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Jimmy Kimmel Responds to Media Calling Him an ‘Out of Touch Hollywood Elitist Creep’ (Video)

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Jimmy Kimmel Responds to Media Calling Him an ‘Out of Touch Hollywood Elitist Creep’ (Video) Jimmy Kimmel was back on ABC on Monday night. And while he had a lot to be happy about, the state of health care in America wasn’t one of those things, nor were all the reactions in the media to his opinion on the matter.

His newborn son, Billy, is on the road to recovery after emergency heart surgery, but he came under fire in some circles for wading into politics while sharing his touching personal story.

“One week ago tonight, I made an emotional speech — that was seen by millions — and as a result of my powerful words, Republicans in Congress had second thoughts about repeal and replace, they realized that what is right is right,” Kimmel said, “and I saved health insurance in America!”

*Also Read:* Tearful Jimmy Kimmel Reveals Newborn Son Had Open Heart Surgery (Video)

Wait, not so fast …

“Oh, I didn’t? They voted against it anyway?” he continued. “I really need to pay more attention to the news.”

By a slim margin, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the GOP plan to replace Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act last Thursday. The imminent repeal of the ACA, known as Obamacare, sparked outcry across the country, especially among those concerned about the treatment of Americans with “pre-existing conditions” who may be unable to obtain affordable health insurance under the new bill.

While Kimmel thanked everyone for the outpouring of support for Billy and his family, he also revealed that there were some “not-so-nice things” said online too, including from some members of the media.

*Also Read:* Senator Who Called for 'Jimmy Kimmel Test' to Appear on His Show

“This is from the New York Post: ‘Jimmy Kimmel’s obscene lies about kids and medical care,'” he read. “This is from something called the Washington Times: ‘Shut up, Jimmy Kimmel, you elitist creep.'”

“I can’t even count the number of times I’ve been called an ‘out-of-touch Hollywood elitist creep’ this week, which, I have to say, I kind of appreciate because when I was a kid, we had to drink powdered milk because we couldn’t afford the liquid variety,” he revealed.

“My father, on the rare occasion we took a family trip, would hide our dog in the car and then smuggle it into the motel room to avoid paying a two dollar pet fee. So after that, my dream was to become an ‘out-of-touch Hollywood elitist’ and I guess it came true.”

Kimmel then got serious and focused on the real issue in hand, saying: “Anyway, I’d like to apologize for saying that children in America should have health care. That was insensitive, it was offensive and I hope you can find it in your heart to forgive me.”

*Also Read:* Kristen Bell Guest Hosts for Jimmy Kimmel: 'I Legitimately Hate Matt Damon' (Video)

ABC

He then went on appeal directly to one of his guests Monday night,  Sen. Bill Cassidy (above), a physician and and Republican representing the state of Louisiana.

“So now the health care bill moves from the House to the Senate, where hopefully, some kind of common sense will prevail,” Kimmel said.

“One Senator — Bill Cassidy from Louisiana, who is a Republican — came up with a barometer for the new health care bill, that I happen to like a lot.

*Also Read:* Patton Oswalt Rips Tea Party Radio Host For Criticizing Jimmy Kimmel's Tearful Statement

The gastroenterologist is married to a retired surgeon, Kimmel explained, and he co-founded the Greater Baton Rouge Community Clinic, “which provides free dental and health care to the working uninsured. So obviously, this is someone who cares about people’s health.”

Cassidy coined the phrase “the Kimmel test” last week as part of his argument for handling pre-existing conditions in health care reform.

“Will a child born with congenital heart disease be able to get everything she or he would need in the first year of life?” he asked during an interview with CNN following Kimmel’s tearful plea when he informed viewer’s of Billy’s surgery.



Cassidy-Collins plan passes the #KimmelTest. Maintains coverage, protections for preexisting conditions, BUT in a fiscally conservative way.

— Bill Cassidy (@BillCassidy) May 8, 2017



*Related stories from TheWrap:*

Senator Who Called for 'Jimmy Kimmel Test' to Appear on His Show

Health Care's New Litmus: Passing the 'Jimmy Kimmel Test' (Video)

Jimmy Kimmel Thanks Fans With Family Photo After Revealing His Newborn Son's Heart Surgery

Tearful Jimmy Kimmel Reveals Newborn Son Had Open Heart Surgery (Video) Reported by The Wrap 14 hours ago.

Frontrunning: May 9

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· Yates warned Trump over Flynn blackmail fears (Reuters)
· Former Trump security aide was Russia blackmail risk: ex-U.S. official (Reuters)
· Visiting the White House Can Boost Your Stock Price. So Who’s Visiting Trump? (BBG)
· Investors Lighten Up on U.S. Stocks, Betting on Europe (WSJ)
· Oil steadies but rattled by concern about OPEC's clout (Reuters)
· GOP Confronts Backlash Over Health Bill (WSJ)
· Macron’s Next Test: Winning Control of France’s Parliament (WSJ)
· French ex-prime minister Valls offers to back Macron in June elections (Reuters)
· Buying Spree Brings Attention to Opaque Chinese Company (NYT)
· Iron Ore Sags Again as Forced-Sale Speculation Gathers Momentum (BBG)
· Elliott Takes Akzo Nobel to Court to Oust Chairman in PPG Bid Battle (WSJ)
· Russia showcases Arctic hardware in Red Square military parade (Reuters)
· SEC Probes Rental Home Values Backing Private-Equity Bond Deals (BBG)
· Chicago Police Warn Officers of Assault-Style Weapons Threat (WSJ)
· Racist soldier's militant double life shocks Germany (Reuters)
· Qatar says Syria 'de-escalation' plan not an alternative to political transition (Reuters)
· Jakarta's Christian governor jailed for blasphemy against Islam (Reuters)
· Amazon Plans to Unveil New Echo (WSJ)
· Venezuelans Accused of Rebellion Are Hauled Into Military Court (BBG)
· Turks in Germany won't be allowed to vote on death penalty: Merkel (Reuters)
· Germany detains third man suspected of planning 'extremist' attack (Reuters)
· Refugee Turned Fintech Chief Aims to Upend a $444 Billion Market (BBG)

 

*Overnight Media Digest*

WSJ

- Quebec's big pension fund is opposing the re-election of Bombardier Inc executive chairman Pierre Beaudoin, signaling a new level of investor activism at the ailing aerospace company controlled for decades by Beaudoin's family. on.wsj.com/2pWooqD

- PTC Therapeutics Inc said Monday it would receive a net price of $35,000 annually per patient for Emflaza, the muscular dystrophy drug it acquired from Marathon Pharmaceuticals LLC last month. on.wsj.com/2pWsE9A

- Facebook Inc, criticized for not doing enough to curb misinformation during last year's U.S. presidential race, is trying to show it is making a more-concerted effort in the UK ahead of next month's general election. on.wsj.com/2pWrqLf

- Coach Inc agreed to acquire rival Kate Spade & Co for $2.4 billion, as the handbag and accessories maker seeks to tap younger consumers amid slower growth in the handbag market. on.wsj.com/2pWrvi1

- Microsoft Corp is hoping to challenge Amazon.com Inc's Echo smart speaker for a spot on the kitchen counter with a device from Samsung Electronics Co that can make phone calls. on.wsj.com/2pWsHlw

- Goldman Sachs Group Inc promoted deal maker Gregg Lemkau and financing executive Marc Nachmann to join John Waldron as co-heads of the investment-banking division, according to people familiar with the matter. on.wsj.com/2pWGQ29

 

FT

Sinclair Broadcast Group Inc, the biggest U.S. local television station owner, said on Monday it would buy Tribune Media Co, one of the largest U.S. television station operators, for about $3.9 billion.

Luxury handbag maker Coach Inc said it would buy Kate Spade & Co for $2.4 billion.

ChemChina and Sinochem are planning to merge next year, according to several senior bankers in Asia. The merger will create the world's largest chemicals group with $100 billion of revenues.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc reshuffled the leadership of its investment banking arm, a shake-up touched off by the departure to Washington last year of Gary Cohn.

 

NYT

- Facebook published a series of advertisements in British newspapers, advising millions of users in the country on how to spot misinformation online. nyti.ms/2pWrryN

- Sinclair, the largest owner of local television stations in the United States, said it agreed to buy Tribune Media for $3.9 billion, beating other suitors including Nexstar and 21st Century Fox. nyti.ms/2pWaAMS

- Nearly five years after the collapse of Dewey & LeBoeuf, a jury in Manhattan convicted the law firm's former CFO Joel Sanders, on three criminal counts on what prosecutors said was a scheme to hide the firm's failing finances from financial backers. nyti.ms/2pWwdMS

- Express Scripts, one of the biggest pharmacy benefit managers in the drug world, said it would begin offering a group of frequently used drugs for a lower price to people without health insurance, or to those in plans with high deductibles that made their medications unaffordable. nyti.ms/2pWtIu6

 

Britain

The Times

The Co-operative Bank Plc          is set to admit that a sale of its business has faltered, increasing the chances that its American hedge fund owners will have to plough more capital into the bank. (bit.ly/2pt6bhJ)   

Premier Foods Plc         has struck a new five-year licensing deal to make Cadbury cakes and desserts in a coup for the British food manufacturer, which is battling to improve its performance. (bit.ly/2qL4pMS)

The Guardian

Slower economic growth and quickening inflation present Bank of England policymakers with a delicate balancing act when they  meet this week to set interest rates and agree new forecasts for the UK as it heads toward an election and Brexit talks. (bit.ly/2pc0w3A)

British Gas owner Centrica Plc         has warned that the Conservative party's plans to cap energy bills could push up average prices, as the company haemorrhaged customers at a rate that could see it lose a million by year-end. (bit.ly/2pZPonm)

The Telegraph

Motor financing software firm Alfa Financial Software, which focuses on the multitrillion-dollar asset finance industry, plans to float on the premium segment of the London Stock Exchange next month. Alfa is eyeing stock market float that is expected to value it at more than 800 million pounds ($1.03 billion). (bit.ly/2pWqd7q)

Rolls-Royce Holdings Plc        has partnered with Turkish industrial group Kale Group with the aim of building engines for the country's new domestically-built fighter jet. (bit.ly/2poEIg0)

Sky News

High street bank Barclays Plc          is to give its customers more control over their debit cards in an effort to crackdown on fraud. New features set to be rolled out will allow consumers to introduce controls, including remotely lowering their withdrawal limits at ATMs and turning off allowances for online purchases, to help limit losses if card details are stolen. (bit.ly/2qUn7ik)

Telecoms watchdog Ofcom has said it is planning a review of 118 enquiry numbers after the cost of calls to the directory lines spiralled over the last 15 years. (bit.ly/2pVj9aI)

The Independent

The UK's political parties must commit to supporting entrepreneurs in their election manifestos in light of fears over a potential black hole in post-Brexit funding for startups, a leading business group has warned. (ind.pn/2ps0cd0)

The equity crowdfunding platform Seedrs is to launch a secondary market early this summer in a bid to improve liquidity for its investors and encourage more individuals to pour cash into early-stage companies. (ind.pn/2qKBmJc)

  Reported by Zero Hedge 20 hours ago.

2017 Qualis Health Idaho Quality Award Winners Announced

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Qualis Health Recognizes Five Idaho Organizations for Improvements in Healthcare

Boise, Idaho (PRWEB) May 09, 2017

Qualis Health, one of the nation's leading population health management organizations, has recognized five healthcare organizations from across the state of Idaho for their achievements in improving healthcare quality and outcomes. The award recipients were recognized during a ceremony at the Idaho Patient Safety and Quality Improvement Conference on May 4 in Boise, Idaho. Kelly McGrath, MD, MS, Qualis Health Idaho Medical Director, presented the awards.

Dr. McGrath presented a special award to Richard Armstrong, director of the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare since 2006, for exemplary contribution to healthcare quality in Idaho.

“Our changing healthcare landscape requires increasingly vigorous efforts to improve healthcare delivery and health outcomes in Idaho and across the nation. The Qualis Health Idaho Quality Awards celebrate organizations that have transformed healthcare delivery for their communities – making a real difference for their patients and their families,” said Jonathan Sugarman, MD, MPH, President and CEO of Qualis Health. “Their achievements exemplify progress towards critical aims for healthcare: better quality of care at a lower cost.”

The 2017 Quality Awards of Excellence in Healthcare Quality are awarded to the following organizations:·     Award of Excellence: Hospital – Madison Memorial Hospital, Rexburg, for their project “Quality-Driven Medication Reconciliation”
·     Award of Excellence: Hospital – Kootenai Health, Coeur d’Alene, for their project “Colorectal Enhanced Recovery Program”
·     Award of Excellence: Post-acute care – Kindred Nursing and Rehabilitation—Mountain Valley, Kellogg, for their project “Improving Resident Quality of Life by Decreasing Moderate-to-Severe Pain in Long-Term Care”
·     Award of Excellence: Critical access hospital – Bonner General Health, Sandpoint, for their project “Code Stork”
·     Award of Excellence: Outpatient setting – Terry Reilly Health Services, Nampa, for their project “Implementing Medication-Assisted Therapy”

Qualis Health recognized Richard “Dick” Armstrong with a special award for his leadership of the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare, the state’s largest agency, for the past 11 years. He was appointed in 2006 after retiring from a long career at Blue Cross of Idaho, expecting to stay on temporarily for 6-7 months. He has served as executive and administrative head of the department, which employs more than 2,800 people and has an annual budget of $2.88 billion to serve the state’s most vulnerable citizens - children, people with mental illnesses, and the elderly. He has been instrumental in streamlining the department’s customer service and business processes and influential in establishing a state-based health insurance exchange.

Director Armstrong has demonstrated a longstanding commitment to population health. Under his leadership, Idaho was one of a few states to receive a multi-year grant from the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation to develop the State Healthcare Innovation Plan (SHIP) to the Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH) model in which clinics seek to improve the quality and effectiveness of the care and meet patients’ unique needs and preferences. The PCMH model of care results in improved health outcomes, patient and provider experience, and cost of care.
“This is an amazing recognition,” said Mr. Armstrong in accepting the award. “I'm truly humbled by it, especially coming from a group such as yours that does wonderful work every day to improve the life of Idaho citizens.”

# # #

About Qualis Health

Qualis Health is one of the nation’s leading population health management organizations, and a leader in improving care delivery and patient outcomes, working with clients throughout the public and private sectors to advance the quality, efficiency and value of healthcare for millions of Americans every day. In Idaho, Qualis Health serves as the Quality Innovation Network – Quality Improvement Organization (QIO) and the Quality Payment Program – Small and Underserved/Rural Support (QPP-SURS) contractor for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

For more information, visit http://www.QualisHealth.org. Reported by PRWeb 20 hours ago.

US Has a Very Sickly Health Insurance System

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For now, we can say goodbye to Obamacare. Let's hope this isn't too little too late. Reported by Newsmax 14 hours ago.

Ask Brianna: How do we budget with a surprise pregnancy?

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According to the Guttmacher Institute, 27 percent of U.S. pregnancies happen sooner — even years sooner — than the mother had planned, so you're not the only one suddenly trying to figure out how to feed and house a tiny human. Follow this crash course in pre-baby money management so you'll be (slightly more) ready for the brave new world of parenthood. In the short term, having available cash is more important than saving for your child's college education, says Matt Becker, a certified financial planner and founder of Mom and Dad Money. Saving now will help prevent credit card debt later, and you can work toward other goals once your budget has stabilized. If you have health insurance, confirm which hospitals, doctors and tests are covered, and how many days in the hospital your insurer will pay for. Hospitals charged a median amount of $17,184 for childbirth stays in 2014, according to a NerdWallet analysis of U.S. Department of Health and Human Services data. Uninsured expectant mothers below certain income thresholds may qualify for Medicaid , which covers childbirth and maternity care. Or you may be able to join your parents' health insurance plan if you're under 26. Just 12 percent of U.S. employees work at private companies that offer paid family leave, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. Reported by SeattlePI.com 15 hours ago.

Potential impacts to employer-based health insurance under GOP House bill

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How might the American Health Care Act impact health insurance coverage for those who get insurance their their employers? Reported by CBS News 12 hours ago.

Maricann looks to replicate Canada success in newly legal German cannabis market

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Anyone looking for a model company in the medical cannabis sector would be well advised to consider Maricann Group Inc (CSE:MARI), as thus far it seems to have done everything right. With a green ethos that drives both product development and corporate efficiency efforts, Maricann succeeded in becoming one of the first companies in Canada approved to cultivate and sell medical cannabis. Not content with being an early mover in just its home market, Maricann was quick to stake its claim in another jurisdiction largely overlooked by its peers: Germany. On the verge of turning a profit The combination has the company predicting profitability by the second quarter of 2018. Its top line is off to a good start, with sales currently running at $450,000 per month. And having just announced a $42.5mln non-dilutive stream financing that will fully fund its German plans, Maricann is positioned to really put its foot on the accelerator. The strategic mix of Canadian and European markets notwithstanding, Maricann chief executive officer Ben Ward sees the company’s key point of differentiation being technology for extraction and product formulation. “We have locked up two groups with preparative chromatography expertise in cannabis and this means we have the only ability in the industry to get all the cannabinoids, terpenes and flavonoids,” says Ward. “To formulate the plant, you first have to be able to deconstruct it to make sure you get the active pharmaceutical ingredients.” Ward explains that there are 500 terpenes – an organic compound found in numerous plant-based products – specific to the cannabis plant, and that companies looking only at cannabinoids or THC are missing much of what cannabis has to offer. “We are focusing on whole-plant medicine, which is done by extracting all of the different isolates.” This approach to the industry reflects the direction set for the company early on by founder Dr Eric Silver. An assistant professor and clinical teacher in the Department of Family and Community Medicine at the University of Toronto, Dr Silver knew first-hand the benefits that alternative medicine employing cannabis could have on patients. The next step was to gather colleagues from the industry with capital and know-how and begin the search for a facility to purchase. Eventually, the team settled on the Langton facility, which had been operating under the MMAR (Marihuana Medical Access Regulations) regime established in 2001. The facility was approved under the more robust MMPR (Marihuana for Medical Purposes Regulations) in March 2014, with a license to sell product grown at the facility arriving in December of the same year. A green ethos going hand-in-hand with the commercial imperative A brief analysis of the facility indicates Maricann is committed both to being a custodian of its environment and running its business with an eye on costs. Langton has its own co-generation plant to help with electricity needs and there is even a natural gas well on the property to provide some of the fuel. Other efforts include equipment to capture rainwater for use in the fertigation process. These and other efforts lead the company to believe that it is among the most competitive producers on the Canadian landscape, with per-gram costs estimated at just $1.37. That should translate into healthy margins that really make their presence known as sales continue to ramp up. “Our revenue generating capacity right now is restricted only by our footprint of 34,000 square feet,” says Ward. “We are building a 216,000 square foot facility and that will be able to produce another 20,000 kg of dry flower starting in the first quarter of 2018.” As far as near-term trends are concerned, Ward is in the camp of industry executives who believe smoking cannabis will give way to ingestion in other forms over time. “We think users will come to prefer extract-based products, which is the experience in more mature markets such as Colorado and California,” Ward notes. “Once people can access a product with a consistent extract in a dose they are used to, they will opt for that. We think that is when the real adoption will take place.” Maricann is ready with its own line of gel caps, which it developed in partnership with another company, to help that trend along. First we conquer Canada, then we take Berlin The Canadian operations are clearly well on their way to developing serious momentum, and the plan is to create the same success in the German market. It was only in January of this year that Germany’s lower house of parliament, the Bundestag, voted to legalize medical cannabis. The drug will be available from pharmacies to patients with a prescription, and importantly for companies serving the market it looks like it will be covered by German health insurance. “I think we will see almost a carbon copy of the Health Canada program as far as cultivation and regulations are concerned. The difference will be in distribution,” posits Ward. “It won’t be supplied directly to patients but through major pharmaceutical companies or wholesalers, or distribution through pharmacies. Germany’s market will likely remain medical for a long time, but from an ease of access standpoint I think it will move ahead of Canada because of the German population’s propensity to seek alternative therapies.” Ward explains that companies hoping to grow cannabis in Germany need to possess over three years of cultivation experience, a benchmark that the team at Maricann is able to meet. The company is currently preparing an initial 150,000 square feet of space in a facility that it has the option to purchase. “All we have to do is install the tables, the fertigation system and the lights and we will be operational,” says Ward. “We are moving through the licensing process there right now.” Ward comments that the team is happy working in jurisdictions where legalization is uniform on a federal level, contrasting the environments in Canada and Germany to that in the United States, where cannabis is illegal federally but many states have passed laws to make it legal. “Much of the rest of the world, and especially western Europe, is moving forward with legalization in some way,” observes Ward. “There is a much larger population that Canadian companies can export our experience to, and in doing so create best in class companies that compete globally. We might only be talking five or six years, but that is a lifetime of experience in the cannabis sector. I see Canadian companies moving into other markets and helping governments with regulatory issues so that their citizens can look forward to safe, reliable access to high-quality cannabis.” Reported by Proactive Investors 11 hours ago.

Alison’s story: How $750,000 in drug ‘treatment’ destroyed her life

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The 23-year-old was recruited from one sober home to another as drug treatment facilities systematically overcharged her mother’s health insurance for unnecessary, expensive tests. Part 1 of 2. Reported by Christian Science Monitor 11 hours ago.

Top GOP senator: 'The public wants every dime they can be given' on healthcare

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Top GOP senator: 'The public wants every dime they can be given' on healthcare Sen. Orrin Hatch on Tuesday suggested public sentiment would make the GOP's healthcare fight more complicated because too many people are "on the dole" and won't want to give up benefits provided by the Affordable Care Act.

Hatch, the chair of the Senate Finance Committee, was asked by a reporter if public opposition to the GOP healthcare plan would impact the Senate's decision-making on its version of the bill.

"The public wants every dime they can be given. I mean face it, once you get them on the dole they're going to take every dime they can," Hatch told reporters leaving a healthcare planning meeting. "We've got to find some way of getting things under control or this country in the near future is going to be gone."

The American Health Care Act, which passed the House last week, has been shown to be generally unpopular among Americans. A HuffPost/YouGov poll released on Monday showed 31% of Americans support the AHCA, while 44% oppose it.

One of the sticking points that has emerged is funding for Obamacare's Medicaid expansion. The AHCA would shift the current funding structure to a per-capita block grant, which the Congressional Budget Office estimates would cut more than $800 billion in funding for the program that provides low-income Americans with health insurance.

Hatch, as head of the Senate Finance Committee, has purview over aspects of Medicaid.

Republicans have been critical of the Medicaid expansion, saying it adds to the funding burden of the federal government.

Other provisions of the Affordable Care Act, such as tax credits to help American pay for insurance, have been criticized by conservatives as new entitlement programs.

Senate Republicans have so far convened a working group to build their own version of a healthcare bill, but have not laid out a time table for its completion.

Hatch's office did not immediately return a request for comment.

*SEE ALSO: PAUL RYAN: The Senate should take 'a month or 2' to pass the GOP healthcare bill*

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Watch a Trump surrogate get shut down after calling Trump the 'Martin Luther King of healthcare' Reported by Business Insider 10 hours ago.

Sen. Orrin Hatch on Healthcare: 'The Public Wants Every Dime'

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Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch is coming under fire after he made comments Tuesday that seemed to criticize Americans who have health insurance under the Obamacare law. Reported by Newsmax 8 hours ago.

Senate Republicans Swear Women Aren't Being Excluded From Health Care Talks

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WASHINGTON ― Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) on Tuesday downplayed reports that a 13-member group working on health care legislation includes no women.

“There is no particular working group,” McConnell told reporters as the Senate group began discussing changes to the House Trumpcare bill. “There are groups meeting.”

Last week, the House passed legislation to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act before rushing out the door for a week-long recess. The hurriedly drafted bill barely made it through the lower chamber, and is likely to be revised in the Senate. 

Some senators want changes in the health insurance tax credits portion of the bill, which raises costs for lower-income and elderly Americans. Others, like Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, are wary of the restriction on Medicaid funding to family planning provider Planned Parenthood. 


I just want to make sure we have some women on it, @lisamurkowski says of Senate 13 men/no women health care group #AHCA

— lesley clark (@lesleyclark) May 9, 2017



Some reporting from WH that Senate has added a woman to their health care group. Per McConnell spokesman, they have not.

— Tarini Parti (@tparti) May 9, 2017



Scott on healthcare working group make-up: "It would have been good to have a diversity there from a gender perspective."

— Emma Dumain (@Emma_Dumain) May 9, 2017


McConnell, at the start of his weekly press conference, quickly dismissed the idea that women didn’t have a seat at the table. Despite the “chatter” about meetings, McConnell said, the ones that count are weekly lunches Republican senators hold from Tuesday through Thursday. 

“The working group counts as all 52 of us, and we’re having extensive meetings,” McConnell told reporters, referring to the entire Senate population of Republicans. “Nobody is being excluded based upon gender.

“You need to write about what’s actually happening,” he continued. “We are having a discussion about real issues. Everybody is at the table.”

McConnell said he’s confident Republicans will be able to work out their differences. At least 50 GOP senators will have to support the bill for passage.

When the 13-man group met on Tuesday, Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) stopped in to discuss Medicaid, even though she’s not a member of the core group.

Democrats seized on the poor optics. 

“If you look at the House bill, it is so discriminatory against women,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said. “And to not have women in the smaller group that we know is making many of the real decisions is a very, very bad thing. They’re more than half the population. It not only sends a bad signal, but will produce a bad result.”

Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) said health coverage women need in order to be “economically secure” won’t come up if they aren’t in the room.

“We know it makes a difference when women are in the room, and we know it makes a difference when women aren’t in the room on what is brought up, how it’s seen, and how it’s put together,” Murray said. “And without women in that working group, I can tell you right now it’s not going to address the issues that women look at when they do health care.”  

-- 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.

Yes, Americans die earlier without health insurance

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WASHINGTON — Do people die because they lack health insurance? Rep. Raul Labrador, R-Idaho, found himself in a pickle — and in monologue by late night talk-show host Jimmy Kimmel — when he suggested they don’t. He later elaborated that he was making the point that no one would “die in th... Reported by Raw Story 7 hours ago.

Can California Go Single-Payer?

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AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli

Supporters of single-payer health care march to the California State Capitol in Sacramento. 

Capital & Main is an award-winning publication that reports from California on economic, political and social issues. The American Prospect is co-publishing this piece.

In February, California state Senators Toni Atkins and Ricardo Lara introduced Senate Bill 562, the Healthy California Act, a one-page law declaring “the intent of the Legislature to ... establish a comprehensive universal single-payer health care coverage program and a health care cost control system for the benefit of all residents of the state.” But perhaps most significantly for its political fate, the bill effectively banishes insurance companies from operating in the state, ensuring that this wealthy industry will do all in its power to kill single-payer in California—as it has successfully twice before.

Announced as Congressional Republicans were strategizing to repeal and replace the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, SB 562 is a clear expression of Sacramento’s mission to stake out a different path on policy from that being forged by the right-wing administration and Congress that Americans sent to Washington in November. (The Atkins-Lara bill is currently headed to the Senate's Appropriations Committee.)

Although all other members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, the world’s wealthiest 35 democracies, have some form of single-payer, national health insurance providing universal coverage, that policy was expressly omitted from the options states could offer to consumers through the insurance exchanges they set up under ACA.

But the federal law gave states an opening: Starting this year, it said, any state would be free to choose another way if it could come up with a health-care system with equivalent or better benefits. Many who have studied the issue and compared statistics internationally believe single-payer is the best way to insure a large population, offering better health outcomes at lower costs overall. Under single-payer everyone is covered—unlike Obamacare, or the Republican bill that would replace it, or the system that preceded it. It encourages people to access preventive care more often, which costs the system less than when people without insurance or the ability to pay a doctor wait until their health reaches a crisis stage requiring costly interventions. Citing higher life expectancy and lower infant mortality in countries with single-payer, advocates say the policy has the ancillary benefit of keeping people healthier because people and the payment system are incentivized to detect and manage conditions before they become critical.

“There is value to people not having to deal with the heartbreak of not having coverage and, as a result, living sicker, dying younger and being one emergency away from financial ruin,” says Anthony Wright, executive director of Health Access California, which has been working for universal health-care coverage in the state for nearly 30 years. “Single-payer is one way to do that, and has particular aspects that are compelling.”

But powerful interests are aligned against Lara and Atkins’s bill, which was amended in March to include details on aspects such as what would be covered and whether patients would contribute for services. Here is an explainer on the major issues at stake.

*What exactly is single-payer?*

Single payer means different things to different people, and in different countries. Although its advocates like to say all other wealthy democracies have it, in truth most retain some element of private industry in the health-care sector.

The countries with systems most unlike our own are the United Kingdom and Spain, where nearly all doctors and other medical service providers are employees of a national health service, but those are the exceptions. In Canada, the government provides insurance but the health-care providers are private entities.

However, universal, publicly-funded health care doesn’t have to eliminate insurance companies, points out Shana Charles at the University of California, Los Angeles’ Center for Health Policy Research. Just as Medicare’s Part B enables Americans over 65 to opt for private insurance and have it paid for by the government, other countries have opted for hybrid systems. “The Netherlands has arguably the most successful system in world and this is how they operate,” Charles says. People there acquire health insurance from tightly regulated insurance companies whose plans, like those on the Obamacare exchanges, must meet certain requirements. “Insurance companies negotiate with the government and compete with each other. All those things can exist within a single-payer system.”

For some, it doesn’t matter how it’s done or what you call it—as long as everyone is covered. “Making sure everyone has affordable quality health care is everybody's North Star,” says Dr. Sandra Hernandez, executive director of the California Health Care Foundation. “Universality is a very important principle any plan would be held up to. Everyone should be included, and it should include a comprehensive set of benefits.”

“The research bears out the health-care system is stronger when everybody is included,” says Anthony Wright. “Beyond universality, the notion of simplicity, of administrative efficiency, group purchasing for the best value, and removing profiteering” are values afforded by single-payer, he maintains.

*Haven't we been down this road before?*

California’s efforts to expand public health-care coverage date back 25 years. An exchange for small employers to purchase insurance for employees operated from 1992 to 2006. In 1994, Proposition 186 would have enacted single-payer in the state but voters overwhelmingly rejected it. Senate Bill 2, signed into law by Governor Gray Davis in 2003, instituted a “pay-or-play” system, whereby all but the smallest companies were required to offer health insurance to employees and their dependents, or pay a penalty to fund an insurance program for those left out of the employee pool. The following year voters repealed SB 2 at the polls before it could go into effect. San Francisco decided the plan was worth doing and enacted a version, which became Healthy San Francisco. Employers, particularly restaurants, fought it, but their predictions that businesses would close en masse as a result of the law were unrealized and 100 percent of San Franciscans are now covered.

In 2006, then-state Senator Sheila Kuehl introduced a single-payer bill, funding the system through a flat tax of eight percent on employers, four percent on employees, and 11.5 percent on the self-employed. Insurers would have still been able to offer plans not covered by the state system and offer administration services to it, but the bill would have virtually eradicated private insurance in the state. The nonpartisan Legislative Analyst’s Office estimated that the costs to the system would exceed its revenue, even accounting for savings from increased coordination and “more consistent preventive care.” Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, citing the high costs, vetoed the bill in 2006 and 2008.

Simultaneous with those efforts, Schwarzenegger and Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez worked with other lawmakers on a bill that would have imposed pay-or-play on employers, established an exchange for those without access to employee-provided insurance, required that all Californians have insurance and that insurance-company policies meet certain standards, and expanded existing public programs. But the bill died in the state Senate. Among its chief opponents was Sheila Kuehl, who argued that it wasn’t good enough because it wasn’t single-payer.

By that time, presidential candidates Barack Obama and John Edwards were both campaigning to enact some form of universal coverage, and California essentially decided to wait and see what came to fruition at the federal level before trying again on health care for the state. The state program launched under ACA, Covered California, has arguably been the most successful such effort in the country. But with private health insurance still expensive, Covered California’s subsidies and the expansion of Medi-Cal to higher income groups still don’t reach everyone who can’t afford health care, and around 3.5 million people in the state are still uncovered. “A family making $40,000 a year might have to pay $2,000 in deductibles per individual,” says Daniel Braunstein of Health Care for All, a single-payer advocacy group, “and for most people that's impossible.”

*So what would single-payer look like this time?*

The March amendment to SB 562, the new moonshot for single-payer in California, lays out a lot of details but leaves one crucial question unresolved. The new system would cover pretty much everything, including sticklers that have previously bogged down negotiations—such as substance abuse, mental health and chiropractic care. Patients would not pay a dime at the point of service—the amended bill bans copays, deductibles and premiums. While it might seem this would encourage people to overuse the system, sending costs skyrocketing, coordinated care systems have been shown to successfully disincentivize unnecessary and expensive tests and screenings.

*How does this all get paid for?*

The major element of any public health care system that SB 562 hasn’t yet addressed is funding. Most experts recognize the need for a dedicated funding stream for the system. Dr. Sandra Hernandez sees room for “a state-based tax, the same way we have the Medicare tax and employees match that.” The big question is at what level would that tax need to be set to avoid the LAO’s finding, as it made in 2006, that the proposed system was underfunded—and would that be too high for state representatives and the governor to swallow?

One critique from the left of the 2006 plan was that the tax fell on all individuals equally, like a sales tax, rather than increasing up the income ladder. Californians have shown a willingness to tax the rich, as with the 2012 hike that funded new revenue from those with incomes over $250,000 to help fund K-12 and community college education, which was extended by referendum last year. Or, to make up for the relatively greater burden on households with lower incomes, the poor could receive greater subsidies.

Wright says that even with employers paying more than four percent, they would still see savings from not having to contribute to premiums and other costs, and medical service providers could lower their prices from seeing their costs go down. “Employers have a big cost of administering their insurance,” he says. “Doctors—whether in small offices or in large hospital-based clinics—would not need insurance coordinators and negotiators, people who do nothing but try to work out the difference between what the insurance will pay and the provider wishes to collect. That's a big cost.”

*How will California’s health-care system work with the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act?*

Financing California’s health care system entirely through the tax structure is no small undertaking. It's a $230 billion industry, while the state budget is $123 billion. But experts and advocates say that not all the money would have to be raised anew; federal Medicare, Medicaid, Department of Veterans Affairs and other health-related funding streams from Washington could be made to flow into Sacramento.

That is, if Washington allows it. Sending federal dollars to California’s single-payer system would require Congressional approval. The conservatives who hope to dismantle Obamacare and approved House Speaker Paul Ryan’s proposed replacement, the American Health Care Act, seem unlikely to do anything to prop up a single-payer system that’s been derided as a “Utopian socialist plan” by some on the right. On the other hand, allowing states a degree of independence to “serve as a laboratory; and try novel social and economic experiments without risk to the rest of the country,” as Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis put it in a 1932 dissent, has been a core conservative principle for decades (although one that has come under attack recently).

*What are the chances this actually happens?*

UCLA’s Shana Charles believes that the best chance for single-payer in California rests with expanding Covered California. “We should build on what's successful,” she says. “Keep Covered California as a single purchaser, simply changing the financing for how it would be administered.”

The politics of health care used to be very different: in the 1970s President Richard Nixon discussed implementing a pay-or-play system like Gray Davis’ SB 2. Massachusetts enacted what is essentially the model for Obamacare under Republican Governor Mitt Romney. But the association of universal coverage with Barack Obama has tainted it for many Republicans, who now seem ready to reflexively oppose anything that remotely resembles anything but a purely market-based system—even though that’s what we had before Obamacare and it resulted in millions of uninsured and the highest costs in the world, with poor outcomes.

“We've seen the success Covered California and Medicaid expansion can have, and we know the private market is not capable of doing this on its own,” says Charles. “There has to be some government-wide intervention to facilitate it.”

Getting there, of course, will be the point of contention. “You need to align the values of how you can realistically finance” public health care, says Dr. Hernandez, “and a bunch of stakeholders who can ask if that is something they want to support or not.” She points out that the California Hospital Association and California Medical Association declined to support single-payer last time, which helped doom the effort. Reported by The American Prospect 23 hours ago.

6 States Where the Average Health Insurance Premium Tops $400 a Month

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These states have the most expensive health insurance in the country, and premiums continue to soar. Reported by Motley Fool 22 hours ago.

$39M CareSource investment touted as state success

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CareSource's $38.9 million investment in downtown Dayton is being touted by the state's jobs organization as a story of success for the state. The continued growth of the $7.2 billion Medicaid, Medicare Advantage and health insurance company has been toted in a case study by JobsOhio as a model for other companies in the biohealth industry looking to grow in the state. CareSource is putting $38.8 million into downtown Dayton between the construction of the new six-story CareSource Center City building… Reported by bizjournals 22 hours ago.

United States: Recent $2.5 Million OCR Settlement Is A Warning To Wireless Health Service Providers - McDermott Will & Emery

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On April 24, the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office for Civil Rights (OCR) announced a Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) settlement Reported by Mondaq 21 hours ago.

Akorbi is the 8th Fastest-Growing Women-Owned/Led Company Globally According to the Women Presidents' Organization and American Express

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Company moves up from 12th place in 2016

Plano, Texas (PRWEB) May 10, 2017

Akorbi’s rapid growth (an impressive 1,267% in the last five years) was celebrated during the Women Presidents’ Organization’s (WPO) 2017 International Conference, a partnership with American Express. On May 5, hundreds of entrepreneurs, business leaders and executives from around the world gathered at the awards ceremony held at The Ritz-Carlton Grande Lakes in Orlando, Florida to celebrate the growth and success of the world’s 50 fastest-growing, women-owned/led companies. The awards ceremony was part of the WPO’s 3-day conference, which took place May 4-6.

According to the WPO, the companies on this year’s 50 Fastest-Growing list span a range of industries including technology, retail and consulting. The companies generated a combined $7.2 billion in 2016 revenues (mean of $155.6 million) and collectively employed 46,000 people in 2016 (mean of 725).

This year, Akorbi was ranked #8 - a leap from its #12 spot in 2016. Akorbi joined only 3 other Dallas/Fort Worth-area companies in the coveted list, including Pinnacle Group (#2), Ivie & Associates, Inc. (#15) and Prim Construction, LLC (#21).

According to the WPO, applicants do not have to be WPO members. All eligible companies were ranked according to a sales growth formula that combined percentage and absolute growth. To be qualified for the ranking, businesses were required to be privately-held, woman-owned/led companies and have reached annual revenue of at least $500,000 as of January 1, 2012.

More about the 2017 50 Fastest-Growing:·     Average honoree age: 50
·     CEOs that founded the business: 92%
·     Started the business with their own funds: 72%
·     CEOs that are active in day-to-day operations: 100%
·     Companies that do business globally: 36%
·     Plan to continue to grow their company: 92%
·     Provide health insurance: 94%

“I am honored to receive this incredible recognition from the Women Presidents’ Organization and American Express and to be in the company of so many amazing business leaders from around the world,” said Claudia Mirza, co-founder and CEO of Akorbi. “I’m thrilled to share this recognition with our 930 global team members, as well as my partner in life and business Azam Mirza, who work tirelessly to make Akorbi an industry leader.”

“We are proud to announce the 10th class of 50 Fastest-Growing honorees. This year, we’re excited to have awardees from a diverse range of industries and locations, including three international winners,” said Marsha Firestone, Ph.D., President and Founder of the Women Presidents’ Organization. “Our partnership with American Express has been crucial in acknowledging the influence women-owned and led companies have in job creation and growing the global economy.”

Akorbi employs approximately 930 full-time and part-time people around the world. The company serves an impressive client base, including many Fortune 500 companies.

Akorbi’s success has been recognized worldwide. In June 2016, independent market research firm Common Sense Advisory ranked it as the 3rd fastest-growing language service provider (LSP) in the world, with a growth rate of 177.27% from 2013-2015, in its report titled, “The Fastest-Growing LSPs 2016.”    

About Akorbi
Akorbi is a U.S.-based company with over 930 employees around the world providing enterprise solutions that empower companies to achieve success in the global economy. We help companies connect with employees, vendors and customers in over 170 languages 24x7, in any modality, from any location. Our customizable, enterprise solutions include: technical and multilingual staffing, learning services, multilingual contact centers, video remote solutions, translation/localization and in-person interpretation services. The company holds several certifications including ISO 9001:2008, ISO 13485:2003, EN 15038:2006 and M/WBE Certification. For more information, visit http://www.akorbi.com or call 1.877.4.AKORBI.

About the Women Presidents’ Organization (WPO)
The WPO is the ultimate affiliation for successful women entrepreneurs worldwide. In monthly meetings across the world, women from diverse industries invest time and energy in themselves and their businesses to drive their corporations to the next level. Local WPO chapters are coordinated by a professional facilitator and meet monthly to share business expertise and experience in a confidential setting. For more information, call 212-688-4114 or visit http://www.womenpresidentsorg.com. Follow WPO on Twitter (@womenpresidents) and like us on Facebook. Reported by PRWeb 19 hours ago.

New Survey Reveals Political Opinions of Unemployed Workers

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Express Employment Professionals Releases Survey Revealing Political Opinions of Unemployed Workers

Oklahoma City, OK (PRWEB) May 10, 2017

Express Employment Professionals today released results from a new poll of unemployed Americans, revealing mixed views on the Trump administration and policies ranging from immigration to healthcare.

The survey also shows that the unemployed favored Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election.

While they are roughly neutral on whether the Trump administration will affect their ability to find a job, they are more favorable to President Trump’s policy stances on illegal immigration and repealing the Affordable Care Act. By a narrow margin, they favor government spending to create jobs over corporate tax cuts.

The national survey of 1,500 jobless Americans age 18 and older was conducted online by Harris Poll on behalf of Express between March 14 and April 6, 2017 and offers a detailed, in-depth look at the background and attitudes of the unemployed.

Clinton Beat Trump

Unemployed Americans were asked for whom they voted in the 2016 presidential election.·     35 percent reported Hillary Clinton
·     25 percent said Donald Trump
·     3 percent said Gary Johnson
·     1 percent said Jill Stein
·     34 percent reported that they did not vote. (According to the U.S. Elections Project, 39.8% of all eligible voters did not vote in the 2016 election, indicating that voter turnout, as reported in this survey, was likely higher among the unemployed than the employed. )

Mixed Outlook on Trump Administration

The unemployed were asked, “What kind of impact do you think the new administration will have on creating jobs?”·     39 percent said positive impact
·     35 percent said negative impact
·     26 percent said no impact at all

Unemployed Americans were also asked, “How do you think President Trump’s policies will affect your job search?”·     30 percent said, “They will make it harder for me to find a job.”
·     30 percent said they were not sure
·     22 percent said they would have no impact
·     18 percent said, “They will make it easier for me to find a job.”

Healthcare, Immigration and Tax Cuts

The unemployed were asked “Are you currently receiving health insurance as a result of the Affordable Care Act (ACA also referred to as Obamacare)?”·     20 percent said yes
·     72 percent said no

Jobless Americans were asked to state whether they agree or disagree with various current policy issues:

I am in favor of repealing the Affordable Care Act (ACA also referred to as Obamacare).·     Agree (net): 57 percent

o    Agree completely: 24 percent
o    Agree a lot: 9 percent
o    Agree somewhat: 14 percent
o    Agree a little: 10 percent·     Do not agree at all: 43 percent

It would be easier to get a job if there was less illegal immigration in the United States.·     Agree (net): 58 percent

o    Agree completely: 18 percent
o    Agree a lot: 12 percent
o    Agree somewhat: 13 percent
o    Agree a little: 15 percent·     Do not agree at all: 42 percent

In addition, the unemployed were asked their opinion on the impact of new government spending versus corporate tax cuts. They were asked:

“The federal government is considering various policies to help create jobs for unemployed Americans. Of the two statements below, which ONE do you think would be the most helpful?”

·     52 percent chose “new government spending for a job program.”
·     48 percent chose “cutting taxes for corporations so they can hire more workers.”

Country Headed in Wrong Direction

Unemployed Americans were asked, “Would you say things in the country are headed in the right direction, or the wrong direction regarding the economy?” Forty percent (40%) said “headed in the right direction,” while 60 percent said “wrong direction.” Among the employed, 36 percent say the country is on the right track versus 33 percent among the unemployed.

“While Democrats and Republicans seem to be polarized, the views of the unemployed appear to be much more mixed. Despite the political commentary, political opinion is not as black and white—or red and blue—as we are often led to believe. Among unemployed Americans who voted, Hillary Clinton was the clear winner, but in general the unemployed are expressing opinions on healthcare and immigration that might put them more in line with President Trump,” said Bob Funk, CEO of Express, and a former chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City.

This study was conducted online by Harris Poll on behalf of Express Employment Professionals and included 1,500 U.S. adults aged 18 or older who are unemployed but capable of working (whether or not they receive unemployment compensation benefits). Excluded are those who are currently retired, choose to stay at home, or are unable to work due to long-term disability. The survey was conducted between March 14 and April 6, 2017.

Results were weighted as needed by gender for age, education, race/ethnicity, region and household income. Propensity score weighting was also used to adjust for respondents' penchant to be online. Totals may not equal the sum of their individual components due to rounding. No estimates of theoretical sampling error can be calculated; a full methodology is available.

***

If you would like to arrange for an interview with Bob Funk to discuss this topic, please contact Sheena Karami, Director of Corporate Communications and PR, at (405) 717-5966.

About Robert A. Funk
Robert A. “Bob” Funk is chairman and chief executive officer of Express Employment Professionals. Headquartered in Oklahoma City, the international staffing company has more than 770 franchises in the U.S., Canada and South Africa. Under his leadership, Express has put more than 6 million people to work worldwide. Funk served as Chairman of the Conference of Chairmen of the Federal Reserve and was also the Chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City.

About Express Employment Professionals
Express Employment Professionals puts people to work. It generated $3.05 billion in sales and employed a record 510,000 people in 2016. Its long-term goal is to put a million people to work annually. For more information, visit ExpressPros.com. Reported by PRWeb 18 hours ago.

Montana Democrat Racks Up Donations As GOP Opponent Waffles On Health Care Bill

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Over the course of 72 hours this past week, Greg Gianforte, the millionaire Republican running for Montana’s open congressional seat, took three different stances on the health care bill just passed by the House of Representatives.

And his opponent took that flip-flopping to the bank.

Democrat Rob Quist, who has refused to accept donations from lobbyists or corporate political action committees, raised over $500,000 in the past four days, his campaign told HuffPost on Wednesday. Campaign contributions, which average $25 and have come from about 147,000 individual donors, now top $3.7 million.

“Our campaign has seen a surge in donations and volunteer enthusiasm since New Jersey multimillionaire Greg Gianforte was caught saying one thing to Montanans and the opposite to his D.C. lobbyist donors,” Tina Olechowski, Quist’s spokeswoman, said in a statement. “Every day Montana voters learn more about how Gianforte doesn’t share Montana values, and thanks to the grassroots movement and momentum behind Rob we’ll have the resources we need to win on May 25th.”

Democrats, who at first ignored the May 25 special election in Montana, have ramped up fundraising as the race becomes more competitive. The party has sent multiple email blasts soliciting donations. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) endorsed Quist last month. Democratic National Committee chair Tom Perez offered to campaign with him in Montana, although Quist turned down the offer, concerned that it could alienate Republican swing voters.

The banjo-strumming folk singer is tailing the deep-pocketed Gianforte, who narrowly lost a race for Montana governor last year, by about 6 points in the latest poll. The GOP has stepped up its support for Gianforte. Last month, the National Rifle Association launched a series of ads attacking Quist for supporting gun control. The president’s eldest son, hunting enthusiast Donald Trump Jr., campaigned with Gianforte last month, and has announced plans to make a return trip. Vice President Mike Pence is slated to visit Billings, Montana’s largest city, on Friday.Quist has countered the NRA blitz with his own ads in which he appears, clad in a cowboy hat, shooting a TV with a rifle. In a state where public land access is a key issue, Quist has repeatedly attacked Gianforte for suing Montana in 2009 to block fishermen from using a river running through his palatial property.

But with anemic public support for the American Health Care Act, health care could become an effective wedge issue for Quist as he courts voters outside his base. The bill, which would dramatically scale back protections of the Affordable Care Act, known colloquially as Obamacare, narrowly passed the Republican-controlled House last Thursday. Less than a third of the public favors the new bill, according to a HuffPost/YouGov survey published Monday. A Fox News poll found similar results.

On Thursday, as President Donald Trump feted the AHCA’s passage with a flashy, beer-fueled musical celebration, Gianforte declined to comment on the bill. “Greg needs to know all the facts because it’s important to know exactly what’s in the bill before he votes on it,” spokesman Shane Scanlon told the Missoulian.

But later that day, Gianforte told lobbyist donors in Washington, D.C., that he backed the bill.

“The votes in the House are going to determine whether we get tax reform done, sounds like we just passed a health care thing, which I’m thankful for, sounds like we’re starting to repeal and replace,” Gianforte said, according to audio of the call published by The New York Times.  Then, over the weekend, Gianforte told a local CBS affiliate in Montana that he would have voted against the bill, which allows states to waive rules protecting people with pre-existing conditions from being turned away or charged astronomical rates.

“I’ve been very clear, to repeal and replace ‘Obamacare’ we must have guarantees here in Montana that rates will go down, rural access will be preserved, and people with pre-existing conditions will be protected,” Gianforte told KPAX. “If I didn’t have that assurance I would have voted against it.”

Gianforte has accepted $2 million from the Congressional Leadership Fund, which only supports candidates who back the AHCA. His campaign did not immediately offer a comment Wednesday morning.

The personal histories of Gianforte and his opponent play handily into Democrats’ health care narrative. In 1991, Gianforte, a software entrepreneur, settled a lawsuit with a former employee who’d accused Gianforte of firing him for having multiple sclerosis. By contrast, Quist, a musician and son of ranchers whose wife is a real estate agent, spiraled into debt after undergoing a botched surgery that counted as a pre-existing condition, disqualifying him from health insurance. He was forced to sell off part of his family’s ranch and access Social Security early to afford follow-up surgeries and avoid bankruptcy.

“Montanans deserve and expect honesty from their representatives but we’ve yet to see that from New Jersey multimillionaire Greg Gianforte,” Olechowski told HuffPost. “All the damage control his wealth can buy can’t walk this back ― Montanans expect straight talk, not a career politician who will only share his true positions with lobbyist donors behind closed doors.”type=type=RelatedArticlesblockTitle=Related... + articlesList=590628f1e4b05c3976805500,58e3fcc5e4b03a26a3670c30,590e5af2e4b0d5d9049cf76e,59109a87e4b0e7021e99b049,58bdd0eae4b033be14679775

-- 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 17 hours ago.

Trumpcare won't eliminate Massachusetts consumer protections

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Trumpcare may cost Massachusetts millions of dollars in federal help, but it won’t eliminate protections Massachusetts has in place for consumers, according to one health care advocate. Consumer health policy experts say the Republican health care plan, which passed the House last week, would slash funding the state receives for Medicaid and would eliminate federal subsidies that help consumers purchase health insurance. What the Republican plan wouldn’t do in Massachusetts is eliminate protections… Reported by bizjournals 15 hours ago.
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