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This GOP Congresswoman Sure Got An Easy First Question At Her Tele-Town Hall

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Rep. Barbara Comstock (R-Va.) held a telephone town hall for her constituents on Tuesday ― and boy, was the first question more of a softball than Republican lawmakers tend to field these days.

A caller introduced as Dr. Gary Maloney simply wanted confirmation that Republicans like Comstock have no intention of doing away with the Affordable Care Act’s protections for people with pre-existing medical conditions.

“There seems to be a lot of noise about changes that are being yelled about, but really isn’t it true that there’s not a big movement, even among Republicans, to change things like pre-existing conditions and that sort of thing, that in fact, it is probably going to go in a different direction, as far as the likely final bill that’s going to emerge?” the caller asked.

“Well, in fact, you’re right on ― thank you, Gary ― particularly on the pre-existing conditions issue,” Comstock responded. “When Republicans had passed a repeal and replace bill in the last Congress, we protected people with pre-existing conditions in that bill. And that is a principle and a commitment that we are going to continue to make. That’s a promise that’s in all of our working documents, that’s what [Health] Secretary [Tom] Price has made clear, and the administration has, and our leadership has.”

“So that’s something there is bipartisan agreement on,” she added. “So for those who keep saying that that’s not the case, I would just ask, please take ‘yes’ for an answer.”

The problem Republicans like Comstock face ― and that she didn’t address at the time ― is that there is virtually no way to maintain coverage and reduce costs without preserving the individual mandate and continuing income-based subsidies for individuals to buy private insurance on the exchanges. Those are the same features of the law that Republicans most oppose.

It is also unclear how private insurers would distribute the cost of covering people with pre-existing conditions if Americans were no longer required to purchase insurance.

Listen to the exchange with Maloney below:
Gary Maloney is the name of a veteran Republican political consultant who donated $350 to Comstock’s 2016 re-election campaign. His Northern Virginia consulting firm, Jackson-Alvarez, took in over $250,000 from advising Republican candidates and groups in the 2016 cycle, although Comstock’s campaign was not one of their clients.

A biography on the website of the Leadership Institute, a conservative group for which this Maloney was once a guest speaker, indicates that he has a Ph.D. in politics from the University of Oxford but not a medical degree. 

When The Huffington Post called Jackson-Alvarez to inquire about the town hall call, the man who picked up said, “not interested” and hung up. Comstock’s staff did not respond to multiple requests for comment on the identity of the caller.

Comstock is one of several Republicans for whom outrage over President Donald Trump and the Republican agenda could prove a political liability in the 2018 midterm elections. Democrats tried mightily last year to unseat Comstock, who represents a swing district that includes many Democratic-leaning suburbs of Washington, D.C. She ultimately won by nearly 6 percentage points. 

Comstock did not show up to two scheduled in-person constituent meetings earlier this month, angering some of the more liberal residents of her district. Her office did not respond to a request for information on her next in-person town hall. 

Just 19 Republican members of Congress scheduled traditional town hall meetings for the congressional recess this week, according to Town Hall Project, a site that publicizes information about the meetings.

The decision not to hold the public events or conduct them by phone comes amid a wave of activists using town halls to aggressively confront members, particularly over their plans to replace Obamacare and investigate Trump’s ties to Russia. 

Indeed, the two questions Comstock got immediately after Maloney’s query were about these two issues.A caller who identified herself as Amy said she was a small business owner who wanted to know why Comstock wanted to repeal, rather than fix, the Affordable Care Act.

“Every major bill has to have a couple of changes. Why do you think we need to just scrap it and not keep what we have?” Amy asked.

Comstock emphasized that she was most interested in repealing aspects of Obamacare that are unpopular among members of both parties, like the tax on so-called “Cadillac” health care plans and the medical device tax.

She suggested those features of the law could be stripped without limiting people’s access to affordable health insurance plans.

“We want to actually increase those plans for small businesses, have, you know, more risk pooling, buying across state lines, making it easier for small businesses to maybe get lower deductible plans or at least have the flexibility of that,” Comstock said. “That’s why we are carefully working on this and transitioning to a new system, get that up and running, but protect people and talk to people.”

Suggesting that consumers should be allowed to buy insurance in states other than where they live is a common Republican proposal. But it would likely to lead to a race to the bottom among states, leaving sicker people especially vulnerable. And it is so impractical, even insurers are not clamoring for it.

Neither the White House nor Republican leaders in Congress have proposed a comprehensive plan to replace Obamacare. Both Trump and House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) announced last week that they would unveil a proposal in March.

Listen to Comstock’s entire town hall below:-- 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.

Angry Constituents Hammer Tom Cotton At Town Hall: 'Do Your Job'

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Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) faced hundreds of angry constituents at a town hall Wednesday night who grilled him for two hours on the Affordable Care Act, immigration, President Donald Trump’s administration and other issues. 

The town hall, held at a high school in Springdale, Arkansas, was raucous throughout. About 2,000 people packed the auditorium and frequently drowned Cotton out with cheers, boos and jeers. Some attendees waved red cards when the senator said something they didn’t agree with. 


Look at this crowd at @SenTomCotton's town hall in Springdale tonight. #ARnews #ARpx pic.twitter.com/sDQ2SKMXCG

— Greg Leding (@gregleding) February 23, 2017


The uproar hit a peak when a 25-year-old constituent pressed the senator on whether he intends to preserve the Affordable Care Act’s treatment protections for people with preexisting conditions. (Congressional Republicans, including Cotton, have vowed to repeal Obamacare but have yet to lay out a comprehensive plan for replacing it.) She kicked off her remarks by asking who in the auditorium was affected by the Affordable Care Act: 


Woman in Tom Cotton town hall asks everyone affected by the ACA to stand up.

The response: pic.twitter.com/eXlEkyJnFM

— Kyle Griffin (@kylegriffin1) February 22, 2017


She then explained she suffers from Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, a condition that affects the body’s connective tissues and blood vessels.

“Without coverage for preexisting conditions, I will die,” she said. “Will you commit today to replacement protections for those Arkansans like me who will die or lose their quality of life or otherwise be unable to be participating citizens, trying to get their part of the American dream? Will you commit to replacement in the same way that you’ve committed to repeal?”

The auditorium erupted in cheers as the crowd gave her a standing ovation. Cotton then attempted to dodge the question and asked for others in the audience to offer comments before he gave an answer.

That didn’t go over well with the bulk of the crowd, which began booing and chanting, “Do your job.” Cotton eventually returned to her question but largely evaded her request for specifics on how he intends to preserve coverage for preexisting conditions.

Watch part of their exchange:


This is a young woman challenging Cotton on ACA replacement plan. 2000 here inside. pic.twitter.com/bBEqIVuzoF

— Vaughn Hillyard (@VaughnHillyard) February 22, 2017


Another woman then confronted Cotton on his support for Obamacare repeal. She said her husband is dying, and she challenged Cotton to sit down with her and her family and hear about their experiences with public health care. 

“You want to stand there ... and expect us to be calm, cool and collected,” she said. “Well, what kind of insurance do you have?” 


Voter to @SenTomCotton: My husband is dying. We can't afford health insurance. What kind of insurance do you have? https://t.co/iYFiZtwJ1F

— CNN (@CNN) February 22, 2017


Cotton faced many other questions on his support for Trump ― one attendee asked how he could support a president who “wants to grab women by the pussy” ― and his congressional record. He was pressed on his opposition to gun control measures, his proposed immigration policies and the president’s tax returns. Almost every answer was met with boos. 

The last question went to a 7-year-old boy concerned about Trump’s proposed wall along the U.S.-Mexico border and his reported plan to cut funds for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

“Donald Trump makes Mexicans not important to people who are in Arkansas who like Mexicans, like me,” said the boy. “He’s deleting all the parts in PBS Kids just to make a wall. He’s going to do that. He shouldn’t. He shouldn’t do all that stuff just for a wall.”

Cotton attempted to answer by praising America as a “melting pot,” a comment met with jeers.

“You should listen to the next generation,” yelled one attendee. 

“We want Mexico to be a healthy, strong partner,” Cotton said. “We also have to protect our own citizens ... and that’s where the wall comes in.”

*You can watch the full town hall meeting here.*

Other Republicans have faced similarly tense crowds at town halls across the country during the congressional recess. On Tuesday, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) was berated by a woman who was upset with Republican accountability on jobs and health care. Republican Sens. Joni Ernst and Chuck Grassley of Iowa and Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, and Reps. Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee and Dave Brat of Virginia have been confronted in recent days.

And some Republicans are avoiding the meetings altogether, turning to conference calls. Some are threatening to cancel public appearances if people disrupt them. 

Trump, meanwhile, has attempted to dismiss the town hall demonstrations as “planned out by liberal activists.”

-- 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 55 minutes ago.

Nobel-winning economist Kenneth J. Arrow dies at 95

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Kenneth J. Arrow, the youngest-ever winner of a Nobel prize for economics, whose theories on risk, innovation and the basic mathematics of markets have influenced thinking on everything from voting to health insurance to high finance, has died. He was 95. Reported by Newsday 13 minutes ago.

App-only bank Monzo raised £19.5 million at a £65 million valuation and is crowdfunding again

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App-only bank Monzo raised £19.5 million at a £65 million valuation and is crowdfunding again LONDON — App-only bank Monzo is raising £22 million to launch its current account in the UK.

Monzo has closed £19.5 million in Series B funding — the second injection of institutional money — and is planning to raise a further £2.5 million through crowdfunding.

The £19.5 million has been raised from New York-based Thrive Capital, with participation from longtime Monzo backers Passion Capital, and Orange Digital Ventures, the VC arm of telecoms network Orange. The funding values the two-year-old business at £65 million pre-money.

Co-CEO and founder Tom Blomfield told Business Insider: "I've known Thrive for a few years actually. I worked in New York and got to know Myles and Jared, who's one of the partners there, pretty well. I chatted with them, probably three or four years ago, about starting a bank.

"I think their investment in Oscar Health, it's a really good parallel. Health insurance in the US is very similar — high cap requirement, high regulation, horrific user experience. A lot of investors were scared off by the regulation and capital requirements. Thrive just saw it as a space they understood very deeply."

Monzo is returning to Crowdcube for its £2.5 million crowdfunding campaign, opening pre-registrations for potential investors from February 28 to March 14. Investors will then be given the opportunity to invest through a random ballot. Last year investor demand was so great that Monzo — then known as Mondo — raised £1 million in just 96 seconds.

Blomfield told BI that the total £22 million is "the big chunk of cash needed to launch the bank." Monzo gained its banking licence last August and Blomfield told BI last year that the startup would have to raise at least £15 million to get certain operating restrictions lifted.

Monzo employs a team of 80 people in London that Blomfield expects to rise to over 100 by the end of the year. While some of the money raised will satisfy banking capital requirements, Blomfield says "most of it is for operating expenses." 

The startup is currently trialling current accounts and overdrafts internally and plans to begin transferring its existing customers — over 100,000 who are on pre-paid cards — to current accounts shortly. New customers should be able to sign up for them by the summer.

BI has highlighted before that the so-called "neobank" market — apps that provide banking or near-banking services — is crowded in Britain, with not much revenue generation so far.

Blomfield told BI: "I think in the short to medium-term, unsecured personal lending will be the majority of our revenue."

Monzo recently joined the UK's Faster Payments network and the MasterCard network directly, which Blomfield says "gives us ultra-low-cost access to these payment schemes, which is super important from a business model perspective."

But he added: "I don't think you'll be able to build a multi-billion-pound business on overdraft lending. The long term vision has always been a marketplace where maybe we won't offer you a Monzo mortgage but Atom will and they'll do it through our platform. We become a kind of aggregating hub for all of the different money problems you have, whether that's savings accounts, or ISAs, or mortgages. We're starting to explore that over the next year or so but that definitely is the long term vision."

Rival app-only bank Atom is close to announcing a fresh round of funding close to £100 million and Tandem Bank announced a £35 million raise in December. Asked if Monzo was daunted by his rivals' war chests, Blomfield said: "I think we're playing a different game. I think a lot of the UK banks, if we're honest, are low-cost savings and loan businesses. We're trying to provide a day-to-day control centre for your money and many of the other banks in the UK are just trying to offer you cheaper mortgages.

"The people I admire in this space are N26 in Germany and Nubank in Brazil. Those are the kind of models we're looking at and admiring."

By the time Monzo's latest crowdfunding campaign completes, the startup will have raised £35 million since launching in February 2015.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: 'Shark Tank' star Daymond John: Making products in the US could cost consumers 25-30% more Reported by Business Insider 21 hours ago.

Bob Greene Joins the Lowers & Associates Team as the Vice President of Sales

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Greene, a strategic senior executive, brings international leadership and business advancement strategies to the Lowers & Associates team.

Purcellville, VA (PRWEB) February 23, 2017

The team at Lowers & Associates is excited to welcome Bob Greene as our new Vice President of Sales. Greene has had leadership roles with several well-known associations, including the American Management Association, America’s Health Insurance Plans, and the Association for Financial Professionals, and has been a consultant to the Fortune 500 and US Military.

When asked about joining the L&A team, Greene said, “I’m delighted to be joining the risk mitigation professionals at Lowers & Associates to help us continue to grow our customer relationships in the US and internationally.”

Lowers & Associates offers a wide array of solutions from assessment to mitigation to recovery. The experts at Lowers & Associates have considerable experience in the following areas: risk management, security, law enforcement, human resources, and accounting. Fraudulent-claims investigation, audits for regulatory compliance, development of cybersecurity policies, and advice on loss prevention are among some of the services that the team at L&A provides.

Brad Moody, the Executive Vice President of Operations at Lowers & Associates commented, “We are excited to have Bob join the Lowers & Associates team. His experience and enthusiasm are a perfect fit for the organization. Bob adds elements to our team that will help us get to the next level.”

About Lowers & Associates:

Headquartered in Northern Virginia, Lowers & Associates ("L&A") is an independent, internationally recognized risk management consulting firm. We offer a wide range of loss prevention/control, risk assessment, loss/claims investigation, audit, compliance, and related risk management services.

Our origins, dating back over 25 years, are in both physical and operational security as well as internal controls and over that time we've become an acknowledged authority on matters of crime and fidelity related risk mitigation.

Throughout our history, we've partnered with many different types of organizations to aid in the mitigation of business, operational, and technology risks on both a proactive/pre-loss and reactive/post-loss basis. Today our service offering also extends into computer/cyber-crime/social engineering with a comprehensive array of privacy protection, network/information security, and cyber risk management services.

For more information about L&A, please visit our website at http://www.lowersrisk.com. Reported by PRWeb 19 hours ago.

Portable Benefits for an Insecure Workforce

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This article appears in the Winter 2017 issue of The American Prospect magazine. Subscribe here. 

Imagine an entirely new system of employment benefits—a system that substantially closes the gap left by the ongoing decline of secure full-time employment while uniting business and labor, tech companies and small businesses, progressives and libertarians.

You would sense you were on to something, right?

We believe that we (and Barack Obama, Elizabeth Warren, Etsy, and the libertarian R Street Institute) are on to something. Traditional full-time employment—and the middle-class lifestyle it enables—is slipping from the grasp of more and more American workers, who’ve been stripped of the benefits our parents’ generation understood to be part of standard compensation: health insurance, vacation, sick leave, unemployment and disability insurance, and retirement. The loss of these basic employment-based benefits is worsening the insecurity faced by workers and their families. Fewer and fewer jobs offer a full package of benefits, or any benefits at all.

At the same time, innovative companies such as TaskRabbit, Instacart, Handy, and Upwork—part of a sector variously called the on-demand, sharing, or gig economy—risk being distracted from the task of creating real economic value by the easy profits to be reaped from classifying workers as independent contractors. This “disruption” of employee-employer relations, which has abetted the on-demand companies’ billion-dollar revenue and high-flying stock valuations, moves us beyond the letter and spirit of our aging and inadequate regulatory framework. The debate over the on-demand economy isn’t merely a legal question, however: Our collective failure to close the widening gap between technological innovation and social realities is responsible for much of the economic angst that dominated the 2016 election.

To address this challenge, we developed the idea of a “Shared Security System,” a package of portable benefits for contingent workers first proposed in the Summer 2015 issue of the journal Democracy (“Shared Security, Shared Growth”). Soon after, an unlikely collaboration of individuals and organizations from across the political spectrum also called for a new system of employment benefits. Supporters included gig economy executives, labor leaders, venture capitalists, business people, academics, and policy professionals.

AP Photo/Candice Choi

A bag of food from McDonald's ordered through the Postmates service sits next to a Postmates delivery bag during a delivery in New York. 

This Shared Security System would recognize that work and employment are changing, and that we can no longer wait to act as the old system unravels. Workers would earn and accrue portable benefits on a per-hour basis, regardless of a worker’s relationship with the employer that is paying him or her. Like Social Security, these benefits would be fully portable, with every worker having an account at the qualified financial institution of his or her choice. Companies would be responsible for paying into workers’ benefit accounts at a reasonable rate. In some situations, workers or the government might also contribute to benefit accounts.

In the year and a half since we first proposed a Shared Security System, we’ve seen serious interest from the tech sector and public policy experts. (President Obama even mentioned portable retirement benefits in his last State of the Union address.) It seems highly likely that cities and states will begin experimenting with some type of prorated, portable benefits program within the next year. Accordingly, it’s time to move beyond our rough outline and into more specifics of what a plan could and should look like—and why it’s so crucial for the future of American workers.

 

*OVER THE PAST FEW DECADES,* corporate America has assiduously worked to sever the social contract that had formerly been the birthright of the Great American Middle Class. There was once an understanding that the benefits of growing labor productivity would be shared with the workers who created it. But while productivity has continued to rise, most of the profits over the past few decades have accrued to CEOs and their shareholders, while most of the disruption from the historic transformation of globalization, automation, and the financialization of the economy has been shouldered by workers and their families. And little has proven more disruptive than the transformation of the employment relationship between corporations and their workers—particularly low-wage workers.

The direct employer-employee relationship assumed by U.S. labor law, a staple of our society for generations, is no longer the reality for 40 percent of American workers, according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office.  These “contingent” workers have jobs that are temporary, irregular, or otherwise not expected to last. Whether they are driving for Uber, working multiple part-time jobs without a consistent schedule, or contracting for a labor intermediary, a growing number of workers don’t have a stable employment contract with the company (or companies) that pay them.

Even workers who technically have a full-time job and receive a W2 increasingly do not work for the company that ultimately benefits from their work—but rather for an ever-shifting network of subcontracting companies.

These pressures have been building for years, as David Weil’s study The Fissured Workplace makes clear. Over the past few decades, corporations have made a science of squeezing labor costs down to the bone. There’s been no one there to stop them: Where labor unions once had the power to hold the line on wages, today fewer than 7 percent of private-sector American workers are represented by a union. At the same time, technological advances in automation and communications have made it easier, and financialization has provided pressure, for companies to export jobs overseas, hire less-skilled contract workers, or eliminate the positions entirely.

Even those jobs that remain have increasingly been low-wage service-sector work; the jobs that returned after the Great Recession were, on net, all low-wage. According to economists Lawrence Katz and Alan Krueger, all of the net employment growth over the past decade has been in contingent work.

These transformations have created a more rootless, desperate—and flexible—labor force. Workers could feel the effects of these changes in their lives, but until now there hasn’t been a focal point to galvanize public attention around these changes in the nature of work.

Stephen L/Creative Commons

As the Fight for 15 has demonstrated, the real work of moving America forward in the 21st century has begun at the state and city level. Here, protesters rally for a higher minimum wage in Columbus, Ohio. 

Now we have a name: Uber. The powerful ride-sharing company has helped drive the creation of one particular form of the fissured workplace—the on-demand sector. Uber, Lyft, Handy, TaskRabbit, Postmates, Instacart, and an ever-evolving cast of smartphone application-based companies have built their sometimes-massive valuations (Uber’s is $66 billion) around a business model of providing customers the service, flexibility, and convenience they were often missing from more traditional competitors.

On-demand companies have also built their fortunes on the insistence that the workers who provide these services are not employees, but rather independent contractors who are simply using their technical platforms to connect with customers. This strategy has allowed them to provide services that are powered by a large and highly flexible workforce, which is—in aggregate—ready to work at any time, for any amount of time. According to the JPMorgan Chase Institute, more than 4 percent of American workers received income from the on-demand platform economy between 2012 and 2015, a rate which increased 47-fold over that time. This growth rate makes platform work by far the fastest-growing sector of the economy, even exceeding the growth of home health care and software.

Many labor advocates have found the contractor arrangements enshrined in the on-demand sector to be unfair and exploitative. By classifying workers as independent contractors, the companies evade the traditional responsibility of paying basic benefits like unemployment and Social Security taxes, complying with overtime provisions, or allowing collective-bargaining efforts. On-demand drivers are also not reimbursed for their gas, insurance, or car payments.

Multiple lawsuits have charged these companies with “misclassifying” their workers as 1099 contractors instead of W2 employees, and have met with some success. Most experts believe that the companies exist in a legal gray zone that could easily turn into a serious liability problem. Drivers for the Lyft platform are most of the way to winning a class-action misclassification lawsuit against the company; U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria granted approval to a $27 million settlement for the workers, saying Lyft had “shortchanged” the drivers. The judge also called out the inherent difficulty in applying labor law to the on-demand economy, noting that “the jury in this case will be handed a square peg and asked to choose between two round holes.” A similar suit is being brought against Uber.

Confronted with this litigation, on-demand companies would be providing further evidence that their contractors are actually employees if they were to pay their workers benefits or provide them with training. Attorneys in misclassification lawsuits against the on-demand companies can make a strong case that providing benefits indicates a traditional employer-employee relationship between the companies and the workers.

It is important to note that worker classification is a legal issue, and not a choice to be made at the convenience of a company or industry. But without a legal mandate or industry-wide agreement for on-demand companies to provide workers with benefits, the companies aren’t willing to jeopardize their contractor-based business model, thereby finding themselves stuck with fewer options for recruiting, training, or retaining their workforce than their competitors enjoy.

While a study by Intuit said most workers are “highly satisfied” with their on-demand jobs, many also protest that the companies treat them like contractors while trying to manage them like regular employees. Uber drivers, for example, are essentially required to abide by Uber’s “rules” for exactly which and how many fares they take—or risk being deactivated from the platform without warning.

In a fissured, flexible world of work, do we give up on the American model of benefits tied to employment? Or innovate a new way to tie them together? When some worry that Uber is wrecking work, we need to remind ourselves, as The Economist wrote last year of the contingent workforce, “that the on-demand economy is not introducing the serpent of casual labour into the garden of full employment: it is exploiting an already casualised workforce in ways that will ameliorate some problems even as they aggravate others.”

 

*ALL OF WHICH LEADS US* to our unexpected bargain: Portable benefits. By redefining work for the 21st century in this way, we will find a common ground between workers who can’t or don’t want to obtain a 40-hour workweek with a traditional employer, and employers who seek to reimagine the worker-employer contract. It offers workers and employers alike the certainty they require while still acknowledging the realities of a technology-driven economy.

We need to put a structure in place that will raise standards for all contingent workers—including those who weren’t ever included in traditional labor law (notably, the domestic and agricultural workforce, explicitly excluded due to misogyny and racism). It’s time for a new safety net, with workers earning benefits that are

• portable from job to job;

• prorated by contributions from employers (for example, a $2-per-hour contribution); and

• universally accessible by all workers.

Portability ensures that benefits are not tied to any particular job or company, but that workers own their own benefits. Even if they work multiple jobs in a single day for multiple employers, benefits are pooled into a single account. A worker should be able to manage and maintain their benefits from year to year, and their protections should not depend on the app they currently have open.

Alfredo Mendez/Creative Commons

A Lyft car and driver in San Francisco. 

Proration means each company contributes to a worker’s benefits at a fixed rate depending on how much he or she works, or earns. Contributions from companies can be prorated by dollars earned, jobs done, or time worked. For example, if a person works an hour for a delivery company and an hour cleaning houses, both companies would contribute a predetermined amount toward that worker’s benefits on a per-hour basis, such as $1 for each hour worked. To increase their competitiveness in the labor market, companies could also choose to contribute more, or offer an expanded suite of portable benefits beyond the minimum requirements.

And universality requires that benefits cover all workers, not just traditional W2 employees. If all companies are playing on the same level field, there is a lot less room for gamesmanship and creative avoidance of employment classification, and more certainty for both workers and companies about their rights and obligations. Any viable benefits system for the new economy must cover individuals working outside of a traditional employment relationship.

A system of portable benefits would initially be tailored to the needs of contingent workers—especially on-demand workers, who are among the least protected—but could be extended outward to cover all workers below a certain benefits floor. And so it should, because the work of the future is much more likely to be a catch-as-catch-can, technologically mediated affair than a return to the union contracts of midcentury American industry.

Shared Security Accounts could track a variety of benefits, including:

• health insurance contributions

• disability insurance

• workers’ compensation insurance

• unemployment insurance

• retirement contributions

• paid sick leave

• paid vacation leave

• paid family leave

In terms of exactly how portable benefits are implemented, we should stress that this is a moment for a big “what” and a small “how.” We believe the system will provide the best outcomes if executed in certain ways, but it’s more important that cities and states quickly begin to experiment with how to implement portable benefits for their workforces.

That said, we propose that cities and states craft legislation that sets out the structure of the system, including a mandate for companies to pay into workers’ benefit accounts at prescribed rates. A state or municipal mandate, or industry-wide agreement, is more or less required to make this system work; anything less leaves loopholes for less scrupulous companies to exploit.

We intentionally are not suggesting an initial push for national legislation, because, as the Fight for 15 and the path to legalized same-sex marriage have demonstrated, the real work of moving America forward in the 21st century has begun at the state and city level. It’s not just blue states moving forward, either: Arizona voters approved a statewide $12 minimum wage while also voting for Donald Trump at the top of the ticket. It’s obviously best to enact portable benefits at the state level to avoid tricky coverage issues (such as, for example, Lyft drivers taking fares into a neighboring city that does not support a portable benefits program). But where state leaders are unwilling to experiment, it must fall on the most forward-thinking cities to forge a path that others will surely follow.

We believe that Shared Security Accounts would best be administered by nonprofit benefit providers whose qualifications are determined by criteria written into statute. We imagine that any number of existing nonprofit organizations, including unions, professional societies, civic groups such as the AARP, and credit unions will have a vested interest in competing in this space. These providers would have to legally agree to stringent conflict-of-interest rules ensuring that they operate with the best interests of beneficiaries in mind, and that they are insured to possess sufficient cash reserves to pay out the benefits that workers have already earned.

The benefit providers will compete on an open exchange for the business of individual workers, who will choose the provider that offers the suite of benefits that most appeals to them. To take advantage of pooled insurance rates, however, benefits such as health insurance, disability insurance, and workers’ compensation should be mandatory.

Once they pass the regulatory hurdles, these benefit providers will be accountable to workers as their customer base. If workers are not satisfied with the quality of their pension plans, they should be able to easily move their account to another provider on an annual open-enrollment basis, with all current benefits intact. This will ensure that providers will advocate for and efficiently provide the highest-quality package of benefits for their workers. Provider organizations could choose to contract with financial institutions and insurers as vendors, but we do not foresee that most of these stringently profit-driven companies will meet the necessary criteria to place beneficiaries’ interests before profits.

Mark Warner/Creative Commons

In a recent op-ed in The Washington Post, Senator Mark Warner recognized that “[m]odern American capitalism is not working for many Americans,” and recommended that “we should be encouraging more innovation and experimentation around portable benefits—a 21st-century safety net tied to the individual, not the job.”

How would qualifying organizations provide portable benefits that significantly match current offerings for W2 workers? Certain benefits are already available as products that would function well in a portable system, including health care and retirement plans. Some, such as disability insurance and workers’ compensation, are now virtually impossible to secure as an individual, and would require new products to be created by insurance companies or innovative startups. Others, such as paid leave, would need to be conceptualized from scratch as cash accounts or accruals that could be withdrawn as cash with the plan administrator’s approval.

Obviously, Shared Security programs would not replace preexisting public benefits like Social Security, Medicaid, and Medicare. In time, as local portable benefits plans establish themselves, it will become clearer how to thread national social safety-net programs—and more complex national issues that are currently in flux, like Obamacare—into a Shared Security program.

Each worker will be provided with a Shared Security Account card or number, which they will then provide to each employer. Whether they work for one employer per week or a dozen, all their benefits—vacation time, sick time, retirement, health insurance contributions—land instantly in a single, easy-to-manage account. We imagine that workers will be able to access their benefit options through an online portal that helps to guide them through their choice of provider, benefit types, contribution and withdrawal options, and more.

Benefit providers can resolve the portability and universality problems of a portable benefits system, but what about proration? How much would this amount total for each hour worked?

Our internal analysis of the cost of providing basic benefits in Washington state yielded an average figure of between $1.68 and $3.54 per hour, depending on the worker’s age and occupation. This calculation includes the cost of the most critical social safety-net components, in our opinion: Sick leave; workers’ compensation insurance, offered by the state of Washington; and 60 percent of the most inexpensive bronze-level health-care plan on the Affordable Care Act exchange. (Our sick leave calculation is based on the City of Seattle’s innovative paid sick leave legislation, which requires that large employers fund one hour of paid sick time for every 30 hours an employee works.)

Another metric comes from the conservative Heritage Foundation, which estimated last year that employers save about 20 percent on their total payroll costs by shifting workers from W2 employment to 1099 employment. That works out to $3.61 per hour for employees earning a $15 hourly wage, and includes the cost of unemployment insurance, payroll taxes, and $2.27 per hour in Affordable Care Act penalties for uncovered employees.

No matter what the magic number is, it’s important to remember that the established amount of deposit for portable benefits accounts is a floor, not a ceiling. While many present-day low-wage employers will undoubtedly pay the bare minimum in benefits, many other employers—those who prefer to invest in a long-term high-quality workforce—can offer better benefits like higher 401(k) pay-ins and higher-quality health insurance to desirable employees.

Depending on the specific legislation passed by each state or municipality, the Shared Security System would likely begin with 1099 contractors and then circle outward to more traditional employees. There are currently a variety of limitations on state or local changes to retirement and health coverage requirements for W2 employees. We also believe that it makes sense to bring contingent workers closer to parity with traditional W2 workers as a first step, as contingent workers usually lack employer contributions for Social Security and Medicare, health insurance mandated under the Affordable Care Act, paid sick leave in states that require it, workers’ compensation, and other crucial benefits. However, in the long run we would like to see a mandated benefits floor that applied to every worker, to reduce the games that companies play with worker classification and ensure that workers are treated equally under the law, no matter their job or sector.

Basic benefits are critically important for American workers, but benefits on their own are meaningless without setting an enforceable floor for the minimum labor standards that all employers must meet, including:

*Paid leave.* Employers will be legally obligated to provide time off to use the leave benefits accrued in portable benefits accounts, without intimidation or retaliation.

*Livable minimum wage. *The federal minimum wage should be raised to $15 an hour and indexed to inflation.

*Anti-discrimination and worker protections. *The federal government should pursue policies that create real wage parity between women and men and properly enforce anti-discrimination provisions. Reasonable health and safety standards should be enforced regardless of workplace or worker classification.

*Health insurance. *Obviously, the federal government also needs to improve health-care policy to the point where every American, regardless of employment, has health insurance. Single-payer health insurance by a government or government-related source would help to resolve issues around the skyrocketing costs of care in the United States and provide true universal access.

AP Photo/Matt Rourke

Taxi and Uber's black car service drivers protest the ride-hailing services Uber X and Lyft Wednesday, December 16, 2015, in Philadelphia. 

For now, we incorporate health insurance into our model because it has historically been tied to employment for U.S. workers.

 

*WE'VE ALREADY SEEN SOME *motion on portable benefits. Senator Mark Warner, a Virginia Democrat, has prompted the federal government to collect more information about the on-demand economy. In a recent op-ed in The Washington Post, Warner recognized that “[m]odern American capitalism is not working for many Americans,” and recommended that “we should be encouraging more innovation and experimentation around portable benefits—a 21st-century safety net tied to the individual, not the job.”

The Republican Party also included a provision in their 2016 party platform that said changes in technology and the workplace mean that employees need “portability in pension plans and health insurance.”

Another leader on the effort has been Senator Elizabeth Warren. “For many,” Warren said in a speech at the New America annual conference in 2016,

… the gig economy is simply the next step in a losing effort to build some economic security in a world where all the benefits are floating to the top 10 percent. … Workers deserve a level playing field and some basic protections, no matter who they work for, where they work, or how the law classifies them. They deserve a strong safety net, dependable benefits, and the chance to bargain over their working conditions—that’s the basic deal. And that’s the deal that is necessary to restore a strong and sustainable American middle class.

Hillary Clinton also enshrined the concept in her presidential platform, noting that “as the nature of work in America changes, the government must do all that it can to update the safety net and ensure that benefits are flexible, portable, and comprehensive.”

Critics of this idea argue that prorating benefits and tracking hours will be difficult. Yet Starbucks utilizes scheduling software that can plan a shop’s schedule months in advance down to the last second, while freelancers have access to powerful software like Harvest that easily allows them to track a complex set of tasks for a variety of employers.

Then there are those who argue that paying a living wage and benefits is impossible. But if you think that’s impossible, imagine running a business with no paying customers; a modern economy can only thrive when all participants are able to be consumers. Strong economies are completely compatible with high wages and labor standards—the minimum wage in Australia is $17.70 an hour, while fast-food workers make a minimum of $20 an hour in Denmark, and the average autoworker in Germany made more than $67 per hour including salary and benefits, nearly twice the $34 average in the United States.

Others charge that this plan will only encourage automation. We say, try selling burgers to your burger-flipping robots.

Finally, there are those who claim that the old employment agreement is the only way forward. But we must reluctantly admit that the old employment contract of the 20th century isn’t coming back.

One argument that few dispute, regardless of party affiliation, is that the current social contract between companies and workers isn’t working. Inequality is rising, growth is not where it should be, populist unrest is increasing. Clinging to a system of labor laws that originated out of the Great Depression—built for an industrial economy that no longer exists—is not a viable strategy.

Most policy experts believe that something like a Shared Security System is coming. Some pilot programs will be sketched out as early as 2017 by state and local governments. The only question is how we build this system. Do we choose to create a system that gives outsize power to large employers, casting a century of labor standards to the dustbin of history? Do we attempt to regulate new-economy employers into behaving as though they’re the factories of the mid-20th century? Neither path works. Instead, we must create a system that benefits both employers and employees.

The Shared Security System balances the needs of workers and employers because those needs are not, and have never been, at odds. The trickle-down economics story, which pits owners against workers as parasites who suck profits dry, is a fact-free caricature. Employees are not regrettable expenses to be strip-mined and cast aside; they are problem-solvers, teammates, brand ambassadors—and they are customers, too.

In the proposal we’ve outlined, government does what it does best—establishes a floor of basic rights and standards on which businesses can innovate—and in so doing creates a civic infrastructure for benefit providers to advocate for their workers. It also removes the complex burden for employers to manage benefits, an ill-fitting relationship born out of necessity almost a hundred years ago.

Many have told us that this concept reimagines too much of the contract of American work. But if the election of Donald Trump does nothing else, it should inspire progressives to think bigger than just tinkering with decades-old social programs ill-fitted to our modern economy. Progressives must create and promote new, nimble programs that help America to evolve as a nation and an economy. Our goal is not to make America great again; it is to make America better than ever as we transition into a dynamic 21st-century economy. Reported by The American Prospect 17 hours ago.

Obamacare 101: Are health insurance marketplaces in a death spiral?

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It's been a rocky few months for the health insurance marketplaces created by the Affordable Care Act. Even if you're not one of the roughly 11 million Americans who rely on these online exchanges to get your health insurance, you've probably seen the headlines about rising premiums and insurance... Reported by L.A. Times 16 hours ago.

Hill GOP asks governors to save Obamacare repeal

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Congressional Republicans struggling over how to repeal Obamacare are stuck on a key problem: what to do with the millions of people in 31 states covered under the dramatic expansion of Medicaid the law enabled.

So they have privately turned to a handful of governors to help resolve the issue -- including Wisconsin's Scott Walker and Ohio's John Kasich, according to several sources involved in the talks. The hope, according to congressional sources, is to let the governors cut a deal on an issue that directly impacts their states and let the White House and Republican leaders endorse the plan that eventually emerges.

The discussions underscore another key point: While President Donald Trump promises to soon unveil his own health care plan, lawmakers on Capitol Hill are drafting the bill -- while the Republican governors are likely to be the driving force behind the major entitlement reform over Medicaid coverage.

The stakes for Republicans are already high. At town halls this week, GOP lawmakers are getting earfuls from voters unhappy with possible rollbacks to Obamacare, and at times struggling to defend a replacement bill that doesn't yet exist.

At the center of the talks are four governors who have taken different approaches to Medicaid: Walker and Gov. Bill Haslam of Tennessee, whose states did not expand Medicaid under the law; and two governors from states that did: Kasich and Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval. The discussions are likely to continue at the National Governors Association meeting in Washington this week, and as Kasich privately meets later this week with Trump at the White House.

"There are 700,000 Ohioans who now get care who didn't have it before," Kasich told CNN's Jim Sciutto on Sunday's "State of the Union," defending his state's Medicaid expansion. "And to turn our back on them makes no sense."

The thinking is that if these four can cut a deal, it will help resolve an issue that GOP leaders say is currently the biggest hurdle in putting together a plan to repeal President Barack Obama's Affordable Care Act. But they have a monumental task: resolving concerns from conservatives who want to turn Medicaid into a block grant program and alleviate fears from politicians who hail from states that accepted federal dollars to expand coverage for low-income adults under Obamacare.

"We're going to have to find a solution that accommodates those concerns," House Speaker Paul Ryan said last week.

Republicans are hoping to unveil a plan in March that could be voted on within the next several weeks. They are under a time constraint because they are using fast-track budget rules that will allow them to avoid a filibuster in the Senate and pass a repeal bill on a party-line vote.

The party is still divided over key issues -- including how far to take the repeal bill. Conservatives in the House Freedom Caucus want to pass a full-blown repeal bill that mirrors a plan that Congress approved in 2015 -- and Obama vetoed -- which would also repeal the Medicaid expansion.

Yet top Senate Republicans privately say that such an approach would not pass their chamber.

- Tax credits and health savings accounts-

Moreover, a number of Republicans are demanding that the repeal bill also include some new provisions to help replace the law. As part of that approach, Republicans want to include in the repeal bill tax credits to help people purchase health insurance and reforms to Health Savings Accounts that would allow families to put more money into the accounts.

Yet, Senate budget rules limit how much of the health care law can be replaced through the process known as "reconciliation," meaning that the GOP will have to rely on skeptical Democrats to pass other health care bills and on Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price to take executive action on other fronts.

But several people involved in the discussions say the biggest challenge right now is how to resolve the Medicaid dilemma. The fear among many Republicans is that gutting the program could leave many low-income individuals in their states without health care coverage if there's no viable alternative to replace it. Republicans are considering a plan -- advocated by Ryan -- where states would receive federal funding based on a formula created by a state's per capita Medicaid population.

While it's uncertain where they'll come down, Walker's support is seen as critical since he could presumably help sell the deal to conservatives who want to gut the entitlement program altogether.

"Gov. Walker and other governors around the country are on the front lines of this effort," said Tom Evenson, a Walker spokesman. "And they want to partner with the federal government to provide affordable and accessible health care."

The talks on the Hill over health care are being driven by five key Republicans: Ryan, Senate Finance Chairman Orrin Hatch, Senate Health Chairman Lamar Alexander, House Energy and Commerce Chairman Greg Walden and Ways and Means Chairman Kevin Brady.

And the Energy and Commerce Committee met in January with more than a dozen GOP governors from states that expanded Medicaid and those that did not, and discussions are continuing between the governors and the lawmakers, a committee aide said.

How the four GOP governors go along with the plan also could influence key senators from those states -- including Nevada Sen. Dean Heller, who is up for re-election in 2018 and whose governor is involved in the talks. And if Kasich cuts a deal, it could influence key Ohio Republicans in both chambers. Reported by Click Orlando 12 hours ago.

Sleeprate, Inc. Announces It Voluntarily Attained HIPAA Compliance Standards In Preparation For Entering U.S. Healthcare Provider Market

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Sleeprate, a provider of sleep monitoring, assessment and therapy via mobile app, has voluntarily attained HIPAA and ISO 27001 information security compliance in order to offer Sleep solutions through the largest health providers in the U.S.

Sunnyvale, CA (PRWEB) February 23, 2017

Sleeprate, Inc., a provider of sleep monitoring, assessment and therapy via its proprietary mobile app, announced today that it has voluntarily attained HIPAA and ISO 27001 information security compliance. Attaining HIPAA compliance will enable Sleeprate to operate as a HIPAA Business Associate when contracting with HIPAA covered entitles.

“We’re very excited to make this announcement today. It’s on the heels of a substantial investment in security infrastructures. This need came from major healthcare market demand for mobile-based sleep solutions. By becoming HIPAA compliant, we will be able to contract with HIPAA covered entities and offer our Sleep solutions through the largest health providers in the U.S.” says, Armanda Baharav, CEO and founder of Sleeprate, Inc.

In October 2016, Sleeprate, Inc. was verified and certified by a third party that it achieved ISO-27001 information security standard. ISO 27001 is a global security standard that outlines controls and procedures to help organizations to keep information assets secure. This ISO-27001 provides the procedural framework for information security procedures and is customary for these purposes.

Users who download and/or purchase Sleeprate’s apps for their own use are not covered by Sleeprate’s HIPAA compliance program which is directed for compliance in association with HIPAA covered entities only.

About HIPAA

HIPAA (U.S. Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) mandates specific information security standards from Healthcare providers and Health insurers in order to safeguard electronic patient medical and health information.

About Sleeprate, Inc.

SleepRate is a revolutionary mobile sleep solution that combines reliable and accurate sleep tracking, evaluation & individually tailored e-coaching, all through a single user-friendly app. Reported by PRWeb 11 hours ago.

Outside the Box: Could your Fitbit data raise the cost of your health insurance?

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Reported by MarketWatch 10 hours ago.

An Open Letter To My Former Colleague, And Current Representative, Pat Tiberi

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Dear Pat,

We missed you last night at the packed town hall meeting at the Unitarian Church. In case you have not heard, even the overflow area was overflowing, as more than 1,200 of our neighbors came out to speak to you. I guess that you were trying to avoid the kind of confrontations I experienced in 2010 as protesters were actually brought to my office in busses sponsored by American Crossroads, and the goal was to shut down dialogue. But this was not that kind of event, and I am really sorry that you were not able to attend. 

I know that you have been in office for a long time, and that like all office holders, have an ego, and a belief that you know and understand the issues, but the reality is, all of us, Members of Congress included, have a lot to learn. Perhaps I should have said Members of Congress, in particular, have a lot to learn, and at town halls like this one, that’s what would have happened. 


If you had been with us, you would have heard the true, heartfelt, sometimes heartwrenching stories from your constituents. They did not come to shout at you, they wanted you to hear them.

You and I know that Washington D.C. can be one huge bubble, insulating Members of Congress from the rest of the country. Every Member of Congress is treated like a Very Important Person, and at every turn there are lobbyists who are paid to tell you what to believe. Those beliefs are often reinforced inside your caucus, and then no doubt they were amplified last night by the attention that Republican donors gave you at the fundraiser (in another Congressional District), that you chose to attend instead of the town hall. 

But if you had been with us, you would have heard the true, heartfelt, sometimes heartwrenching stories from your constituents. They did not come to shout at you, they wanted you to hear them; they made a huge effort to communicate their hopes and fears around health care.  Would it have always been comfortable for you? Probably not. It would be hard to hear from a man who lost his job and his health care and was unable to buy an individual plan because he was priced out of that vaunted free-market — until the Affordable Care Act prohibited discrimination on the basis of pre-existing conditions. It could be difficult to listen to testimony from one who experienced huge price increases in his insurance pre-ACA, which he no longer has to contend with now that he has so-called Obama-care. Their testimony goes against the accepted “wisdom” about the ACA and the insurance marketplace.

You may have been uneasy listening to a woman who has health care now, only because the Affordable Care Act mandated that her large employer offer coverage, knowing that members of your caucus want to end those mandates. Maybe your heart would have been touched listening to a  young woman who had had childhood leukemia and is able to stay in remission and pay for her ongoing prescription medications because she can now buy health insurance through the ACA exchange with a subsidy.  She very much wants to have childlren and fears that without the Affordable Care Act she may not be around for them, or be able to afford to have them. It would not feel good to sit there listening to her as she choked up, knowing that one of the Republican plans is to collapse that very marketplace and its subsidies that have kept her insured and healthy. 

I know you have triplets that you love very much, and Mitch, the dad with his three children with serious chronic illnesses such as arthritis and juvenile diabetes may have given you pause to reflect on how lucky you and your family are with the health care that your employer, our government, provides. You have met Mitch. He had visited your D.C. office in the past and you promised to remember his kids. He is worried you have forgotten them.


People say you are angry and resentful over the town halls and constituent visits. You shouldn’t be.

You would have come face to face with these and other real people with real struggles, those of the young, those of the elderly, those of the small business person, those of poor, who passionately care about their families, their health and the future of the ACA.  It would have been enlightening and given your insight not readily available in the halls of Congress, and information that a true representative (your actual title) needs to have when making these momentous changes. In order to represent, you need to listen to your constituents whether they vote in a Republican primary or not. People say you are angry and resentful over the town halls and constituent visits. You shouldn’t be. It’s what you signed on for those many years ago when you first ran for this position of trust, and it is part of your duty as one holding that office.

Perhaps there will be another town hall and you will attend it. Even if you don’t, your constituents will continue to try to communicate with you via their emails, their postcards, and their drop-ins to your office. They are of necessity determined to persist, and persist they shall. I hope that you will find it in your heart to listen to them and then find the courage to do what would be a lot harder than attending an uncomfortable town hall. Find the courage to vote their concerns and protect their health. 

-- 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 4 hours ago.

Lidl to hire 800, job openings include Charlotte-area stores

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Lidl has started hiring for its first stores in the Tar Heel State. The German grocer confirmed plans to hire 800 store associates in 13 N.C. cities. That list includes Charlotte, Gastonia and Shelby in the local market. “That’s starting this week,” says Will Harwood, spokesman. Hiring will take place over the next four months, with pay starting at $12 per hour plus benefits, including health insurance and a retirement plan. Lidl announced earlier this month it plans to open its first 20… Reported by bizjournals 7 hours ago.

The Dark Reality For Women Migrants In Morocco

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Morocco’s policy toward migrants is more generous than most, issuing work permits and refusing to evict undocumented refugees. But it does little to account for gender, leaving women living in refugee camps vulnerable to exploitation and abuse.

FEZ, Morocco – Born and raised in Lagos, 16-year-old Juliet Bamawo left her home and her family a year ago to travel thousands of miles from Nigeria to Morocco, propelled by the dream of studying at a European university and one day becoming a nurse. But soon after she arrived, reality set in. Instead of living in an apartment in Europe and learning about nursing, Bamawo is living in a makeshift camp beside Fez’s newly refurbished train station, in a tent made from plastic and scraps of material. There is no running water, and the tents are surrounded by garbage.

“I came here to travel to Europe, but there is no money,” she says. “I am now trying to get money, I am looking for help. It is difficult to live here. If there was a job and I was paid, I would work.”

Bamawo is among 15 Nigerian women living in the camp of around 300 residents from 10 sub-Saharan countries. Many were drawn by Morocco’s recently relaxed immigration policy, which tolerates camps like the one in Fez. But that’s as far as the welcome goes: Once migrants arrive, usually planning to continue on to Europe, they are given no support and essentially left to fend for themselves.

The lack of provisions leaves migrants unable to find work, abandoned in squalid, crime-ridden camps, and unable to move on to their final destination. And for women migrants who come to Morocco without an accompanying man, that usually means arriving to a life of poverty, exploitation and abuse.

The North African country of 35 million people has historically been a magnet for migrants. Many arrive with an “obsession to cross Gibraltar at any cost,” says Mohamed Khachani, president of the Moroccan Association for Studies and Research on Migration. But in response to the ongoing refugee crisis, many European countries have strengthened their borders, leaving large numbers of migrants stuck in Morocco. “There used to be evictions of clandestine migrants from Morocco. Nowadays it is not common to deport anymore,” says Khachani.

The drop in evictions is a result of a new strategy on immigration and asylum that Morocco announced in 2013, based on recommendations issued by the Moroccan National Human Rights Council. According to the report, Morocco “undoubtedly suffers from the effects of a strict European policy of control of its external borders.” So the government decided to adopt a human rights-based approach to documenting migrants. In a one-off move, Moroccan authorities issued around 27,000 residence permits to migrants between September 2013 and February 2015. The carte de séjour includes a work permit and offers access to primary and secondary schooling, but not to public health insurance.The majority of women migrants who come to Morocco in hopes of crossing through the country to gain entry into Europe are from Nigeria and Cameroon, but there are also women from Mali, Ivory Coast and the Democratic Republic of Congo. And for many of them, the already risky journey along the Trans-Sahara Highway is made even more treacherous by the constant threat of exploitation and sexual violence.

“Women suffer more than men. When they cross over 6,000 kilometers (3,700 miles), imagine every single border they have to cross,” says Khachani. “They suffer countless violations of numerous types.” According to his research, one-third of the migrant women living in Morocco were abused on their way to North Africa.

The U.N. Refugee Agency (UNHCR) estimates that of the over 6,000 refugees and asylum seekers considered persons of concern in Morocco, 44 percent are women. And a study by the International Organization for Migration (IOM) found most women migrants in Morocco travel without family members, but often in groups with other migrants.

According to a report by the IOM, more than half of the women are single mothers, the majority of them having become pregnant on the route, most likely in a context of abuse.

Migrants’ rights advocates say that while Morocco’s new immigration policy seems to treat migrants more humanely than many other countries, it fails to protect those most vulnerable once they arrive. “Women should be treated differently, they should be protected from rape and human trafficking. We should give them shelters and healthcare support,” says Moha Ennaji, president of the South-North Center for Intercultural Dialogue and Migration Studies and director of Morocco’s first PhD program in gender studies. “And for those who have babies, we should help them with daycare and kindergartens.”

Noting that Morocco has no women-only migrant shelters, Ennaji, who also works as a consultant to the United Nations Research Institute for Social Development, says more needs to be done to help migrants once they get to Morocco. The new policy “basically says that we don’t deport them, we don’t beat them up … we tolerate them, [but] they can beg and fight for a job.”

As head of the national body for the care and protection of migrants in Morocco, Fatima Attari deals directly with girls like Bamawo who are living in refugee camps. Attari says fighting against racism and discrimination are key to helping integrate undocumented women. “We need to welcome, listen, inform, guide, advise, assist them and provide legal, social and professional support,” she says.

While Bamawo still plans to one day make the dangerous sea crossing to Europe, these days she isn’t driven as much by her dream of becoming a nurse as by her desperation to move to somewhere safe and clean. “If I had good shelter, I would stay in Morocco,” she says. “Look at our environment here, it is very dirty. We need help; we are sick. We don’t know who can help us.”

This article originally appeared on Women & Girls Hub. For weekly updates, you can sign up to the Women & Girls Hub email list.

-- 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 6 hours ago.

Retailers Tumble After Trump Says He Is "In Favor Of Border Tax", Hints At Nuclear Arms Race

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Retailers Tumble After Trump Says He Is In Favor Of Border Tax, Hints At Nuclear Arms Race Moments ago retailers stumbled on one single Reuters headline: Trump says he supports "some form" of border tax.

As Reuters adds, President Donald Trump on Thursday spoke favorably about an export-boosting border adjustment tax proposal being pushed by Republicans in the U.S. Congress, but did not specifically  endorse it. Trump had previously sent mixed signals on the proposal at the heart of a Republican plan to overhaul the U.S. tax code for the first time in more than 30 years.

"*It could lead to a lot more jobs in the United States*," Trump told Reuters in an interview, using his most positive language to date on the proposal.

Trump had sent conflicting signals about his position on the border adjustability tax in separate media interviews in January, saying in one interview that it was "too complicated" and in another that it was still on the table. 

*"I certainly support a form of tax on the border,"* he told Reuters on Thursday.

*"What is going to happen is companies are going to come back here, they're going to build their factories and they're going to create a lot of jobs and there's no tax*." Trump also said his administration will tackle tax reform legislation after dealing with Obamacare, the health insurance system put in place by his predecessor, President Barack Obama.

Trump's latest U-turn means that the BAT debate, having been largely assumed to be over, following vocal opposition from both senators and the retail lobby, is again back front and center. And since "some form" of border adjustment would force retailers to pass on rising import costs to consumers, it promptly sent the retail sector tumbling to day lows:

In separate comments to Reuters, Trump also appeared to revive the second coming of the nuclear arms race - something he hinted at several months ago - when he said that *he wants to build up the U.S. nuclear arsenal to ensure it is at the "top of the pack," saying the United States has fallen behind in its atomic weapons capacity*. Trump also complained about Russian deployment of a cruise missile in violation of an arms control treaty and said he would raise the issue with Russian President Vladimir Putin when and if they meet.



In his first comments about the U.S. nuclear arsenal since taking office on Jan. 20, Trump said the United States has "fallen behind on nuclear weapon capacity."“I am the first one that would like to see everybody - nobody have nukes, but we’re never going to fall behind any country even if it’s a friendly country, we’re never going to fall behind on nuclear power. 

 

"It would be wonderful, a dream would be that no country would have nukes, but if countries are going to have nukes, we’re going to be at the top of the pack," Trump said. The new strategic arms limitation treaty, known as New START, between the U.S. and Russia requires that by February 5, 2018, both countries must limit their arsenals of strategic nuclear weapons to equal levels for 10 years.

 

The treaty permits both countries to have no more than 800 deployed and non-deployed land-based intercontinental and submarine-launched ballistic missile launchers and heavy bombers equipped to carry nuclear weapons, and contains equal limits on other nuclear weapons.



Analysts have questioned whether Trump wants to abrogate New START or would begin deploying other warheads. In the interview, Trump called New START "a one-sided deal.  "Just another bad deal that the country made, whether it's START, whether it's the Iran deal ... We're going to start making good deals," he said.

The United States is in the midst of a $1 trillion, 30-year modernization of its aging ballistic missile submarines, bombers and land-based missiles, a price tag that most experts say the country cannot afford.



Trump also complained that the Russian deployment of a ground-based cruise missile is in violation of a 1987 treaty that bans land-based American and Russian intermediate-range missiles.

 

"To me it's a big deal," Trump said.  Asked if he would raise the issue with Putin, Trump said he would do so "if and when we meet." He said he had no meetings scheduled as of yet with Putin.

 

Speaking from behind his desk in the Oval Office, Trump  declared that "we're very angry" at North Korea's ballistic missile tests and said accelerating a missile defense system for U.S. allies Japan and South Korea was among many options available.



"There's talks of a lot more than that," Trump said, when asked about the missile defense system. "We'll see what happens. But it's a very dangerous situation, and China can end it very quickly in my opinion. Reported by Zero Hedge 6 hours ago.

Nearly 500,000 Georgia Residents Will Lose Healthcare If Republicans Repeal Obamacare, Join Hip Hop 4 Healthcare At The "Save Affordable Healthcare Rally Atlanta

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Hip Hop 4 Healthcare has joined efforts with Senator Bernie Sanders in order to fight the repeal of The Affordable Healthcare Act, also known as Obamacare. Come join us this Sunday, 1 PM, at 2339 Brannen Rd SE Atlanta, GA 30316 to support ACA because hard working Americans deserve healthcare.

Atlanta, Georgia (PRWEB) February 24, 2017

30 Million People could lose access to affordable healthcare, including nearly 500,000 Georgia residents, if Republicans succeed at repealing The Affordable Healthcare Act. Join us this Sunday February 26th at the 'Save Affordable Healthcare Rally' hosted by Hip Hop 4 Healthcare. From 1 PM to 5 PM we will use our platform to voice our opinion and concerns about the repeal of The Affordable Care Act. (2339 Brannen Rd Southeast, Atlanta, GA 30316)

The impact of what Republicans are planning would be devastating to the working men and women of this country. If they repeal the Affordable Care Act it would cut health care for the poor and privatize it for the aging. Not only will 30 million Americans lose their health insurance, but half of American households have someone with a pre-existing condition which means these people would not qualify for healthcare. If that's not bad enough seniors could see their Medicare premiums rise by as much as 50%, while their benefits are slashed and their prescription drug costs increase an average of $2,000. "Our country must go forward and join the rest of the industrialized world and make health care a right, not a privilege" says Senator Bernie Sanders.

About HH4HC

Hip Hop 4 Healthcare is an organization creating awareness about The Affordable Care Act through hip-hop culture. Our mission is to inform, educate, and enroll eligible Americans in affordable healthcare.

Through partnerships with many notable hip hop culture influences and brands, we’re helping the masses get the coverage they deserve by understanding their options and helping them enroll in compatible health plans.

Individuals and families can compare health insurance products of the leading carriers both on and off the exchange including; Blue Cross Blue Shield, Humana, Kaiser Permanente, etc.
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http://www.hiphop4healthcare.org Reported by PRWeb 20 hours ago.

Poll: GOP should keep money for Medicaid expansion

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A new poll finds that 8 in 10 say lawmakers should preserve federal funding that has allowed states to add coverage for some 11 million low-income people. Many congressional Republicans also want to rewrite the basic financial contract for Medicaid, the federal-state health insurance program covering low-income and disabled people. The survey found strong support across party lines for keeping the Medicaid expansion funding, with 69 percent of Republicans saying lawmakers should continue to provide the money, along with 84 percent of independents and 95 percent of Democrats. Overall, 84 percent of Americans said it's important that any replacement for the Affordable Care Act, or ACA, continue to fund Medicaid expansion. "Medicaid now covers more people than Medicare," said Trish Riley, executive director of the National Academy for State Health Policy, a nonpartisan policy group that advises state officials. Reported by SeattlePI.com 19 hours ago.

Bernie Sanders: GOP Lawmakers Dodging Town Hall Events 'Shouldn't Be In Congress'

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Bernie Sanders: "If you don’t have the guts to face your constituents, then you shouldn’t be" in Congress https://t.co/TySrkSyNcT

— CNN (@CNN) February 24, 2017


Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) has a strong message for lawmakers avoiding meetings with their constituents.

“If you don’t have the guts to face your constituents, then you shouldn’t be in the United States Congress,” Sanders told CNN’s Erin Burnett on Thursday.

Republican lawmakers have been avoiding town hall events after several recent meetings turned contentious. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), and Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah) in particular made headlines for facing heated protests over their promises to repeal Obamacare. Republicans have accused angry attendees of being “paid protesters” rather than legitimately concerned citizens. But Sanders says that’s hogwash.

“If you need police at the meetings, that’s fine, have police at the meetings, have security at the meetings,” Sanders said. “But don’t use that as an excuse to run away from your constituents after you support repealing the Affordable Care Act, throwing 20 million people off of health insurance, doing away with preexisting conditions. If you are going to do all those things, answer the questions that your constituents have.”

Watch his response in the video above.

-- 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 18 hours ago.

Public Opinion and the Passage of Medicare

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The early days of public opinion research captured Americans’ response to the first major efforts by the U.S. government to provide health care to its citizens, an undertaking that saw success in the passage of Medicare in 1965. A review of polls archived at the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research reveals the battle for public support for Medicare.

*Before Kennedy*

Health insurance itself was a relatively new notion in the 1940s, but most Americans liked the idea. A 1944 NORC poll found 92% thought it was a good idea to pay a certain amount each month for insurance to cover any hospital care they might have in the future. But only 34% said they themselves had any insurance against hospital bills, and just 15% against doctors’ bills. Though a 54% majority said they would prefer to have insurance, 38% said they would rather pay medical bills each time. Still, support in this poll for a large-scale government health insurance bill was high; 68% thought it would be a good idea if the Social Security law also provided paying for the doctor and hospital care that people might need in the future.

Among those who opposed expanding Social Security in this way, a plurality of 37% thought it represented too much government interference or might lead to socialism. Overall, however, the public approved of government taking the lead on health care. When asked in a 1945 Gallup poll which they preferred, a mandatory government health plan or an optional plan set up by the medical profession, 53% of respondents chose the former; just a third the latter. After President Truman called for a national health insurance program in November 1945, 59% in a Gallup poll approved of the plan; 25% disapproved. 

Despite public support, the American Medical Association opposed Truman’s plan strongly and loudly. The proposal languished. By 1949, those in a Gallup poll who had heard about the Truman plan were equally divided between supporters (38%) and opponents (38%). When provided descriptions of the president’s plan and an alternative put forth by the A.M.A., only 33% preferred the former. A May Gallup poll the same year found the country divided between 44% who would have Congress pass the government’s compulsory health insurance program which would require wage or salary deduction from all employed people to provide medical and hospital care to them and their families, and 47% who would not. By 1950, a Gallup poll found that, of those who had heard about the Truman plan, only 24% approved, while 61% disapproved. Over the next few years, repeated Gallup polls found majorities opposing a government health insurance plan run by the federal government. A 1953 ORC poll showed just 30% saying the federal government should provide government health insurance for all. Government-supported health insurance seemed to be a non-starter.

*The Kennedy Plan*

Over the fifties, growing numbers of employer-sponsored health care plans greatly increased the proportion of insured Americans. But health care costs for the uninsured remained a serious problem, one President Kennedy was determined to address when he took office. Kennedy believed the key to achieving passage of a health care bill was to focus on the specific problem of covering the elderly. This was a popular position. In May 1961, support for a Social Security tax to pay for old age medical insurance was a solid 68% in a Gallup poll. In a January 1962 ORC poll, 51% of American believed there was a great, urgent need for payment of doctor, hospital, medicine bills of old people. An additional 33% saw some need; only 10% saw no need. Of those who believed there was any need, 52% thought the federal government should meet it; 33% thought state government should deal with it. Very low proportions thought private industry (2%), voluntary agencies (6%), or individuals (6%) should deal with this problem.

But the fight over what would be Medicare had just begun. The A.M.A., along with insurers, vehemently opposed Kennedy’s proposal on the grounds that the president was introducing socialism to America’s medical system. One letter in the Archives of Otolaryngology read:

Before swallowing the attractively flavored bait of hospitalization under social security for the aged, the public should become better informed of the philosophical implications of adopting the principle of medical and hospital services through Social Security, for unquestionably, once accepted, this mechanism is capable of infinite expansion in every direction until it includes the entire population.

A major campaign to influence public opinion was undertaken to prevent such a scenario, much to Kennedy’s frustration. He countered with an unusually aggressive outreach effort of his own, including 33 AFL-CIO rallies. In a May 1962 speech, he argued that a minority of Americans had been unduly alarmed by misrepresentation of the bill, while the majority supported it:

All these arguments were made against social security at the time of Franklin Roosevelt. They are made today. The mail pours in. And at least half of the mail which I receive in the White House, on this issue and others, is wholly misinformed. Last week I got 1,500 letters on a revenue measure―1,494 opposed, and 6 for. And at least half of those letters were completely misinformed about the details of what they wrote.

And why is that so? Because there are so many busy men in Washington who write-some organizations have six, seven, and eight hundred people spreading mail across the country, asking doctors and others to write in and tell your Congressman you’re opposed to it. The mail pours into the White House, into the Congress and Senators’ offices―Congressmen and Senators feel people are opposed to it. Then they read a Gallup Poll which says seventy-five percent of the people are in favor of it, and they say, “What has happened to my mail?

Kennedy’s number was touched with a kiss of blarney; that 68% approval in Gallup’s poll the May before had represented peak support for the initiative. Despite his efforts, public support for expanding Social Security to provide medical benefits weakened over 1962. In March Gallup poll, a 55% majority supported a plan that would be paid by increasing the Social Security tax deducted from pay checks. Thirty-five percent preferred a plan that would let each individual decide whether to join Blue Cross or buy some form of voluntary health insurance. By May, opinion had shifted slightly, with the Social Security approach favored by 48% and private insurance by 41%. In July, just 44% of Americans preferred the Medicare plan; 41% private insurance. With the public split, the bill backed by Kennedy stalled in committee in the House. A revised version amended to a welfare bill was defeated in a July vote in the Senate.

In an ORC poll following the vote, a plurality of 44% of Americans said the bill should have passed, while 37% said Congress did right in not passing it. In respondents’ evaluation of the problems with the bill, no one problem stood out as much more important than the others; substantial proportions considered each of several possible problems to have been serious. The country remained split between changing the government Social Security program to cover medical insurance for older people (43%) or expanding voluntary medical insurance plans (41%).*Johnson’s Success*

Johnson was not put off by Kennedy’s failure and in 1964 looked to use the fallen president’s initiative as a springboard for again attempting to pass an elder care bill. Public approval of the idea of Medicare had rebounded from the lows of two years before. Gallup polls during the 1964 election found approval between 57% to 62% for a compulsory elder medical insurance program financed out of Social Security taxes.

In this somewhat arcane debate over financing of medical care, wording mattered. In a February 1965 Harris poll, 62% favored President Johnson’s program of medical care for the aged under Social Security. But, in a separate question, 56% said they favored the AMA plan in which everyone who could afford it would be covered by private health insurance and those who couldn’t would be covered under a government health plan. As is often the case with health policy, the public seemed more certain that something ought to be done than what exactly that something should be.

The Medicare bill was successfully passed at last in July 1965. A Harris poll in August found that 82% approved. When asked which of ten bills passed by the last Congress was the most important to them personally, a plurality of 28% chose Medicare. By 1967, only 8% of the country in a Harris poll wanted Medicare to be cut back, 51% wanted it to stay as it was, and 35% expanded. The road to acceptance had been long and hard, but the American public was firmly behind the new program. 

-- 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 10 hours ago.

HUFFPOLLSTER: Obamacare Hits Highest Favorability Since 2010

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Opinions of the Affordable Care Act have improved notably in recent months. Americans are split over how much President Donald Trump has accomplished in office. And many of Trump’s supporters consider the media their enemy. This is HuffPollster for Friday, February 24, 2017.

*SUPPORT FOR THE ACA RISES* - Kaiser Family Foundation: “As President Trump and Congress weigh repealing the Affordable Care Act, the latest Kaiser Health Tracking Poll finds more Americans viewing the law favorably than unfavorably (48% compared to 42%). *This is the highest level of favorability measured in more than 60 Kaiser Health Tracking Polls conducted since 2010. *The shift largely reflects more favorable views among independents, who now are more likely to view the law favorably (50%) than unfavorably (39%). Most Democrats (73%) continue to view the law favorably while most Republicans (74%) view it unfavorably. In spite of these more favorable views, the public remains divided along partisan lines on whether Congress should (47%) or should not (48%) repeal the law. At the same time, more of those who favor repeal want lawmakers to wait until the details of a replacement plan are known (28% overall) than want Congress to repeal immediately and work out the replacement’s details later (18% overall).” [KFF, full results]*Other polls show a similar trend* - HuffPost Pollster’s aggregate now puts support for the health law at nearly 48 percent, the highest it’s scored since early 2009. Opinions of the ACA, which were largely negative ever since its passage in 2010, have risen above water since late last November, just after the presidential election, with the dozen most recent polls to ask about it all finding support outstripping opposition. [HuffPost Pollster chart]
*Many aspects of the ACA are more popular than the law itself* - HuffPollster, on a new Morning Consult/Politico survey: “Even among those who voted for President Donald Trump, there is widespread support for many of the health care law’s individual provisions. Eighty-one percent of Trump voters said Obamacare should be partially or completely repealed. But the majority said they would keep all the specific elements highlighted except ‘requiring health insurance companies to cover prescription birth control,’ ‘removing lifetime and annual limits on the amount of money health insurance companies can pay out for an individual’s care,’ and requiring nearly all Americans to have insurance.” [HuffPost]

*AMERICANS SPLIT OVER HOW MUCH TRUMP HAS ACCOMPLISHED* - HuffPollster: “Americans are divided in how much they think Donald Trump has accomplished in the first weeks of his presidency, a new HuffPost/YouGov survey finds, even as a plurality say they think he’s moved quickly to make changes in policy. *Forty-three percent say he’s accomplished a good amount or a great deal since taking office, and another 43 percent say he’s accomplished not very much, or that he’s accomplished little or nothing*….A 46 percent plurality say Trump has made policy changes too quickly since becoming president, while 30 percent say he’s been moving at the right speed, and 10 percent that he hasn’t been moving quickly enough.”  [HuffPost]

*More on Trump’s job performance:*

-”Despite a first month characterized as ‘a continual series of crises,’ Donald Trump’s presidential job approval has been mostly stable in recent weeks.” [SurveyMonkey’s Mark Blumenthal for HuffPost]

 -”’President Donald Trump’s popularity is sinking like a rock,’ said Tim Malloy, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Poll….’This is a terrible survey one month in.’” [Quinnipiac]

 -”Nearly two-thirds of Americans, divided sharply along party lines, are worried that the United States will become engaged in a major war in the next four years.” [NBC]

 -”Three in ten (30%) Americans say Trump should be impeached and removed from office, while nearly two-thirds (65%) disagree. Notably, a similar number of Americans supported the impeachment of Barack Obama (29%) and George W. Bush (30%), although at a much later date in their presidencies.” [PRRI]

*HERE’S WHAT PARTISANS WANT FROM THEIR LEADERS IN CONGRESS *- Pew Research: “As President Trump prepares for his address next week to a joint session of Congress, Republicans say they are more inclined to trust the president, rather than GOP congressional leaders, if the two sides disagree. For their part, Democrats are far more concerned that congressional Democrats will not do enough,  rather than go too far, to oppose Trump….*Job approval for Republican congressional leaders has increased sharply – from 19% to 34% – since September 2015. * In contrast, there has been little change in Democratic leaders’ job ratings (34% then, 37% now). The rise in approval of GOP leaders is largely attributable to a turnaround among Republicans: 68% approve of GOP leaders’ performance now; only 26% did so two years ago.” [Pew, more on when Congress uses partisan language and how that study was conducted]

*MOST TRUMP VOTERS CALL THE MEDIA THEIR ENEMY* - HuffPollster: “A narrow majority of President Donald Trump’s supporters agree with him that the media is their enemy, a new HuffPost/YouGov survey finds, although most Americans overall don’t feel similarly….*Most Trump voters, 51 percent, say the media is an enemy to people like them, according to the poll, with 36 percent considering the media unfriendly, and just 5 percent saying it’s friendly or an ally.* Overall, 22 percent of Americans consider the media an enemy to people like them, with 19 percent saying it’s unfriendly, 21 percent that it’s friendly, and 14 percent that it’s an ally. That rating scale ― ally, friendly, unfriendly, enemy ― is one YouGov more often uses to measure Americans’ views of foreign countries rather than the Fourth Estate….Many Americans are also comfortable applying the term ‘enemy’ to describe their political opponents. Four in 10 Democrats, for instance, say they consider the GOP an enemy to people like them, and 56 percent that they consider Trump an enemy. Across the aisle, 56 percent of Republicans say that the Democratic Party is an enemy to people like them.” [HuffPost]

*Do voters trust the media more than Trump? *- Danielle Kurtzleben: “A new poll from Quinnipiac University shows that 52 percent of registered voters said they trust the news media more than Trump to tell them ‘the truth about important issues.’ Only 37 percent say they choose Trump….But just five days ago there was another headline: ‘Poll: Trump administration edges media in voter trust.’ That came from a Fox News poll finding that the 45 percent of people trust the Trump administration more than news reporters to ‘tell the public the truth.’ So is one poll right and one poll wrong?...One big bottom line here is that focusing on any one poll can easily be misleading….*Polling **trends** give greater context and tell more of a story about what’s happening and why. *Should Fox News and Quinnipiac continue to poll on these questions, the movement as major news events happen will be more meaningful, showing what sways people’s opinions and why. In addition, focusing too much on one poll means missing out on a bigger picture. In this case, it’s that both Trump and the media have big, big trust problems.” [NPR]

*MANY YOUNG AMERICANS ARE TURNING OUT IN PROTEST *- Sarah Ruiz-Grossman: “Millennials ages 18 to 30 are more likely to have gone to a protest since the election than any other age group, according to a HuffPost/YouGov poll conducted from Feb. 1 to Feb. 3. Millennials are also more likely than older groups to think protesting is an effective form of political action….*Young people also rank protest as one of the two most effective political actions one can take*, alongside calling or writing their representatives. Older age groups rank protests’ effectiveness below other forms of political actions that rely on more traditional, institutional channels, such as calling representatives or signing petitions.”  [HuffPost]

*POLLSTERS’ ASSOCIATION ISSUES STATEMENT ON ‘FRUGGING’ - *The American Association for Public Opinion Research: “A recent Web survey from the Trump/Pence campaign (Mainstream Media Accountability Survey) has been circulated that asks for donations at the conclusion of the survey. *The practice of fundraising under the guise of a survey (frugging) is neither new nor unique to a single candidate or political party.* It is strongly condemned by AAPOR, together with the Research Industry Coalition and the National Council on Public Polls (Condemned Survey Practices), along with other practices such as ‘push-polling’ that attempt to change rather than measure people’s opinions.” [AAPOR]

*HUFFPOLLSTER VIA EMAIL! *- You can receive this daily update every weekday morning via email! Just click here, enter your email address, 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:

 -Vladimir Putin’s favorability rating rises 8 points, a shift fueled largely by Republicans. [Gallup]

 -Democrats turn against the Keystone XL pipeline. [Pew]

-Geoffrey Skelley and Kyle Kondik sketch out how the 2018 midterms will affect redistricting in 2020. [Sabato’s Crystal Ball]

-Nate Cohn argues that Democrats’ best path to retaking the House in 2018 lies through the Sun Belt. [NYT]

-Kevin Quealy analyzes a study showing readers tend to avoid stories that contradict their beliefs. [NYT]

-Stephen Wolf (D) notes that Donald Trump won easily in most congressional Republicans’ House districts. [Daily Kos]

-Philip Bump charts how Donald Trump spent his first month in office. [WashPost]

-Dan Hirschman and Daniel Laurison discuss a potentially-misleading pie chart of last year’s election results. [Scatterplot]

-Claire Cain Miller and Kevin Quealy discuss a new survey of political scientists rating how democracy is doing in America. [NYT]

-Six in 10 Americans can’t name a best picture nominee for the Oscars. [THR]

-- 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.

UPS airplane mechanics want to walk away from labor negotiations

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Unionized mechanics negotiating a labor deal with United Parcel Service Inc. are ready to walk away from the table. The negotiations, which have been ongoing for more than three years, are being mediated by the National Mediation Board— a federal agency. The mechanics, represented by the Teamsters Local 2727, asked the board to release them from negotiations earlier this week. The two sides have reached an impasse on health insurance — something we've been writing about for months now. In a… Reported by bizjournals 11 hours ago.
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