Category: Action
Electoral Ceilings
| August 10, 2013 | 9:37 pm | Action | Comments closed

by A. Shaw

Ceilings are odd things.

The USA and Venezuela have ceilings, but the two ceilings are very different.

The ceiling in the USA says the number of registered voters is more or less fixed at something like 50% of the eligible voters and the number of participating voters is fixed at something like 50% of the registered voters. The numbers that describe the ceiling in the USA bounces up and down. But since the ups and downs cancel out each other at the level of the ceiling, the ceiling abides while the numbers bounce. So far, the registration and participation seem resistant to change, once we make these cancellations. In the USA, the ceiling is produced by the lack of capacity or will to change registration and participation.

The ceiling in Venezuela is a lot easier to understand. In Venezuela, 96% of the eligible voters are registered and the tendency is for about 80% of them to participate on election day. Clearly, those numbers are as high as they can get. In Venezuela, the ceiling is produced by the country running out of fresh voters.

Both the whole bourgeoisie in Venezuela and the reactionary wing of the bourgeoisie in the USA know how to deal with the ceiling. Instead of limiting their operations to trying to register the unregistered and to push non-participating voters toward voting machines, reactionaries in the USA and Venezuela aggressively seduce and penetrate supporters of their liberal or revolutionary opponents.

The point, in other words, is don’t ignore some active voters merely because these voters support the opposition. To identify “some active voters” reguires somebody in the campaign with exceptional skill in targeting,

Nobody is talking about dropping voter registration campaigns or dropping Get-Out-The-Vote [GOTV] operations targeted at supporters. We’re talking about supplementation of these traditional operations by a “special operation” that seeks to seduce and penetrate supporters of the opponents in a well planned and highly trained manner.

Perhaps, the best theoretical groundwork for duping supporters of the opponent is found in the work of reactionary bourgeois theorist Gene Sharp and perhaps the top guy on the practical side for this kind of campaigning is JJ Rendon, a Venezuelan political consultant based in Mexico City. According to both Sharp and Rendon, this idea of making fools out of opposition supporters is a huge expansion of the role and importance of opposition research in the campaign. Under this new idea, opposition research now has something else to do than to dig up mud and sling it at the opponent.

In the USA, the electorate seems divided into three roughly equal sectors — reactionary, liberal, and swing voters. So, it’s hard for liberals to mess around with reactionary crackpots when the liberals have swing voters to win over. This means that liberals in the USA can grow at the expense of two sources — reactionaries and swings. In Venezuela, the electorate seems divided into reactionary and revolutionary voters. More polarized. So, the revolutionaries can only grow at the expense of reactionaries.

There are specific ways that these seductions and penetrations of supporters of the opponents should take place. It’s more like an intelligence than political operation. The reactionary wing of the bourgeoisie in USA and the mass of the bourgeoisie in Venezuela know these “ways.” But the liberal wing of the bourgeoisie in the USA and the mass of revolutionary proletariat in Venezuela often repudiate these “ways” and the political end at which these “ways” are aimed, contending that a liberal or revolutionary campaign has limited resources — that is, limited time, limited people, and limited money. Therefore, resources should not be squandered on opposition supporters.

Clearly, as soon as one sees the ceiling in the spheres of voter registration and voter participation, one sees the flaws in these old school arguments. That is, after you run out of unregistereds and non-participants, you can’t rationally continue to chase only them.

A Simple Solution
| August 5, 2013 | 10:21 pm | Action | 1 Comment

by Saul Landau and Philip Brenner

Posted: 08/03/2013 10:54 am

President Barack Obama has a simple way to solve his Guantánamo dilemma. Five years after the president promised to close the detention center for alleged terrorists the prison remains open and continues to leave a stain on the honor and integrity of the United States and its proclaimed commitment to universal human rights.

With a brief and unambiguous message to Cuba’s President Raúl Castro, President Obama could offer to return Guantánamo naval base to Cuba on the condition that Cuba accept all of the prisoners. In one act the United States would rid itself of a loathsome prison and prisoners it has been unable to send anywhere else, open the way to repairing a sixty-year old dysfunctional relationship with Cuba, and repatriate territory that all Latin Americans — not just Cubans — have long viewed with resentment as a symbol of U.S. imperial behavior in the hemisphere. It would be the single most significant action that could break through the barriers of distrust and misunderstanding both countries have erected.

Most Americans don’t know the history of Guantánamo. Under the terms of the 1902 Platt Amendment — a relic of the Spanish-American war that allowed us to control Cuba’s affairs — the United States forced Cuba to give it a 99-year lease for the 47 square-mile territory on which it built the Guantánamo base. In 1934 President Franklin Roosevelt abrogated the Platt Amendment as a good neighbor gesture, but pressured Cuba to sign a new Guantánamo lease, this time with no end date. Following the 1991 Haitian coup, the United States rediscovered Guantánamo’s utility, as a refugee camp for escaping Haitians unwanted in the United States. After the 9/11 attacks the military converted the camp to a high security prison.

To be sure, several matters would need to be negotiated in order to implement this “simple” solution. Apart from the disposition of the base facilities, the two countries would need to agree on the latitude Cuba would have with regard to the prisoners. For example, the United States might seek assurances that Cuba would prevent the travel of released prisoners to the United States or a U.S. territory.

But once positive energy vibrates through U.S.-Cuba diplomacy, many of the disagreements between the two countries would emerge as soluble, as solutions build on one another to engender confidence. It is likely that even before the details of returning the naval base to Cuba were settled, the two countries might be able to overcome the most vexing, immediate source of irritation between them.

The United States holds in federal prisons four Cuban agents convicted of espionage, and Cuba holds an employee of a U.S. Agency for International Development subcontractor convicted of “acts against the independence or territorial integrity of the state.” Just as we have swapped prisoners with Russia and other adversaries, there is nothing stopping us from exchanging Mr. Gross for the four and allowing them all to return to their homes.

Similarly, Cuba has successfully negotiated agreements over expropriated property with every country except the United States. The typical debt-for-equity formula Cuba has used could resolve this fifty-year old issue to the benefit of U.S. citizens and corporations, and might even open the way to new U.S. investment in Cuba.

Or consider that the United States and Cuba already have achieved impressive levels of cooperation in areas of mutual concern – such as drug interdiction and natural disaster preparation – which would be even more effective if the engagements could be deepened, institutionalized, and undertaken without fear of domestic repercussions.

The U.S.-Cuba relationship has baffled ten previous U.S. presidents. It is source of tension between the United States and nearly all of the countries in Latin America. There is no objective reason for it to continue this way, along a hostile road. Solving the Cuba problem is one certain way that President Obama could keep his promises in 2009 to forge a new relationship with Latin America based on mutual respect and have a positive foreign policy legacy. Cuba has indicated a sincere desire to enter into discussions with the United States on all bilateral issues of concern between the two countries, but until now the United States has responded with a self-defeating aloofness.

As dozens of Guantánamo detainees continue their hunger strike, and a ruling about force-feeding them remains in limbo between different federal courts, the moment is ripe for President Obama to act with courage and decisiveness. Guantánamo gives him the opportunity of turning a lemon into lemonade.

Saul Landau is a Senior Fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies, and producer/director of “Will the Real Terrorist Please Stand Up.” Philip Brenner is a professor of international relations at American University and co-editor of A Contemporary Cuba Reader.

Study released on Capitol Hill shows single payer is feasible and would save billions
| August 5, 2013 | 9:53 pm | Action | Comments closed

On Wednesday, July 31, Congressman John Conyers and three other
legislators celebrated Medicare’s 48th Birthday on Capitol Hill by hosting
a briefing by Professor Gerald Friedman who released his study of the
funding of HR 676, the Expanded and Improved Medicare for All Act, showing
that single payer health care is feasible and would save 592 billion in
one year.

Following the briefing, Congressman Conyers was joined by Representatives
Mark Takano and Keith Ellison and Senator Bernie Sanders in a press
conference to call for enactment of single payer health care. The events
were cosponsored by Physicians for a National Health Program, Public
Citizen, and a number of other organizations.

Professor Friedman’s study was covered by The Hill and Becker’s Hospital
Review. The Huffington Post ran an opinion piece by Conyers and Robert
Weissman, President of Public Citizen. Conyers’ Op Ed appeared in The
Hill and his Medicare Birthday Statement was presented in the House.

University of Massachusetts Professor Gerald Friedman’s full study is
available here:
http://www.pnhp.org/sites/default/files/Funding%20HR%20676_Friedman_final_7.31.13.pdf

Excerpts and links to the articles are here:

1. Study: Single-payer healthcare system would save billions

By Lara Seligman

The Hill, Healthwatch blog, July 31, 2013

Expanding the nation’s Medicare program to cover people of all ages would
save the government billions of dollars, according to a new study released
Wednesday.

The study found that a single-payer health care system based on the
principles of legislation by Rep. John Conyers, Jr. (D-Mich.), the
Expanded and Improved Medicare for All Act, would save the federal
government about $592 billion in one year.

That’s more than enough to pay for comprehensive benefits for all
Americans at a lower cost to the public, according to Physicians for a
National Health Program, which circulated the study. The extra money would
go to paying down the national debt.

Full story:
http://www.pnhp.org/news/2013/august/study-single-payer-healthcare-system-would-save-billions

2. Happy 48th birthday, Medicare

By Rep. John Conyers Jr.

The Hill, July 29, 2013

I believe Medicare For All is the answer, which is why I have introduced
and advocated for since 2003 a publicly funded, privately distributed
insurance program, H.R. 676. Even with the expansion of access that ACA
will provide, there will still be those who fall through the gaps or who
struggle to pay for the costs of medical care. This would not be the case
under a single-payer program like H.R. 676.

More:
http://www.pnhp.org/news/2013/july/happy-48th-birthday-medicare

3. Fulfilling the Promise of Medicare

By Rep. John Conyers and Robert Weissman

The Huffington Post, July 30, 2013

Nearly five decades after its enactment, here’s what we know: Medicare
saves money by eliminating all the waste associated with the for-profit
insurance industry. And Medicare provides coverage to everyone eligible.
In stark contrast, the for-profit insurers condition care on ability to
pay … and then still try to deny care to those who have paid.

That’s five decades of evidence that indicates the solution to our
nation’s healthcare crisis isn’t cutting Medicare. It’s strengthening
Medicare and expanding it to cover everyone.
However the Affordable Care Act ultimately plays out, we know two things
for certain: Millions of Americans will remain uncovered and the
for-profit insurance industry will remain in charge of prices and
life-and-death treatment decisions. As President Obama once stated, the
only way to ensure everyone is covered is with Medicare-for-All, a
single-payer system.

More:
http://www.pnhp.org/news/2013/july/fulfilling-the-promise-of-medicare

4. Study: Single-Payer Health System Feasible, Could Save $1.8 Trillion
in 10 Years

By Bob Herman

Becker’s Hospital Review, July 31, 2013

A new study shows that expanding Medicare to every American citizen would
not only achieve universal coverage and trillions in savings, but it’s
also feasible to implement based on legislation that has already been
proposed.

Gerald Friedman, PhD, a professor of economics at the University of
Massachusetts at Amherst, released his study today in Washington, D.C., at
a congressional briefing. The basis of Dr. Friedman’s research is HR 676 —
the Expanded and Improved Medicare for All Act — which is a bill
introduced by Rep. John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.) in February that would
establish a single-payer health care program. The bill has been proposed
for 11 straight years.

In his study, Dr. Friedman said if Rep. Conyers’ bill were signed into
law, the expansion of Medicare could “paradoxically” save the U.S. health
care system $592 billion in 2014 alone. The main savings would come from
slashing “administrative waste” in the private health insurance industry
and using the government’s bargaining power to obtain cheaper
pharmaceuticals, according to the report. Over the next decade, the study
suggested savings could reach $1.8 trillion.

More:
http://www.pnhp.org/news/2013/july/study-single-payer-health-system-feasible-could-save-18-trillion-in-10-years

Distributed by:

All Unions Committee for Single Payer Health Care–HR 676
c/o Nurses Professional Organization (NPO)
1169 Eastern Parkway, Suite 2218
Louisville, KY 40217
(502) 636 1551

Email: nursenpo@aol.com
http://unionsforsinglepayer.org
8/5/13

Some Marxist Ideas Made Easy
| August 4, 2013 | 9:40 am | Action | Comments closed

by Zoltan Zigedy is available at:
http://zzs-blg.blogspot.com/

The Ruling Class

The words “ruling class” conjure a group of older, rich, typically white, men sitting in overstuffed chairs in their private club discussing and deciding the future of US domestic and foreign policies. Better yet, images of an annual gathering in a private wooded area spring to mind, with the same wealthy codgers prancing around bonfires and indulging their fantasies before retiring to cigars and cognac and deliberation. To augment these representations, film directors like Jean Renoir (The Rules of the Game), Luis Bunuel (The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie), and Peter Medak (The Ruling Class) have sought to provide vivid, often comical narrative flesh to the manners and fashions of those who are said to decide our fate—the ruling class.

But this is not what Marxists mean by “ruling class.” They do not deny that wealth and power come together from time to time, both socially and to do business, but Marxists would be hard pressed to name all the names and locate the seats of power.

For Marxists, the idea of the ruling class is the answer to an enigma: How does a relatively small segment of the population impose its will over everyone else? How could a tiny minority advance its interests ahead of the interests of the majority? And how could that minority do it not once, not occasionally, but systematically?

By asking these questions, we open the door to envisioning an alternative arrangement, an arrangement that would place the will and interests of the majority first. But first we must provide an answer.

Behind the words “ruling class,” Marxists find the secret of elite rule in a complex system of social relations and processes that compel, control, confuse, or secure consent, while frustrating any attempt to rebel. Ingenious mechanisms– electoral pageantry, entertainments, competitions, contrived identities, insatiable consumption, and a host of other distractions– deflect the majority from the question of who should rule. And should some get the bold idea of rejecting this machinery of consent, there are instruments of repression: the police and the judiciary.

These systems of contrived consent and coercion are posed as elements and guardians of “civil society,” when, in fact, they protect the interests of a minority of the super rich and protect them, their minions, and servants from any challenges from the many. Money and its influence fuel these mechanisms; from elections to movies, from lifestyles to consumption, the hand of an unseen class shapes the direction.

Like an electron, the ruling class is studied from its traces. While we cannot see or touch electrons, we know they exist from their relationship and influence upon other particles and processes. That is, their footprint is evidence for their existence. Similarly, the ruling class footprint is all over the social, political, and economic world.

History teaches that nothing beneficial to the great majority comes without a struggle. Why would this be? Who stands in the way of the majority will?

The answer should be apparent: the class that rules by virtue of its accumulated wealth and the power that it buys.

Bourgeois Democracy

“Bourgeois democracy” and “capitalist democracy” are terms that pose the fundamental question of “democracy for whom?” The terms remind us that the belief that there is some kind of pure democracy, a democracy that affords everyone an equal voice in decisions is only attainable when all the advantages of wealth and power are removed from decision-making processes.

Thus, in capitalist society– what Marx meant by “bourgeois society”– the wealthy are able to multiply the influence of their sole votes in the democratic process by “buying” elections. They use their ownership of the media, their influence over legislation, their command over political parties, and their vetting of candidates to ensure democracy for the few. The mechanisms for capturing electoral power are, of course, money and ownership.

Despite boastful claims of delivering democracy, the electoral systems of Europe and the US present outcomes that consistently favor the wealthy and their wealth-producing corporations. And when something resembling the popular will arises, it is quickly smothered with an outpouring of media demagoguery and the enticement to compromise. The rare electoral ascent of popular rule invariably faces naked, unabashed repression by the wealthy through their organs of coercion. One only has to review the fascist takeovers and military coups of the twentieth century to understand the limits of bourgeois democracy.

The deception of bourgeois democracy is not that the rules are not fair; in principle, anyone could be elected to an office. Rather, the deception is that everyone has the same possibility of winning an election. Trusted candidates supported by great corporations have an infinitely greater chance of winning against a candidate armed only with integrity and a commitment to social justice.

And throughout the capitalist world, corporations support only candidates who are loyal to the bourgeois system. Today, the labor movement alone could marshal resources that even remotely challenge a corporate-sponsored campaign; sadly, most of the labor leadership is content to cast those resources before the corporate candidate who is less offensive to working people. And corporate candidates have the incentive to only marginally appear closer to representing the working class.

It is irresponsibly cynical to believe that nothing good can be accomplished within a regime of bourgeois democracy; and it is delusional to believe that fundamental change can be accomplished with bourgeois democracy intact. Reforms– important reforms– are possible with a bourgeois democratic government. But fundamental change in the balance of forces between the rich and the rest of us is impossible without fighting to replace it with working class democracy.

Moreover, the transitional period between bourgeois democracy and proletarian or working class democracy is inherently unstable. Only one class can rule until classes are finally abolished.

Idealists and utopians constantly imagine a smooth exchange of the reins of rule through the bourgeois democratic electoral process. They see the wealthy and powerful recognize defeat and pass the keys of governance on to the representatives of working people. History knows of no such event.

That doesn’t mean that working class democracy can’t be approached through the bourgeois democratic process. It only means that working people must be prepared to meet every challenge, every reaction mounted to workers’ power. Invariably the foes of change will react– that’s why they’re called “reactionaries.”

Games of chance, like the institutions of bourgeois democracy– representative elections, formal legal systems, decentralization of power, etc– are not inherently unfair. In theory, they give everyone a reasonable opportunity for success. That is their appeal. But in practice, the poker player with far greater stakes will inevitably win. Similarly, bourgeois democracy guarantees that those with the great bankrolls will dominate the game of politics unless they are forced to play a different game.

State-Monopoly Capitalism

“State-monopoly capitalism” is one of the least-well understood ideas of Marxism; yet it is one of the most important.

Marxists understand that for most of the last century capitalism has become more and more monopolized with a shrinking number of enterprises in all of the key industries. This process has resulted in fewer and fewer giant enterprises absorbing or dissolving smaller, less competitive rivals– the process of merger and acquisition. Old industries like mining, steel, auto, and other manufacturing have grown more concentrated, as have newer technology-based industries like telecommunications and computers.

Some have mistakenly asserted that the Marxist theory of monopoly capital implies that only one or a few enterprises will dominate every industry in time. It does not.

It does predict that the process of greater and greater concentration of capital in the leading enterprises located within an industry will continually be a feature of capitalism. It also implies that the cost of entry– the amount of capital needed to start up an enterprise– will grow greater and more prohibitive over time in those industries that have achieved maturity. Thus, it is the process of concentration that is revealed by the theory and not the status of individual enterprises in the capitalist hierarchy. Marx’s colleague Frederick Engels put this point well when he exposed the logic behind this process: “Competition is based on self-interest, and self-interest in turn breeds monopoly. In short, competition passes over into monopoly.” Engels affirms that competition will continue, further leading to even greater concentration.

But along with the concentration of capital, another process is at work: the continual merging of monopoly capital with the bourgeois state. The state will play a larger and larger role in the destiny of monopoly capital and, conversely, monopoly capital will obtain a greater and greater role in the operation and direction of the state.

This process– the underlying expression of state-monopoly capitalism– is exemplified every day and in every way. The bail-out of financial institutions while mortgagees are thrown under the bus illustrates well the “ownership” of the state by big capital and the disdain of the state for the people. The regulatory agencies of the state grease the operations of monopoly capital while paying little head to the people’s interest. The coercive arms of the state function to protect and expand the corporate horizon abroad and protect property and bourgeois values at home. The state establishes secretive and undemocratic trade agreements and global institutions that protect and promote monopoly corporations from the restraints of regional and national interests. The doors of big capital and government swing both ways as their respective leaders change places.

The political Right rails against big government, laying every social and economic ill at government’s doorstep. This is, of course, absurd, but not because government is a benign or neutral arbiter of the people’s interests, as liberals want to suggest. The idea that government “bureaucrats” possess some deep-seated evil intent to cause mischief on individuals, businesses, and the economy strains the last thread of credibility. They have no common interest to buttress such a conspiratorial view. The rightist anti-government position is simply the disguise for shilling for monopoly capital.

On the other hand, the liberal position that government stands as a neutral arbiter and guardian of the rights of man is an equal absurdity. Moreover, opinion polls of confidence in government institutions– notably Congress– show that the US population knows that it is absurd. The responses of “a great deal” and “quite a lot” of confidence in Congress together barely reach double digits in recent Gallup polls, a showing even below that of the banks.

Election reform, term limits, and the other panaceas will fail to break the solid weld of monopoly capital to the state; only the evisceration of monopoly capital will break that connection.

The Interplay of the Three Ideas

The three Marxist ideas discussed above share many features and interact profoundly with one another. Bourgeois democracy is an instrument of class rule in the era of capitalism, an instrument of the capitalist ruling class. In other eras, ruling classes sustained their rule with other mechanisms.

State-monopoly capitalism is the expression of the most recent, mature stage of capitalist development, a stage that brings with it the most corrupted, crisis-ridden expression of bourgeois democracy.

While the ruling class maintains a stranglehold on governance in this era, its democratic veneer is constantly eroded; more and more of the governed recognize bourgeois democracy as thinly disguised, but naked rule by the wealthy and powerful. At the same time, state-monopoly capitalism exhausts its means to avoid or moderate economic decline or stagnation.

The maturation of these political and economic contradictions generates a revolutionary crossroads, a moment when working people must choose between veritable slavery or taking the reins of power.

Zoltan Zigedy

zoltanzigedy@gmail.com

Congressional Single Payer Supporters Plan to Celebrate Medicare’s 48th Birthday
| July 31, 2013 | 8:26 pm | Action | Comments closed

Washington, DC On Wednesday, July 31, 2013, Congressman John Conyers
(D-MI), Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT), and other congressional supporters
of a single payer healthcare system have planned several events in
Washington to celebrate the 48th anniversary of Medicare and to call for
improvement and expansion of Medicare to all. In cities across the nation
over 30 single payer groups will also be holding local “Happy Birthday
Medicare” events.

Conyers, who is the author of HR 676, national single payer health care
legislation, has scheduled a congressional briefing with Professor Gerald
Friedman from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, who will release
the results of his study on the financing of the single-payer plan in H.R.
676, The Expanded & Improved Medicare For All Act.

This briefing, which is open to the public, is hosted by Public Citizen
and Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP) and will take place:

11 a.m. to 12 noon, Wednesday, July 31
Cannon House Office Building, Room 121
1st and Independence Ave, SE

The briefing will conclude with an opportunity to ask questions. The
study will later be available on the PNHP website at www.pnhp.org.

Following the briefing, Rep. Conyers, Sen. Sanders, and other co-sponsors
of HR 676 will hold a News Conference on Defending and Expanding Medicare
to All.

1 p.m.–1:45 p.m., Wednesday, July 31
House Triangle
The grassy triangle on the House side of the Capitol’s East Front

Those in the Washington area are invited to attend these events.

For further information, please contact Dave Sterrett of Public Citizen
(202) 454 5132

Distributed by:

All Unions Committee for Single Payer Health Care–HR 676
c/o Nurses Professional Organization (NPO)
1169 Eastern Parkway, Suite 2218
Louisville, KY 40217
(502) 636 1551

Email: nursenpo@aol.com
http://unionsforsinglepayer.org
7/29/13

IBEW Calls on the President and Congress to Act on Problems in Obamacare
| July 26, 2013 | 9:06 pm | Action | Comments closed

The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW), the largest
construction union in the AFL-CIO, has launched a full scale campaign to
persuade the President and Congress to correct problems in the new
healthcare bill which the union claims will seriously hurt its members.

The IBEW campaign includes:
An article on its website (reprinted below);
A full page advertisement which appeared in several newspapers;
A ‘White Paper’;
A short video by IBEW International President Ed Hill.

The IBEW White Paper quotes President Obama’s July 16, 2009 statement:

“And that means that no matter how we reform health care, we will keep
this promise: If you like your doctor, you will be able to keep your
doctor. Period. If you like your health care plan, you will be able to
keep your health care plan. Period. No one will take it away. No matter
what. My view is that health care reform should be guided by a simple
principle: fix what’s broken and build on what works.”

IBEW Tells Capitol Hill: ‘Let us Keep Our Healthcare’

http://www.ibew.org/articles/13daily/1307/130711_ACAwhitepaper.htm

July 11, 2013

Electrical workers are raising the alarm about loopholes in the Affordable
Care Act that threaten to undermine quality coverage for more than 26
million Americans.

A new white paper from the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers
lays out provisions in the law that put multiemployer health plans at
risk.

For more than 65 years, multiemployer plans have provided affordable,
quality coverage for American workers. Found in nearly every industry, the
plans allow small businesses to team up with other employers to pool risk
and reduce costs in order to provide high-quality health care for workers.

But despite President Obama’s promise during the health care debate that
Americans could keep their current health care plan, the law would end up
forcing millions out of multiemployer plans because small businesses are
exempted from the tax on employees that do not provide health benefits
under the law.

“The IBEW is a strong supporter of the Affordable Care Act because the
goal of making sure every American has access to quality and affordable
health coverage has been a legislative priority for the IBEW since our
founding,” says Hill. “But our members and allies employers have worked
hard for the healthcare they have, and Obama must move now to guarantee
that his signature law will not cost them their coverage.”

The problem is that the ACA’s definition of a small business – one that
employs fewer than 50 employees – exempts large parts of the American
economy from the health care mandate. For example, approximately 90
percent of construction contractors employ less than 50 workers, which
gives low-road companies in construction and other industries an incentive
to not provide their employees’ health care, putting additional pressure
on employers that do.

Workers who are not covered are eligible for a federal subsidy to purchase
their own health care – an option not available to employees covered by
multiemployer plans.

“Businesses that did the right thing all along will be punished while
employers who helped contribute to the health care crisis will be
rewarded,” says IBEW President Edwin D. Hill. “It goes against the whole
spirit of the legislation to begin with.”

The IBEW are calling on the Obama administration to make regulatory
changes so workers covered by multiemployer plans are eligible for federal
subsidies – just like workers covered by for-profit plans.
“It is a question of fairness,” says Hill. “Multiemployer plans are
genuine health care success stories and they deserve the same federal
support private insurance companies get.”

Hill is also calling on Congress to amend the Affordable Care Act by
lowering the employee threshold to level the playing field in industries
dominated by companies with less than 50 workers.

Click here to read the white paper.
http://www.acawhitepaper.org/The%20Affordable%20Care%20Act%20FINAL.pdf

And click here to see the IBEW’s ad currently running in multiple
Washington, D.C., publications.
http://www.acawhitepaper.org/IBEW%20fullpage%20fullcolor%20ad.pdf

There is also a 3 minute video of IBEW President Ed Hill speaking on the
ACA here:
http://www.ibew.org/

Distributed by:

All Unions Committee for Single Payer Health Care–HR 676
c/o Nurses Professional Organization (NPO)
1169 Eastern Parkway, Suite 2218
Louisville, KY 40217
(502) 636 1551

Email: nursenpo@aol.com
http://unionsforsinglepayer.org
7/25/13

Love Among the Ruins: A Town in Decline in LaToya Ruby Frazier’s Witness
| July 25, 2013 | 7:46 pm | Action | Comments closed

Love Among the Ruins: A Town in Decline in LaToya Ruby Frazier’s Witness
LaToya Ruby Frazier’s photographs detail the personal loss when a city falls apart.

By Kelly Klaasmeyer Wednesday, Jul 24 2013

LaToya Ruby Frazier was born in Braddock, Pennsylvania, in 1982, right about the time things started to go to hell for the once-booming steel town nine miles outside Pittsburgh. The photographs in “LaToya Ruby Frazier: Witness” at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston document the town’s continued decline. Braddock is where Andrew Carnegie built his first major steel mill in 1873 as well as his first public library. The town was hard hit in the early 1980s, when steel manufacturing almost disappeared. The population fell from more than 20,000 to fewer than 2,500 today. The economic crisis led to the town being redlined — turned into a loan and investment dead zone. Then crack took its toll on the area.

Read more:
http://www.houstonpress.com/2013-07-25/culture/latoya-ruby-frazier/