Rep. Ron Paul, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, and Herman Cain. After people take the survey, an email from RNC Chairman Reince Priebus asks for donations in order to 'secure Republican victories" and help build the group's ground game.'" [HuffPost]

*But there are so many un-shoo'ed children who remain on his lawn*: "In the clearest indication yet that Sen. John McCain is gearing up to run for a sixth term, the Arizona Republican is holding a Washington fundraiser at the end of January. McCain is not up for reelection until 2016, but appears to be kicking things off early. An invitation from 'Friends of John McCain' bills a Jan. 28 fundraiser as the senator’s 'first DC re-elect reception' at Johnny’s Half Shell in Washington. Requested donations range between $1,000 and $5,200.' [BuzzFeed]

*FEDERAL GOVERNMENT TO RECOGNIZE UTAH'S SAME-SEX MARRIAGES* - Not to get bogged down in the legal technicalities, but this means President Obama now has one year to visit Crate and Barrel's registry website and purchase 1,300 throw pillows. Ryan Reilly: "The federal government will recognize the same-sex marriages that were performed in Utah during a brief window, despite the state government's decision not to do the same, Attorney General Eric Holder announced Friday. A federal judge in Utah struck down the state's ban on same-sex marriages on Dec. 20, and thousands of couples rushed to get their marriage licenses. But the state of Utah is appealing the decision, and the Supreme Court earlier this week put the ruling on hold until the appeals court has ruled. The Supreme Court's decision halted the state from performing any additional same-sex unions, but it didn't address the status of those same-sex marriages performed in the interim period. Holder's announcement Friday clarified that those couples will, for now, be afforded the federal benefits married couples receive. *'I am confirming today that, for purposes of federal law, these marriages will be recognized as lawful and considered eligible for all relevant federal benefits on the same terms as other same-sex marriages,' Holder said* in a video released Friday afternoon." [HuffPost]

*THE HEALTHCARE PR BLITZ THAT WASN'T* - Instead all we really got was that Healthcare.gov lady. Emily Swanson and Mark Blumenthal: "It looked like the 'health insurance ad wars' were about to heat up. *But the long-anticipated ad campaign to sell Obamacare has not started yet, according to a series of polls conducted by The Huffington Post and YouGov*. In mid-December, the Wall Street Journal reported that there would be a 'coming blitz of insurance ads' aimed at Americans now eligible to purchase health insurance through the new exchanges created as part of the health reform law. The new slew of ads would be a 'step up from an already heated-up marketing push' already underway. So far, however, few people seem to have been subjected to the PR blitz. The Huffington Post and YouGov conducted a series of three weekly polls on Dec. 18-19,Dec. 27-28 and Jan. 2-3. The data from those surveys, combined with ad tracking information provided by Kantar Media, showed little change in the number of health care ads Americans recalled seeing towards the end of 2013. Each survey found that most Americans remembered seeing ads for health insurance, and many remembered seeing those favoring or opposing the new health care law during the previous month. But the percentage of people who reported seeing each type of ad remained stable over the course of the three surveys." [HuffPost]

*BECAUSE YOU'VE READ THIS FAR* - Here a pig on a treadmill.

*CONGRESSMAN BEMOANS FREE LUNCHES, EATS THEM CONSTANTLY* - If a turkey sandwich and a bag of Baked Lays isn't the American dream, we don't know what is. Ashley Alman: "*Weeks after Rep. Jack Kingston (R-Ga.) made headlines for suggesting low-income students sweep cafeteria floors to learn there's 'no such thing as free lunch,' Savannah TV station WSAV 3 looked at the 'free lunches' Kingston himself has received as a member of Congress*. There's no precise way to count the number of lunches Kingston has enjoyed on taxpayer dollars, but the station took a look at expense reports and disclosures to uncover staggering figures from the congressman's three years in office. According to the station's investigation, Kingston and his staff have expensed $4,182 worth of "meals for business purposes," and recorded $4,289.33 in free meals from third-party interest groups, including the Congressional Institute and the Georgia Bankers Association. As a member of the House Appropriations Committee, Kingston has traveled to four continents, racking up $24,313 in per diem allowances. While the allowances were allotted for more than just lunch money, midday meals were included." [HuffPost]

*COMFORT FOOD*

- American Girl dolls based on the cast of "Girls." [http://bzfd.it/1eKwrbp]

- Calm, cool and collected bro takes selfie after his plane crashes off of Hawaii. [http://bit.ly/1bZHMBh]

- Parkour in Marrakech. [http://bit.ly/KJJpwO]

- Finger tutting -- basically elaborately choreographed finger dancing -- is now a thing. [http://bit.ly/1l1bTgV]

- Now you too can be like the Son of God by filling up your pool with non-Newtonian fluids and walking on [DEL: water :DEL] water-looking liquids. [http://bit.ly/1eKOCxS]

- An iPhone case that is pressure-sensitive, meaning you can also touch the back of your phone, freeing up viewing space. [http://huff.to/1gV2Yxz]

*TWITTERAMA*

@pourmecoffee: On this day in 1776 Thomas Paine published "Common Sense" but got depressed reading the comments. "First!""Brits rule, yanks drool.

@dceiver: Getting some raw metrics about that GWB traffic study guys. According to the data I'm reading here, there were a total of zero fucks given

@brianbeutler: Pizza + Benghazi = Pizzazi, which would actually be an okay name for a pizzeria.

*Got something to add? Send tips/quotes/stories/photos/events/fundraisers/job movement/juicy miscellanea to Eliot Nelson (eliot@huffingtonpost.com), Ryan Grim (ryan@huffingtonpost.com) or Arthur Delaney (arthur@huffingtonpost.com). Follow us on Twitter @HuffPostHill (twitter.com/HuffPostHill). Sign up here: http://huff.to/an2k2e* Reported by Huffington Post 2 hours ago.

Humana: Obamacare Exchange Enrollment 'More Adverse Than Previously Expected'

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On January 9, health insurance bellwether Humana formally announced something that industry observers have long suspected: that healthy and young people don’t think Obamacare’s insurance plans are a good deal for them. Those people, Humana indicated, are choosing to stay on their previous health plans, where allowed, instead of participating in the Obamacare exchanges. As a result, Humana “now expects the risk mix of members enrolling through the health insurance exchanges to be more adverse than previously expected.” The question now is: will taxpayers have to pick up the bill for the Obama administration’s last-minute changes to the law? Reported by Forbes.com 2 hours ago.

HUFFPOLLSTER: 'Liberal' Democrats Now Outnumber 'Moderates'

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The term "liberal" has grown steadily more acceptable among Democrats over the past 10 years. Two political scientists offer a theory for why so many Americans claim to be "independent" when they vote like partisans. And a sudden blitz of ACA insurance ads doesn't materialize. This is HuffPollster for Friday, January 10, 2014.

*GALLUP: LIBERAL SELF-ID 'EDGES UP'* - "Americans continue to be more likely to identify as conservatives (38%) than as liberals (23%). But the conservative advantage is down to 15 percentage points as *liberal identification edged up to its highest level since Gallup began regularly measuring ideology in the current format in 1992*. The figures are based on combined data from 13 separate Gallup polls, including interviews with more than 18,000 Americans, conducted in 2013. When Gallup began asking about ideological identification in all its polls in 1992, an average 17% of Americans said they were liberal. That dipped to 16% in 1995 and 1996, but has gradually increased, exceeding 20% each year since 2005." [Gallup]*Recent change is slight and potentially suspect...* - Note that enormous sample sizes involved -- 18,871 interviews in 2013 alone -- make almost any change statistically significant. Nonetheless, the change in liberal identification since 2011 is still relatively small (+2 percentage points), and it *coincides with key changes in late 2012 and early 2013 in the way Gallup measures and weights by racial subgroups*. These changes reduced the "house effects" apparent in Gallup's measurement of President Obama's approval rating in 2011 and 2012. [see HuffPost]

*...but long term shift among Democrats is substantial* - Scott Clement: "While the one-year shift is small (and not duplicated in Washington Post-ABC News polls, which find 22 percent liberal in 2012 and 2013), one finding is crystal clear: More Democrats are identifying as liberals, and today they outnumber moderates within the party. Indeed, *43 percent of Democrats called themselves liberal in 2013, compared with just 32 percent who said this 10 years ago*. The shift toward liberal identity has come about equally from moderates (minus five points since 2003) and conservatives (minus six points). By contrast, the trend line for liberal identity among Republicans and independents is flat." [WaPost]*MAKE A GOOD IMPRESSION? SAY YOU'RE AN 'INDEPENDENT'* - Yanna Krupnikov and Samara Klar offer an explanation for why Americans are more likely to describe themselves as independent while still behaving like partisans: "When people see politics in the news and entertainment media, they see partisan gridlock and disagreement. *Partisans are portrayed as uncooperative, uncompromising and angry. This perception of partisans leads ordinary people to be embarrassed about admitting – including to pollsters – that they identify with a political party*. Instead, people have come to believe that they will make a better impression if they say they are independent. In one of our first studies on the topic, we randomly assigned survey respondents to two groups. We instructed the first group to answer the question “what is your partisanship?” in a way that they believed would make the most positive impression on another person. We instructed the second group to answer the very same question in a way that they believed would make the most negative impression on another person.
The results were striking: when asked to make a 'positive impression' nearly 60 percent more people reported that they were independents, as compared to those who were asked to make a negative impression." [WaPost's Monkey Cage]

*MOST AMERICANS NOT SEEING A BLITZ OF HEALTH INSURANCE ADS* - With Emily Swanson: "The long-anticipated ad campaign to sell Obamacare has not started yet, according to a series of polls conducted by The Huffington Post and YouGov….The Huffington Post and YouGov conducted a series of three weekly polls on Dec. 18-19,Dec. 27-28 and Jan. 2-3. The data from those surveys, combined with ad tracking information provided by Kantar Media, showed little change in the number of health care ads Americans recalled seeing towards the end of 2013. Each survey found that most Americans remembered seeing ads for health insurance, and many remembered seeing those favoring or opposing the new health care law during the previous month. *But the percentage of people who reported seeing each type of ad remained stable over the course of the three surveys.*" [HuffPost]

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

*FRIDAY'S 'OUTLIERS'* - Links to the best of news at the intersection of polling, politics and political data that we missed during our holiday break (starting with a few new items from today:

-An overnight automated poll finds Chris Christie's favorable rating in New Jersey dropping to 55 percent from 63 percent last October. [Rasmussen Reports]

-Christie's press conference on Thursday did little to dampen criticism of him on Twitter. [Pew Research]

-Gallup finds no change in attitudes on the Affordable Care Act since November; 48 percent say it will make "the healthcare situation" worse, 35 percent say it will make it better. [Gallup]

-53 percent of Americans rank cigarette smoking as a serious public health problem. [Pew Research]

-Cliff Young argues that Obama's second-term decline isn't uniquely due to the ACA. [Ipsos]

-The RNC uses fundraising emails to ask about potential 2016 GOP nominees. [HuffPost]

-YouGov's tracking shows plunge in consumer perceptions of Target since data breach. [@AshleyLutz] Reported by Huffington Post 1 hour ago.

Friday Talking Points -- Bullygate

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Welcome back to our regular Friday roundup of politics! We've been on hiatus for quite a while now, since we took two weeks off to dole out our year-end awards, and then last week we were just sick as a dog, which precluded all rational thought (much less trying to type coherently). So we've got a lot to cover this week, and our apologies in advance for all the stuff we're bound to have missed in the past month.

Of course, the big news at the end of this week was New Jersey's Chris Christie trying to navigate a bridge over some very troubled waters, but our guess is that this story is going to stick around for some time to come, so we're only going to mention it in passing (although we did write yesterday of our disappointment that we seem to have returned to labeling political scandals with the "-gate" suffix). Is Christie now no longer a viable candidate for the 2016 Republican nomination? Is "Bullygate" more appropriate than "Bridgegate"? Well, we'll have plenty of time to contemplate all of that in the weeks to come, that's for sure.

Liz Cheney dropped out of the Wyoming Senate race, which may be a sign of trouble for Tea Party candidates everywhere, or it may just be a sign that Wyoming Republicans don't take kindly to carpetbaggers who don't even know how to properly get a fishing license. Either way, we're relieved we won't have to listen to Liz expounding on all sorts of subjects about which she knows very little, in the upcoming months.

The mainstream media, in the past few weeks, have proved once again that "the weather" is the ultimate shiny, shiny object which the kittenish news anchors cannot resist, no matter how normal the story truly is. I mean, how many times can America realistically believe that "It Gets Cold In Winter" is some sort of breaking story? Look for the groundbreaking followup series "It Gets Hot In Summer," which will run in six months' time, just like clockwork.

Sigh.

The most fascinating news story was the opening of the legal recreational marijuana marketplace in Colorado, of course. This story wasn't fascinating just because it actually was newsworthy, but also for the secondary effect that Serious People in Washington are now forced to stop with the endless stoner jokes and actually address the failed policy of the War On Weed.

This led to some monumental hypocrisy, it should be noted, from such luminaries from the Washington cocktail party circuit (irony intended) as David Brooks, Ruth Marcus, and Joe Scarborough. Here is their argument, in a nutshell:



I smoked a little pot when I was young and reckless.

I did not get arrested.

We should keep on arresting people for smoking pot today. Because.



There's a longer and funnier translation ("condensed for maximum stoner hilarity") of the Brooks and Marcus columns available, if this was too brief, I should add.

At heart, this is just a continuing chapter in the endless story of "Why Baby Boomers Are So Special, Because Of Their Specialness," really. You see, when they were young, smoking pot was a lark, really. Now that they are parents with children, smoking pot is immoral and evil and must be stamped out. As long as suburban children don't go to jail, the way that inner-city children do for the same crime.

Part of this is intellectual inertia. The War On (Some) Drugs has been going on for so long now, and has been used so effectively against Democrats and liberals (painted as "soft on crime!"), that even now -- with legal weed being sold in an American state -- the knee-jerk reaction is still the most prevalent. This is the same type of idiocy that led to banning needle exchanges during the height of the AIDS crisis -- because it "would send the wrong message to kids." Sending the message "letting people needlessly die is good because it gives me political cover" was such a better message for the kiddies, after all.

In any case, there was one prominent pundit who did get it right. E. J. Dionne of the Washington Post summed up the reality of the situation perfectly, because he took the time to look at some hard data which unequivocally shows the racial disparity of how drug laws (marijuana laws in particular) are enforced in the real world. Which led him to the conclusion that the "lock them all up" philosophy has just failed. If you'd like to read something a lot more reasonable than the hypocrisy of Brooks and Marcus, this is the column you should read.

Two final thoughts, on marijuana. The first is an interesting historical footnote pointed out in the Huffington Post -- Denver was where the first federal arrest for marijuana took place, back in 1937. And the last is yet another poll showing that Americans' attitudes are changing much faster than the politicians, on this particular issue. If the people lead, the leaders must eventually follow, one hopes.

We end this week with a few quick items on religion. Seems Oklahoma is going to have to decide whether to allow a Satanist statue on their statehouse grounds, after allowing a Ten Commandments monument to be erected. A drawing of the proposed statue was released, which has to be seen to be fully appreciated. And the first-ever Pastafarian officeholder was sworn in to the town council seat he won in Pomfret, New York -- while wearing a colander as a mark of his faith. Worshippers of the Flying Spaghetti Monster should feel proud indeed!

Last and indeed (literally) least, we have a fun map for anyone who finds themselves guilty of too much state pride. This is a map of all the United States, annotated with what each state is "worst" or "least" in. Enjoy!

 

We have an *Honorable Mention* to hand out, for a deputy whip in the House, Representative Diana DeGette, who hails from Colorado. She sent an email out which is easily the best commentary so far on the entire subject: "It was a big week in Colorado. Across the state, recreational marijuana was sold for the first time. And guess what? The world didn't end."

Well done, Representative DeGette! We couldn't have put it better if we had tried.

But a big milestone happened which must be acknowledged, as Janet Yellen became the first woman ever to head the Federal Reserve. Her Senate confirmation was the final step for her on her path to becoming one of the most powerful women in all American political history, in fact. More independent than any cabinet secretary, and more powerful than any other individual woman who has served in any of the three branches of government, Yellen begins her term with the economy in much better shape than it has been in years.

While she has yet to put her real stamp on the Fed, her easy confirmation in the Senate and her rise to power have been impressive indeed -- more than enough to qualify her for the *Most Impressive Democrat Of The Week* this week.

[Congratulate Federal Reserve Board Chairman Janet Yellen on the Federal Reserve Board contact page, to let her know you appreciate her efforts.]

 

This story needs no embellishment or further explanation. Here is the news report:



Kentucky state Rep. Leslie Combs accidentally fired her gun in the state Capitol building's annex office on Tuesday night, according to a report from WHAS11.

Combs says she was attempting to unload her handgun when it went off, sending a bullet ricocheting off the floor and into a nearby bookcase. Though fellow Rep. Jeff Greer was in the room, no one was hurt.

Following the incident, Combs told reporters she'd put the gun away. "I don't want to use it anymore," she said.

Combs went on to explain that she thought the gun was "totally clear" but didn't seem too concerned about the mix-up.

"I am a gun owner. It happens," Combs said.



For reckless endangerment and statehouse gunplay, Representative Leslie Combs is our *Most Disappointing Democrat Of The Week*. There's just nothing else to say about this one, really, unless you'd like to make some sort of "longshot" joke.

[Contact Kentucky state representative Leslie Combs on her official contact page, to let her know what you think of her actions.]

 

*Volume 286* (1/10/13)

Before we begin offering up our own suggested talking points, for Democrats everywhere to contemplate, we have to point out an extraordinary article in The Atlantic. The article is an extended interview piece with none other than Frank Luntz, who is probably the best creator of talking points over on the Republican side of things. Calling the estate tax the "death tax" was his brainchild, just to give one example of his wordsmithing abilities (and how influential his advice is among Republicans).

Luntz, it seems, is depressed these days. Not only did Republicans lose big in the 2012 elections, but it seems that the American public just isn't buying his particular brand of dog food any more. Which is making Luntz very sad. Don't believe me? Try this on for size:



The crisis began, he says, after last year's presidential election, when Luntz became profoundly depressed. For more than a month, he tried to stay occupied, but nothing could keep his attention. Finally, six weeks after the election, during a meeting of his consulting company in Las Vegas, he fell apart. Leaving his employees behind, he flew back to his mansion in Los Angeles, where he stayed for three weeks, barely going outside or talking to anyone.

"I just gave up," Luntz says.

. . .

It was what Luntz heard from the American people that scared him. They were contentious and argumentative. They didn't listen to each other as they once had. They weren't interested in hearing other points of view. They were divided one against the other, black vs. white, men vs. women, young vs. old, rich vs. poor. "They want to impose their opinions rather than express them," is the way he describes what he saw. "And they're picking up their leads from here in Washington." Haven't political disagreements always been contentious, I ask? "Not like this," he says. "Not like this."

Luntz knew that he, a maker of political messages and attacks and advertisements, had helped create this negativity, and it haunted him. But it was Obama he principally blamed. The people in his focus groups, he perceived, had absorbed the president's message of class divisions, haves and have-nots, of redistribution. It was a message Luntz believed to be profoundly wrong, but one so powerful he had no slogans, no arguments with which to beat it back. In reelecting Obama, the people had spoken. And the people, he believed, were wrong. Having spent his career telling politicians what the people wanted to hear, Luntz now believed the people had been corrupted and were beyond saving. Obama had ruined the electorate, set them at each other's throats, and there was no way to turn back.



For everyone interested in the continuing battle over how to "frame" things politically, I strongly recommend this article. If only for the schadenfreude of seeing Frank Luntz bemoan how little people are buying into his spin these days. It truly is an extraordinary read, folks.

 *   I am not a bully*Well, bully for him (as Teddy Roosevelt might have said).

"Chris Christie tried to rewrite history in his recent press conference, and wants us all to believe that he is, quote, not a bully, unquote. That's really funny, since he has spent his entire political career building up the image of himself as a bully. Check out just about any of the videos which his own political team posts online of him dealing with his own constituents. He yells at them, he belittles their opinions, and generally throws his considerable weight around in what can only be called true bullyboy style. It's laughable to hear Christie now try to convince us that he isn't a bully, because there are so many videos out there that prove him to be flat-out lying about that. They're not even all that hard to find."

 *   How can you study traffic when it stops?*This is a key question that I haven't heard anyone ask yet. Of course, someone might have asked it during his press conference -- I didn't watch the entire two-hour spectacle, I have to admit.

"The really hilarious thing at the heart of the Christie bridge scandal is that somehow we were all supposed to believe that the entire exercise was to perform some sort of 'traffic study.' This is just flat-out ridiculous on the face of it. How can you study traffic by bringing it to a halt? What can be studied by closing two lanes out of three? What possible data can be collected by creating a traffic jam instead of watching the normal flow of traffic across a bridge? I would like to hear someone ask both Chris Christie and everyone else involved with this bit of political payback how any sane person could believe that bringing traffic to a screeching halt is a valid way to study traffic."

 *   Nine million and counting*This is a crucial talking point which all Democrats really need to practice, because it puts things into much better perspective than the media is right now.

"The number of people who have gained health insurance that they otherwise might not have been able to acquire has now reached nine million Americans, and it continues to grow. In the first three months of the Obamacare website exchanges, over two million people signed up for private insurance policies. But don't forget about the others who have been helped by Obamacare as well -- including three million young people who have been able to stay on their parents' health insurance. This wouldn't have been possible without the Affordable Care Act, so you've got to count them, too. And then there are the four million people who have gone to the website to find out that they are now eligible for Medicaid. Again -- this would not have happened without the Affordable Care Act. Through the end of 2013, over nine million people have benefited directly by gaining health coverage. And that number is only going to grow bigger and bigger, over time."

 *   Hospitals not overwhelmed*Yet again, the doomsayers were wrong.

"The opponents of Obamacare trotted out a new doom-and-gloom prediction, just before the new year began and people's new health insurance coverage started to kick in. Hospitals and doctors' offices, we were told, would be swamped and just overwhelmed with all the new patient load. People would be standing in long lines, beginning the first of the year, and there would be a massive doctor shortage because there were so many newly-insured people. Also, hordes of people who thought they had coverage would be turned away because the insurance companies had no record of them. Neither of these dire threats materialized, though. Here we are in the second week of Obamacare coverage, and I haven't heard a single story on the news of a hospital with lines out the door. Or masses of people left in limbo without coverage. It seems the system was able to handle the influx without muss or fuss. You can chalk this up on the increasingly-long list of apocalyptic outcomes from Obamacare which have just not come to pass. Maybe the media could keep this in mind, the next time the doomsayers come up with their next nightmare scenario, what do you think?"

 *   The War on the War On Poverty*It's bootstrappin' time!

"I see that Republicans have launched a new war on poverty. They have just noticed that there are poor people in America, it seems, and they've got all kinds of ideas how to solve the problem. These ideas all have one thing in common: they make life tougher on the poor. So the GOP is going to fight poverty by making life harder and harder on the poor, in the hopes that they all will decide not to be poor anymore. Or something. It's tough to even try to understand their logic. They're going to fight poverty by cutting food stamps and by refusing to extend unemployment insurance. I'm really not sure how that's supposed to work. Or how this is even supposed to be some sort of compassionate conservative rebranding -- it sounds like the same old 'screw the poor, it's their fault for being poor' philosophy that Republicans have believed all along."

 *   So long, Liz*Being a lover of the political fray, I am indeed sorry to see her go so early. Heh.

"The Tea Party seems to have suffered an early defeat in their plans to primary every Republican senator they possibly can. The most prominent candidate they had in this election cycle just walked away from her Senate campaign in Wyoming. Is the Tea Party on the way onto the scrap heap of history? Perhaps it is too soon to tell, but one thing is for certain, we won't have to listen to the shrill voice of Liz Cheney for the rest of the election season. That's comfort enough, I suppose. I guess it'll give her more time to work on her fishing."

 *   I stand with The People*This one is short, so allow me to properly introduce it. Sooner or later Democratic politicians are going to notice that this is a winning issue with the voters. Nationwide, support is up to 55 percent. More people in Colorado voted for legalization than voted for President Obama in 2012. The people are leading, and the leaders need to catch up. Some day soon, this will be a required box to check off for any Democratic candidate -- instead of a fearsome and brave thing to say which might lose you votes. Look at the shift on gay marriage, to see how this will take place over the next five years or so. But however long it takes, sooner or later Democrats will feel enough political cover to stand up and proudly say the following:

"I fully support ending the wasteful and destructive War On Weed. Prohibition of alcohol was wrong, and had to be ended. Prohibition of marijuana should follow the same route. It is a failed policy, and it needs to end. Now."

 

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