to pass this health care bill themselves? They have been compromising and compromising and still they have more opposotion than when they started.
Time to throw these insurance companies under the bus and include a public option. Without it they are going to sabotage any attempt to have meaningful change.
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Insurers escalate criticism of health overhaul
By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR,
WASHINGTON – The insurance industry sharply escalated its criticism of the Senate health care bill Sunday, charging that the legislation would shift costs to privately insured people, raising the price of a typical policy by hundreds — if not thousands — of dollars annually.
A spokesman for Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., whose 10-year, $829 billion overhaul plan faces a final committee vote Tuesday, questioned the credibility of the late-innings cost estimate. "It's a health insurance company hatchet job, plain and simple," said Scott Mulhauser.
Until recently, the health insurance industry has been working behind the scenes to shape legislation, while publicly endorsing President Barack Obama's goal of affordable coverage for all Americans. The fragile alliance is growing strained as legislation advances toward floor votes in the House and Senate
Time to throw these insurance companies under the bus and include a public option. Without it they are going to sabotage any attempt to have meaningful change.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Insurers escalate criticism of health overhaul
By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR,
WASHINGTON – The insurance industry sharply escalated its criticism of the Senate health care bill Sunday, charging that the legislation would shift costs to privately insured people, raising the price of a typical policy by hundreds — if not thousands — of dollars annually.
A spokesman for Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., whose 10-year, $829 billion overhaul plan faces a final committee vote Tuesday, questioned the credibility of the late-innings cost estimate. "It's a health insurance company hatchet job, plain and simple," said Scott Mulhauser.
Until recently, the health insurance industry has been working behind the scenes to shape legislation, while publicly endorsing President Barack Obama's goal of affordable coverage for all Americans. The fragile alliance is growing strained as legislation advances toward floor votes in the House and Senate
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