On Friday, June 26, the House of Representatives passed the historic Waxman-Markley comprehensive energy bill by a vote of 219 to 212. H.R. 2454, formally titled the American Clean energy and Security Act of 2009 includes a market-based cap & trade global warming reduction plan designed to reduce U.S. greenhouse gas emissions 17% by the year 2020. This is not where we need to be. It is thought that we will have to reduce emissions 80% by 2050 in order to stabilize the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere at a level that prevent the worst consequences of global warming. Still the bill is a start and it has won praise from environmental groups like the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC):

“The House of Representatives has made a dramatic breakthrough for America’s future by choosing to create jobs, move to clean energy, and reduce global warming pollution. The passage of this legislation, which was almost unimaginable six months ago, will help set our country in a new direction by shifting to a clean energy economy and reducing the carbon pollution that causes global warming.

“While passing the bill through the House took hard work and compromises on many sides, this is strong and vital legislation that Congress needs to deliver to the President’s desk this year. This bill will help create new jobs in manufacturing and clean technology. It will increase energy efficiency, help consumers save on energy bills, and protect lower-income families. And it will finally put our country on a course to limit the carbon pollution that causes global warming.

Sadly our own Congressman, Republican Peter Roskam, was not a party to that “hard work and compromise”. Roskam voted against the bill, choosing to support the narrow interests of his big campaign donors from the energy sector, who opposed the bill, rather than act to save the planet from an impending catastrophe that threatens the  welfare of our children and of generations to come.

OpenSecrets.org, a project of the Center for Responsive Politics, today released data demonstrating how the industries that have worked to oppose climate change legislation gave, on average, twice the amount of campaign contributions to legislators, Democrat and Republican alike, who, like Roskam, opposed the legislation, as they did to those voting in favor. The table below compares contributions received by industry for the average “yes” voter on H.R. 2454, the average, “no” voter, and for Peter Roskam. Bear in mind that while contributions are totaled back to 1989, Roskam has only been running since 2006.

Industry Yes Voters Avg No Voters Avg Roskam
Energy Sector $124,181 $274,021 $240,765
Oil & Gas $31,663 $120,566 $138,815
Electric utilities $67,013 $102,370 $73,800
Coal Mining $2,279 $12,004 $1,000
Construction $138,569 $241,079 $297,517
Automakers $10,603 $11,982 $0
Business PACs $1,380,210 $1,901,371 $,1529,147
Environmentalists $21,198 $3,088 $0
Alternative Energy $1,250 $869 $0

You can draw your own conclusions but in my estimation this speaks volumes about why Roskam votes as he does.

The climate bill will now have to be taken up by the Senate where the fight is likely to be even tougher than it was in the House. I predict that 6th District residents will be hearing a lot more lobbying against the bill by our Congressman.

This past Thursday, June 25, Peter Roskam spoke on the House floor in favor of an ammendment to H.R. 2647, the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010. The text of Roskam’s press release is here.

First off, I think Dan Conston got mixed up about what Roskam had to say:

“This is an Administration that has said that Iran has legitimate nuclear ambitions, no they don’t. There is no legitimate pursuit of nuclear power in Iran. It is all for an evil and despicable purpose. This is an Administration that got it wrong on the Iranian dissonance and has, sort of, back peddled over the past several days and recast their support of the dissonance when they really missed the mark.

…[Iran] is an aggressive regime that ought not to be coddled. This is an effort to make sure that all of us are safe, and this is a sacred duty.

I’m pretty sure we heard Peter talking about dissidents in the video, but I could be wrong.

More importantly, I think this kind of overblown rhetoric is decidedly unhelpful. The President didn’t get it wrong. Bush and Cheney and Roskam and their neo-con faction did. Their hostile rhetoric and their bungled invasion of Iraq put us into the dangerous position we are in relative to Iran today.

Roskam’s hostile language will not help Iranian dissidents. It only feeds the perception of an outside threat which helps Ahmadinejad maintain a precarious hold on power. Its terrific political theater for Republicans pandering for votes among a population that has largely rejected their platform but it is lousy foreign policy and can only make things more difficult for President Obama as he strives to deal with a very delicate situation. Roskam should shut up.

Nicholas Burns, who lead the Bush administration’s tardy efforts to negotiate with Iran on nuclear issues has praised President Obama’s handling of the Iran situation. Speaking in an interview on NPR’s Morning Edition on June 16, Burns had this to say (thanks to Greg Sargeant’s The Plum Line):

“President Ahmadinejad would like nothing better than to see a very aggressive series of statements by the United States that would try to put the U.S. in the center of this,” Burns said. “And I think President Obama is avoiding that quite rightly.”

“This is not a dispute for the U.S. to be the center of,” Burns said at another point. “It’s up to Iranians to decide who Iran’s future leaders will be. He said he respects Iran’s sovereignty. I think it was important to do that.”

Burns said that Obama was right to refrain from throwing the U.S.’s weight around while giving props to reformers. He praised Obama for being “low-key” while saying he’s concerned about the plight of reformers and inspired by them, which Burns called a “balancing act.”

Even creepy John Negroponte, Bush’s first ambassador to Iraq, has praised Obama for his conduct of foreign policy. Speaking at a review of foreign policy under Obama hosted by the French-America Foundation on June 23, Negroponte said that he had a “high level degree of confidence” in the Obama team, which got “an extremely good start to foreign policy.”

Roskam’s assertion that the President supports Iran’s nuclear ambitions is a gross distortion based on a much more nuanced remark Obama made this spring. Roskam has a bright future ahead as a commentator for Fox News once we replace him in 2010.

The ammendment that Roskam rose to speak for, and which bore his name failed. It’s point was to restore $1.2 billion in cuts to spending on missile defense over 2009 levels. Missile defense has been an article of religion  for arch-conservatives like Roskam since Ronald Reagan’s Strategic Defense Initiative was launched. Programs have cost billions with limited success. The ground-based mid-course defense that Roskam’s ammendment refers to has failed 6 out of 14 intercept tests since 1999. This is a program that is a boon to defense contractors like Boeing, having cost over $30 billion to date, but offers no increased security to this country in the near term. Missile defense programs like these are certainly not a substitute for effective diplomacy in resolving what threat may be posed by Iran. Roskam should let the grown-ups manage foreign policy.

I received a breathless email from Peter Roskam earlier today begging for contributions to his re-election campaign prior to the end of the second quarter  this week.

Roskam writes:

Tomorrow marks the end of the second fundraising quarter, and the Democrats are waiting to see how much money I have raised. Potential challengers are weighing their options even as I write this, and if I show strength, they’ll think twice about running against me.

I am a constant target of the national Democrats and I anticipate they will redouble their efforts this year with Barack Obama and Rahm Emanuel in the White House. Rahm tried to take me out in 2006 and 2008, and now he has the power of the White House behind him to pour money from the far left into my opponent’s campaign.

One can dream anyway.

Because of this, we’ve set an aggressive fundraising goal for the second quarter and we’re just $10,000 away from meeting it. Can I count on you to help me reach my fundraising goal by tomorrow at midnight. With your support, I can continue to serve as a voice for you in Congress.

Don’t kid yourself. Unless you are a bank, or a loan company, or a big drug or insurance company,  or a bloated defense contractor,  or a millionaire, Peter Roskam is not your voice in Congress. In fact, Peter Roskam has used his office and his vote consistently to do the opposite of what is in the best interests of you and your family. He has voted against a fair minimum wage for workers, against protections of consumers against predatory lenders, against equal pay for women, against paid parental leave, against  services for Illinois veterans, against efforts to address catastrophic global climate change. And Roskam is currently campaigning against Democratic efforts to provide all Americans with access to healthcare. And Roskam used his position withthe House Financial Servics Committee to fight against the kind of common sense regulation that could have prevented our current economic crisis. When it comes to a choice of doing what is best for big corporations or what is best for working people, Roskam always sides with big corporations. You can read more about Peter Roskam’s anti-consumer, anti-middle-class record here. Worse still, Roskam was an unfailing supporter of the Bush program of endless war, torture, illegal rendition, and domestic eavesdropping.

And Roskam, despite his plea, is not poor. In the 2008 race, Roskam outspent his Democratic opponent, Jill Morgenthaler 3 to 1. You can be sure that in 2010 the same fat cat contributors will make sure Roskam is able to run another nasty campaign of smears and lies. He doesn’t need your $25.

I’d like to be able to suggest that you make a donation to the Democrats instead. But until the Democratic President and Congress step up and do what is right for gay people repeal  DOMA and “Don’t Ask – Don’t Tell”, I won’t be giving them any money – or votes – and do not suggest that you do so. Instead, give your money to two organizations working hard here  to help victims of the Bush-Roskam recession: the Chicago Area Food Depository and DuPage PADS. I split my United Way Contribution between the two organizations and highly endorse their work

In his latest attempt to distract 6th District residents from his absolute refusal to do anything to meet their real needs, Republican Congressman Peter Roskam has launched the “Medi-Fraud Blog” at his Congressional website.  Aside from using your tax dollars to in another misguided public relations scheme to shore up his image in the district, Roskam’s new blog has two main goals:

  • To distract you from the real issues in the current national discussion as to how we can best insure the 45 million Americans who currently have no health coverage
  • To scare you into believing that real health reform is just too dangerous an undertaking now with all the scary criminals seeking to defraud the government and that the 45 million Americans who don’t have access to the quality healthcare that Roskam’s family receives courtesy of the taxpayers will just have to wait … for oh say 10 to 20 years until we can get this fraud thing under control.

Peter Roskam’s press secretary, Dan, each day will tell you a story about some crooks who made a killing defrauding Medicare – until they got caught. It will be just like  “COPS” on a blog except that everyone will be wearing their shirts.

Well at least this will give you something cool to read while you are performing your own appendectomy at the kitchen table. (This is may not be so bad an idea. My goodfriend Jon had our other friend Tony, who is a pretty good mechanic, sew up a nasty gash in his leg last summer because Jon didn’t have any insurance. It left kind of a big scar but there was no infection. So you can probably do it too – if Roskam doesn’t change his mind about health insurance for everyone).

Did I mention that Peter Roskam is working against universal coverage? Because that is the most important thing you need to know. Your Congressman, Peter Roskam, the one guy who’s job it is to work to  get you a fair shake in Washington, is actively working to defeat any Democratic proposal to give insurance coverage to people here in Illinois who don’t presently have any. It would be too expensive, a misuse of your tax dollars.

And did I mention that Peter Roskam has an excellent health plan for himself and his family, paid for by your tax dollars? I wrote about it once before here. I guess that’s part of why it just doesn’t matter to Congressman Roskam whether we do anything about health reform this year. His family is already taken care of.

So, enjoy Peter’s blog. And be sure and post your comments about what a great Congressman Peter Roskam is because he’s fighting the commies in Washington who want to make sure everybody has healthcare whether they’re rich or a Congressman or not. (Be nice. Dan will be weeding out all the bad things people say). And good luck with that appendectomy.

Jeff Berkowitz of Public Affairs reports today on Peter Roskam’s address to the Chicago chapter of the Republican National Lawyers Association. Roskam spoke to the group on June 22 at Svenson Law Offices in Chicago.  (Svenson is a law firm with a specialty in defeating Workers Compensation claims by injured employees. )

According to Berkowitz, Roskam addressed the issue of healthcare reform, indicating his opposition to any plan that includes a public option because such a plan would be a first step toward a single payer system, driving out options for private health coverage. Apparently leaving millions without any coverage or care is a better option in Roskam’s view than anything that might harm the private health insurance carriers.

Berkowitz says he asked Roskam if he could support a Democratic plan without a public option. Roskam “indicated that would get him and his fellow Republicans “to the table,” but other issues would likely remain to be worked out.” From this we gather that a vote by Roskam to support insurance coverage for 6th district Residents who presently have no access to care is highly unlikely. This is hardly a surprise. As usual, Roskam’s constituents will have to look to Democratic Congressmen in other districts to stand up for their needs.

According to Berkowitz, Roskam disputes the widely accepted estimate of 47 million uninsured Americans, indicating many are illegal immigrants or young people who are healthy and don’t want coverage, leaving only about 15 million truly uninsured. 15 million Americans without adequate health care, it would seem, are not worth worrying about.

Healthcare aside, it is interesting that Roskam chose to speak to this group. RNLA is in the vanguard of Republican efforts to suppress Democratic votes, devoting significant energy to the defamation of ACORN (Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now).  ACORN is a large and venerable grassroots organization of low and moderate income families, born of the civil rights movement, that has worked tirelessly to ensure living wages for workers and benefits for workers,  increase the availability of affordable housing, end predatory lending practices, and improve the quality and funding of the public schools – all those things that Republicans like Roskam fiercely oppose.

Republicans hate ACORN because it has run very successful voter registration efforts aimed at giving a voice to the marginalized. Because the Republicans have such a diminutive base of economic elites, and because wedge issues like gay marriage are beginning to lose their power to sway voters, Republicans must increasingly rely on vote suppression to have any chance at all of regaining a majority. Hence the vicious and basesless attacks against ACORN that have become so common.

I find it quite ironic that many of the same Republicans who are so critical of what they view as a weak response by President Obama to the obvious fraud in the recent Iranian election are so eager to keep people from voting here at home.

Every couple of weeks for the past 15 years or so I have gone to get my hair cut by a woman in Villa Park. I’ll call her Liz. She’d be mortified if I used her real name. Liz works in a small shop where she gets paid a portion a what she takes in in business plus the tips her customers give her. Her income is modest but she lives very simply. When her Mom died a couple of years back, she was able to afford a tiny condominium in Wood Dale with the inheritance. Prior to that she’d lived with her Mom. Liz’s employer doesn’t provide a health plan and she is unable to afford the premiums for an individual plan on her limited income. Even if she could, preexisting condition limitations on any policy she might purchase make it unlikely she would get the care she needs.

Liz may have a serious medical condition. Because she knows that I am a health care professional, she tells me about her symptoms when I visit and looks to me for advice. At my insistence she has gone to see a primary care physician, paying out of pocket for her visits. He helps her out by giving her medication samples which she takes but her condition isn’t resolving. Her doctor wants to refer her to a specialist who will need to perform an endoscopy to definitively diagnose and treat her condition. Liz has consistently refused because she has no means to pay for such an expensive procedure. Instead she just hopes that her condition will resolve itself. She has lost weight and sometimes feels too sick to work but can’t afford to take a day off. Eventually she will probably end up in an emergency room where she will get care that could have been provided much more effectively and for much less cost in a specialist’s office. Her delay of care has the potential to be life-threatening.

Liz is one of Peter Roskam’s constituents. He was elected to represent her interests in Congress. She is one of thousands of people just like her in the 6th District who work hard for a living and still can’t afford to buy into our healthcare system. Peter Roskam doesn’t even seem to know these folks are alive. Or else he just doesn’t care.

Peter Roskam claims to listen to his constituents. But look at his remarks from WLS 890’s Don Wade and Roma show last week:

“My constituents want doctors and patients to be reconnected in ways that make sense to them. They want to see us make sure we don’t stifle medical innovation, which in this country is great. Think about the devices and the transforming nature of things that have come upon and been made available to us within our lifetime. You got to make sure those things don’t get stifle because government alone certainly does not come up with those medical devices. It is largely the private sector.

“My folks are looking for the right to know from their Health Care providers. Who’s doing a good job, who’s not doing a good job – publishing some results – morbidity results and success rates of different hospitals and physicians. And they are also interested in doing everything they can to contain costs because for small businesses, for that manufacturing core that I represent in DuPage and northwest suburban Cook county, those guys are struggling from 19,20, 23, 25% increases in their insurance premiums and I don’t think the President’s plan hits the mark in terms of cost containment.”

Wrong, Peter. Your constituents want to be able to go to the doctor when they get sick.  Your constituents are not the “manufacturing core”. Your constituents are people like Liz who are sick and can’t get care. And their President has proposed that we fix that, and Democrats in Congress are working hard to make that proposal a reality. And what are you doing, Peter? You are fighting tooth and nail to ensure that real healthcare reform never happens. You are doing this by trying to scare people about a “government takeover” of healthcare.

Listen to Peter Roskam’s staged “interview” on WIND’s Big John and Cisco program last week:

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Lets look at Roskam’s arguments:

  • Roskam warns that breast and prostate cancer survival rates in the United Kingdom are much lower than ours here in the United States, implying that the quality of care will suffer here if we diminish the role of the private sector in healthcare. But Roskam is using a couple of statistics very selectively to compare healthcare under a public single payer system to our own. Roskam fails to address the overall cost-effectiveness of the U.S. healthcare “system”. The United States currently spends about 17% of its gross domestic product on healthcare. That figure may grow to 20% by 2017. At that astounding level of spending 46 million Americans are uninsured and are getting ineffective incomplete care. We are the only wealthy Western industrialized nation that does not ensure that all citizens have  at least minimal coverage. And even those who are covered by insurance plans are often choosing to do without care due to rising healthcare costs and shrinking benefit plans. And here we spend 6 times as much per capita on administrative expenses as in industrialized European nations. Medical tourism is gaining increasing popularity in this country. U.S. citizens are traveling to places like India and Thailand for major medical and dental procedures because quality is high and costs are low. Some health plans and employers are beginning to look at it as a means of saving money. For all the money we spend on healthcare here, quality of care leaves much to be desired.  Our infant mortality rate is higher than in all other developed countries and we rank 46th in total life expectancy. Between 1997 and 2003, U.S. mortality amenable to health care interventation (preventable death) declined much more slowly than in the 18 other industrialized countries studied. (4% vs an average of 16%). A 2000 study by the World Health Organization ranked the U.S. healthcare system 37th in overall effectiveness (the U.K. ranked 18th with much lower spending.) While the cancer survival rates that Roskam quoted are not without controversy, they probably do relate to a real phenomenon in that the market creates incentives here for spending on highly lucrative new technologies involved in cancer treatment while it encourages neglect of more mundane but ultimately more important aspects of care like prevention and primary care. And not all Americans share equally in the benefits of those new cancer treatments. A recent study showed that uninsured or medicaid recipients were more likely to be diagnosed with 12 common cancers at a late stage when they are less amenable to treatment. In short, American healthcare is bad and getting worse when stacked up against our peers. In fact, our system is a terrific model of why its a bad idea to let the market alone drive the provision of healthcare.
  • Roskam complains that Democrats are using deceptive language and tested talking points to steer the debate. I don’t want to give this more attention than it is worth but this is the pot calling the kettle black. MediaMatters has already pointed out that Roskam is pushing Frank Luntz talking points on healthcare reform. Luntz is a Republican political consultant who has authored a set of talking points aimed at helping Republicans in Congress prevent any action toward healthcare reform. Roskams remarks show heavy indebtedness to Luntz. You can read the Luntz document here courtesy of Think Progress. One of the high points for me was: “The cure rate differentials between the United States and countries with government-run healthcare is a powerful weapons. You need to assemble a list of the five most staggering facts that show better cure rates in the United States than our neighbors in Canada and our cousins in Great Britain. Focus on the kinds of diseases that touch the most people in the most personal ways, like cancer and heart disease. The facts must be accurate – because our research indicates that this kind of information really will move people. It personalizes the harm of government-run healthcare in a powerful way.” Sound familiar?
  • Roskam complains that a public option will result in a “government takeover” of healthcare. This is Luntz’s chief talking point in his document “The 10 Rules For Stopping the Washington Takeover of Healthcare.” This phrase is pretty meaningless and is designed only to scare and upset you and to boost Glenn Beck’s ratings.
  • Roskam claims that you will have no choice in a public option.  We currently have a public option covering many millions of Americans. It is called Medicare. Medicare recipients have much greater choice of providers than the rest of us.
  • Roskam claims that a public option will deter medical innovation. Medicare has been around since the 1960’s and medical innovation hasn’t slowed. But we have already talked about the perverse incentives the market creates in the direction of that innovation.  (i.e. toward lucrative high technology vs effective primary and preventive care).
  • Roskam says you will have to wait a long time for care if the Democrats reform healthcare. Roskam does not substantiate this claim with evidence, just an anecdote about an aunt. For many Americans a wait for care would be a vast improvement over no care at all. But we have no real reason to believe that this will be the case. Medicare recipients are not waiting for care.
  • Roskam says there will be rationing. Again, these are just scary words from the Luntz talking points. We already have rationing. Rich people and public officials like Roskam get Cadillac care. The working poor get next to none. Thats how we do rationining in this country and essentially that’s what this debate is all about. Roskam and his ilk want to protect that privileged Cadillac care for the very rich at the expense of those of you who have to sweat to earn a living. Its not much different from his stance on taxation really. As with any good, we do need to have a method of fairly allocating healthcare. We will never have a plan that we can afford that covers everything for everyone.  And we need to rationalize the kind of care that we give to people at the very end of life, when much of the care we render is actually futile and causes needless suffering. Our present system of allocation of care is very unfair. It is based upon wealth and status.
  • Roskam claims that bureauocrats will make medical decisions for you. This is, again, straight out of the Luntz talking points: “With government run healthcare, politicians and bureaucrats make your healthcare decisions for you.” Roskam offers nothing to substantiate this wild claim. Under Medicare, physicians make treatment decisions. As with any insurance plan, there are limitations to coverage, and not all aspects of care are reimbursed by the plan.

So what does Roskam offer to my friend and his constituent , Liz, as a solution to her inability to healthcare?

  • We should improve medical data transfer
  • We should control Medicare waste and fraud
  • We should have medical tort reform

I’m sure all of that will be a great comfort to Liz. Why if we are dilligent, in 20 or 30 years she might be able to afford to see a doctor again.

No Peter. We need universal access to care now. And you are standing in the way.

Unlike many progressives, I am not wedded to a single payer solution or even convinced that it would be workable in the near term. I don’t see how you can turn a monster like the current U.S. system into a public single payer system overnight. I believe that the private healthplans bring much to the table in terms of controlling costs and improving outcomes and transparency and that we would be foolish to bring about their demise. They have been unfairly demonized in the current debate. Healthplans provide a check on excesses by other sectors like hospital systems, drug companies, and unscrupulous physicians. Rather than rebuild a healthcare system from the ground up, the goverment should be given powers to help correct some of the perverse incentives created by the market and to get all components of the current system working together toward common ends. But I also believe that universal coverage is non-negotiable. We have to provide it, and if the only way to do so is through some kind of public option, then so be it.

Peter Roskam is using his position and his platform to obstruct progress toward universal coverage and his constituents should let him know that they won’t stand for it. Please call him today and demand that he stop badmouthing the present efforts toward healthcare reform and work with the Democrats to achieve universal coverage this session. You can reach him at (202) 225-4561 in Washington or at (630) 893-9670 in Bloomingdale.

BTW: Roskam accused President Obama of being defensive in his speech before the AMA. You can judge for yourself but IMHO this guy was not defensive, he was in command:

View more news videos at: http://www.nbcchicago.com/video.

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