Showing posts with label Democrat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Democrat. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 19, 2020

Bloomberg's transaction tax sets stage for clash with Wall Street clients


WASHINGTON - Presidential candidate Michael Bloomberg's decision to back a tax on trades marks a blow for Wall Street lobbyists which had seen the moderate Democrat as a potential ally, said analysts and lobbyists.

On Tuesday, the former New York mayor and Wall Street investment banker, who made his $60 billion fortune in finance, proposed imposing a 0.1 percent tax on trading stocks, bonds and derivatives as part of a broader financial services agenda.

Bloomberg's decision to back the tax is likely to bring him into conflict with Wall Street firms that are fighting the policy, many of which are the very same clients that helped him make the fortune with which he is funding his campaign.

A spokeswoman for Bloomberg did not immediately provide comment. Bloomberg, who was a Republican, has said he would sell his eponymous Bloomberg Inc financial data company, whose trading terminal is widely used on Wall Street, if he wins the presidency.

"It is notable that a candidate who bills himself as a centrist businessman has moved so far left," said Brian Gardner, a managing director at brokerage Keefe, Bruyette & Woods in an analyst note. He added that Bloomberg's decision to endorse the tax meant it had become a more mainstream idea in Democratic circles. "It is likely to stay in headlines beyond the 2020 election."

Long seen as a radical non-starter, a trading tax has gained momentum due to the rise of progressive firebrands including Senators Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren who have pledged to fund social policies with a "tax on Wall Street."

Former Indiana Mayor Pete Buttigieg also lists the tax among his policies, while former Vice President Joe Biden has voiced tentative support.

A Reuters/Ipsos poll released Tuesday put Sanders in the lead among Democratic and independent voters, with Bloomberg in second, Biden in third, Buttigieg in fourth and Warren in fifth.

That leaves Wall Street with few obvious allies on an issue that some firms regard as an existential threat. Depending on the structure of a tax, it could badly wound hedge funds and high-speed traders which profit by slicing tiny margins off millions of trades a day, according to academics.

For example, high-speed traders in France experienced a 30 percent reduction in trading volumes as a result of a 2012 transaction tax, according to a 2017 Journal of Finance study.

"It's certainly a concern for financial firms...since it increases the cost of trading," said Nicholas Colas, co-founder of Wall Street investment research firm DataTrek Research.

"I see it as a not-so-subtle attempt to show that Bloomberg the candidate is not afraid to hurt the clients of Bloomberg the business in order to appeal to Democratic voters."

Alarmed by its traction, the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA), the US Chamber of Commerce, and the Modern Markets Initiative (MMI) are lobbying against the tax.

In addition to the rhetoric coming from the Democratic candidates, lobbyists note there are four bills pending in Congress that seek to impose a transaction tax of some type.

Kirsten Wegner, CEO of MMI, said advocates of the policy were wrong to frame it as a tax on the wealthy. MMI advocates on behalf of high-speed trading firms.

"It would be paid by all Americans invested directly or indirectly in the markets and not just the wealthy," she said in an email.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Wednesday, December 4, 2019

Democrat Kamala Harris ends 2020 White House bid


WASHINGTON—Democrat Kamala Harris announced Tuesday she is ending her 2020 White House bid following a period of campaign turmoil and disappointing fundraising that saw her fail to break out of a crowded field.

"I've taken stock and looked at this from every angle, and over the last few days have come to one of the hardest decisions of my life," the senator from California told supporters in an email. 

"My campaign for president simply doesn't have the financial resources we need to continue."

Harris, 55, was the only African-American woman seeking the Democratic presidential nomination.

She rocketed toward the top of the field with a promising campaign launch in January, but saw her prospects slide in recent months as she struggled to define her positions on various domestic issues including health care.

Harris is one of the biggest names to date to drop out of the race, along with former congressman Beto O'Rourke of Texas and New York mayor Bill de Blasio. 

After stagnating in fifth place in the polls, with about 3.4 percent support, she was bumped to sixth spot out of 16 candidates after billionaire former New York mayor Mike Bloomberg recently threw his hat in the presidential contest.

"I'm not a billionaire. I can't fund my own campaign," she wrote to supporters. "As the campaign has gone on, it's become harder and harder to raise the money we need to compete."

It was a biting and unveiled swat at some of her rivals, including Bloomberg and billionaire activist Tom Steyer, and a telling revelation about the piles of cash a candidate needs to mount a viable campaign in today's overheated political environment.

Harris has been one the fiercest critics of Donald Trump among the 2020 candidates, directly attacking the embattled president and repeatedly calling for his impeachment.

She also challenged Democratic front-runner Joe Biden head on in the party's first presidential debate, a move that proved a strategic mistake as her support slid while Biden's largely held steady.

Harris quickly received accolades from other candidates on Twitter after her premature exit from the race.

"Her campaign broke barriers and did it with joy. Love you, sister," said fellow Senator Cory Booker, the other black candidate in the 2020 race. 

Harris was the third candidate to drop out in recent days, along with low-polling Democrats Montana Governor Steve Bullock and former congressman Joe Sestak.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Sunday, November 17, 2019

Elizabeth Warren takes risk with ad blasting billionaires


NEW YORK -- Elizabeth Warren, one of the leading Democratic presidential candidates, has stepped up her assault on billionaires -- a rallying cry popular with her base, but one that could stymie her efforts to garner wider support among US voters.

The 70-year-old US senator from Massachusetts on Thursday unveiled a new ad in an appearance on CNBC, a business news network that often criticizes her, in which she takes on the ultra-rich.

The one-minute campaign ad shows clips of several leading businessmen criticizing her plans for a wealth tax and predicting economic ruin if she is elected to succeed Donald Trump, a billionaire himself.

"The vilification of billionaires makes no sense to me. It's bull," says investor and hedge fund manager Leon Cooperman, one of the men targeted in the ad. After he speaks, a note appears on screen -- "charged with insider trading."

"I'm most scared by Elizabeth Warren," chimes in Silicon Valley investor Peter Thiel, who is identified on screen as a "Facebook board member and major Trump donor."

Then the viewer sees Warren at a campaign rally, challenging America's most wealthy to pay up to help reduce income inequality in America.

"Pitch in two cents so everybody else gets a chance to make it!" she says to cheers from the crowd.

The ad marks a new phase in the White House strategy of Warren, who has put her fight against the rich at the heart of her campaign.

"All of this is a publicity stunt," said Capri Cafaro, an executive in residence at American University's School of Public Affairs and a former Democratic member of the Ohio state senate.

"She's showing that she has the toughest talk when it comes to taking on the billionaires and standing up for working families," she told AFP.

'BILLIONAIRE TEARS'

In her campaign, Warren often fluctuates between using irony and outright scorn for those she doesn't like.

When Cooperman blasted Warren as "disgraceful," the Wall Street foe's campaign Twitter account fired back: "ok billionaire" -- a twist on the "ok boomer" meme that has gone viral among those fed up with their elders.

When Bill Gates expressed concern that he would have to pay $100 billion under her wealth tax, her team launched a tax calculator for billionaires on her website, and she offered to meet the Microsoft founder and philanthropist to explain her policy platform.

When one clicks on the tax calculator, you can enter your net worth and get a rough estimate. If you're Gates, Cooperman or former New York mayor Michael Bloomberg, there are dedicated links that automatically inputs net worth. For Gates, it's $107 billion. 

Bloomberg is, meanwhile, mulling his own presidential bid.

Warren is also selling anti-billionaire swag on her site. One mug has the mocking phrase "Billionaire tears." Buttons promoting the wealth tax -- which would be a two percent levy on fortunes exceeding $50 million -- say "two cents" and show two pennies.

Cooperman is always ready to take a swing at Warren, but he's not the only one.

Former Goldman Sachs chief Lloyd Blankfein -- who also appears in the campaign ad -- said he was surprised by being included, and noted: "Maybe tribalism is just in her DNA."

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon lamented that Warren was "vilifying" the rich, telling CNBC: "I think we should applaud successful people."

Mark Cuban, who owns the NBA's Dallas Mavericks, accused the senator of "misleading the public" with proposals that he suggested would not work, criticizing, in particular, her Medicare for All health plan.

Amid all the swirling controversy and tit-for-tat attacks, will Warren's strategy pay off?

After running neck-and-neck with former vice president Joe Biden in several opinion polls, earning more than 20 percent support in some surveys, a Reuters-Ipsos poll published Friday showed her trailing off at 13 percent, behind Biden and fellow Senator Bernie Sanders at 19 percent each.

According to Cafaro, some voters already skeptical about Warren's many policy plans could be turned off by her harsh words for the rich.

"But if you're someone that does feel that billionaires need to pay their fair share, this is going to make you even more firmly committed to her candidacy," the analyst added.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Thursday, October 10, 2019

Democrat Biden calls for Trump's impeachment


WASHINGTON - Democratic White House hopeful Joe Biden called Wednesday for Donald Trump's impeachment, saying the president "betrayed" the United States, but Trump dug in, predicting that the Supreme Court would have to resolve the fight.

"To preserve our constitution, our democracy, our basic integrity, he should be impeached," Biden told supporters at a rally in New Hampshire, adding his voice to that of other Democratic contenders.

"He's shooting holes in the constitution, and we cannot let him get away with it," added Biden.

Meanwhile a poll by Fox News, a TV channel generally viewed as sympathetic to the president, showed that "a new high" of 51 percent of voters want Trump impeached and removed from office.

Trump, however, gave no sign of buckling under pressure from the Democratic party probe into his alleged bid to damage Biden by strong-arming Ukraine to investigate the former vice president.

Having threatened a constitutional crisis by refusing to cooperate with the congressional investigation, Trump predicted that the row would end up "being a big Supreme Court case."

He told reporters in the White House that his Republican party was being "treated very badly."

Democrats accuse Trump of stonewalling and obstruction.

"No one is above the law, not even President Trump," the Democratic majority leader in the House, Steny Hoyer, said Wednesday.

IMPEACHMENT BECOMES CAMPAIGN MESSAGE

On Twitter, which Trump is using to bombard the public with conspiracy theories about a "deep state" aiming to eject him, the president argued that the whistleblower behind the impeachment case had been shown to be partisan and inaccurate.

"The Whistleblower's facts have been so incorrect about my 'no pressure' conversation with the Ukrainian President, and now the conflict of interest and involvement with a Democrat Candidate, that he or she should be exposed and questioned," Trump tweeted.

In another tweet, Trump dismissed the impeachment process as a Democratic bid to influence the election, saying "their total focus is 2020, nothing more."

But Trump, who broke with precedent by campaigning for reelection almost from the moment he took office in 2017, is himself pouncing on the impeachment as the new cornerstone of his 2020 effort.

He and the Republican Party have pushed hard to raise funds off the back of their accusation of unfair treatment from the Democratic lower house in Congress.

And on Thursday and Friday, Trump will take that message to his core supporters when he holds campaign rallies in Minneapolis and in Louisiana.

Even if the House impeaches Trump, it remains unlikely that the Republican-led Senate would convict him in the subsequent trial.

However, Trump's already turbulent presidency would be forever associated with the impeachment.

UKRAINIAN PHONE CALL 

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi formally launched the impeachment inquiry last month after revelations Trump pressured Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky in a July 25 phone call.

In the call, Trump asked Zelensky to look into what the US leader said were corrupt business deals involving Biden.

Democrats say that Trump tried to coerce Zelensky by holding back US military aid to Ukraine. Trump says there was no quid pro quo and that his only desire is to combat corruption.

He subsequently said publicly he would also like China to investigate Biden, something critics say bolsters the allegation that Trump is seeking foreign help to discredit opponents.

On Tuesday, the Trump administration blocked a potentially major witness, ambassador to the European Union Gordon Sondland, from testifying before Congress. Democrats then slapped Sondland with a subpoena to appear on October 16.

"The failure to produce this witness, the failure to produce these documents" was "additional strong evidence of obstruction," House Intelligence Committee chairman Adam Schiff said.

Later the same day, the White House announced in a lengthy legal statement that it rejected any cooperation with the Democrats at all.

Lawmakers want to hear on Friday from another key witness: former US ambassador to Kiev Marie Yovanovitch, who is scheduled to appear before the House Intelligence Committee.

US media has reported that Trump removed her from her post because she opposed his efforts to get Ukraine to investigate Biden.

bur-sms/wd/bfm

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Thursday, October 3, 2019

Bernie Sanders pauses campaign after treatment for chest pain


NEW YORK - Bernie Sanders put his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination on hold Wednesday after being treated for a blocked artery, becoming the first in a race dominated by septuagenarians to halt their campaign for health reasons.

At 78, the leftist senator from Vermont is the oldest candidate vying to take on President Donald Trump in 2020 and one of the leading contenders behind favorites Joe Biden and Elizabeth Warren.

Sanders' team said he was canceling events and appearances "until further notice" after complaining of chest pains while on the stump in Las Vegas, Nevada on Tuesday.

Sanders later wrote on Twitter that he was "feeling good."

"During a campaign event yesterday evening Sen. Sanders experienced some chest discomfort," Sanders' senior advisor Jeff Weaver said in a statement.

"Following medical evaluation and testing he was found to have a blockage in one artery and two stents were successfully inserted."

He added that the senator was talking and in good spirits, and would be resting over the "next few days."

Sanders -- a self-described Democratic socialist -- pushed 2016 Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton right to the wire three years ago and is sitting third in the polls this time around.

He was one of the first to argue loudly for taxing the rich and for the introduction of universal health care, policies now embraced by some of the other candidates.

His Democratic rivals rushed to wish Sanders a swift recovery.

"Anyone who knows Bernie understands what a force he is. We are confident that he will have a full and speedy recovery and look forward to seeing him on the trail soon," tweeted Democratic frontrunner Biden.

Warren, a senator from Massachusetts, tweeted that she hoped "to see my friend back on the campaign trail very soon," while Kamala Harris said she was "thinking" of Sanders.

Sanders thanked well wishers and used the opportunity to trumpet one of his key election pledges.

"I'm fortunate to have good health care and great doctors and nurses helping me to recover," he tweeted.

"None of us know when a medical emergency might affect us. And no one should fear going bankrupt if it occurs. Medicare for All!"

Sanders has served in Congress as an independent aligned with Democrats since 1991, first as a representative of Vermont and then, since 2007, as the state's junior senator.

'Crazy hard'

Earlier this year he was running consistently in second place behind former vice president Biden, who is two years younger, in the race for the Democratic Party nomination for president.

Since July, he has jockeyed for position with Warren, who recently moved slightly ahead of him in polls in the crowded field.

Both Sanders' and Biden's age has been raised as an issue in their candidacies. Trump is 73, while Warren is 70.

Sanders' health has generally been good for his age, however, and it has been Biden who has had to bat away questions about his stamina and mental sharpness.

In March, Sanders gashed his head on a shower door and had seven stitches, but quickly returned to the campaign trail.

Last month, he canceled three events in South Carolina to rest his voice, which had become hoarse.

Sanders sounded raspy during the third Democratic debate and his campaign said it was because of a "vigorous campaign schedule."

New York congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said Sanders' hospitalization highlighted the rigors of running for office.

"A lot of people don't understand how crazy hard grassroots campaigning is -- for organizers and candidates alike. Rest up, friend. We're with you!" she wrote on Twitter.

Sanders faces a long and bruising battle ahead, with the first Democratic primaries not taking place until February.

He is currently third in an average of national polls, with 16.7 percent, according to RealClearPolitics.

Biden leads at 26.1 percent, with Warren second with 24.4 percent.

It was not immediately clear whether Sanders would be fit to appear in the fourth Democratic debate scheduled for October 15 in Ohio.

Trump, who likes to tout his own health, famously mocked Clinton when she became ill during a 9/11 memorial ceremony in 2016.

The president did not immediately comment on Sanders' announcement.

pmh-pdh/ft

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Thursday, January 24, 2019

Gay war veteran mayor jumps into US presidential race


CHICAGO - Democratic mayor and military veteran Pete Buttigieg announced Wednesday that he is entering the 2020 presidential fray, aiming to become America's youngest and first openly gay commander-in-chief.

Buttigieg said he had formed a presidential exploratory committee, a key opening step to formally launching what would be a longshot campaign to catapult from local politics onto the national stage.

Little known outside of South Bend, Indiana, where he is the two-term mayor, Buttigieg even includes a guide to pronouncing his name on his Twitter account -- it's "BOOT-edge-edge."

The 37-year-old Democrat, Rhodes Scholar, and Afghanistan war veteran, who married his husband last year, announced his intentions while emphasizing his millennial pedigree and track record in improving the economy in his "Rust Belt" city.

Areas of the Midwest that have struggled for years amid a decline in manufacturing jobs were vital to Donald Trump's 2016 presidential victory.

"I am obviously not stepping onto this stage as the most famous person in this conversation," Buttigieg told reporters at a news conference.

"But, I belong to a party whose characteristic has always been to look for fresh voices, new leadership, and big ideas. And, I think that's what 2020 is going to be about."

'LONGEST OF LONGSHOTS'

The young mayor faces substantial odds from a growing list of charismatic Democrats seeking to carry their party's torch into 2020, including three female US senators -- Elizabeth Warren, Kamala Harris and Kirsten Gillibrand -- and Hispanic-American former Obama cabinet member Julian Castro.

In a campaign-style video posted online, Buttigieg portrayed himself as a can-do reformer who revived his mid-sized city after decades of population flight and economic decline brought on by the loss of manufacturing jobs.

He makes no mention of Trump, instead taking aim at what he called the "show" in Washington: "The corruption, the fighting, the lying, the crisis. It's got to end."

"We're the generation that lived through school shootings, that served in the wars after 9/11. And we're the generation that stands to be the first to make less than our parents -- unless we do something different," he said.

Buttigieg was born and raised in South Bend, studied at Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar and earned a degree in history from Harvard University.

He has been mentioned as a potential presidential hopeful for years and was in the early primary state of Iowa last year, testing out a campaign message and attempting to build name recognition.

"Longest of longshots, but this 37-year-old gay, Afghanistan War vet has a remarkable story," David Axelrod, who was a senior aide to former president Barack Obama, said on Twitter.

The Democratic field of contenders is expected to broaden in the coming months to likely include former vice president Joe Biden, Senator Cory Booker, former congressman Beto O'Rourke, and Senator Bernie Sanders, the runner-up for the 2016 Democratic nomination.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Friday, November 24, 2017

Al Franken in Thanksgiving apology after fresh groping allegations


WASHINGTON - US Senator and former Saturday Night Live star Al Franken, accused of groping women, issued a fresh apology Thursday after new complaints of inappropriate behavior emerged this week.

The case of the Minnesota Democrat, who faces a potential Senate ethics investigation, is the latest in a series of sexual assault complaints against prominent American men in the entertainment, sports, political and media worlds.

Two women have anonymously alleged that Franken touched their buttocks at two separate political events in 2007 and 2008, the Huffington Post reported on Wednesday, taking the total number of accusations against him to four.

On the United States holiday of Thanksgiving, Franken wrote that he "feels terribly that I've made some women feel badly," the Star Tribune newspaper in his home state reported.

The former comedian, writer and liberal talk radio host described himself as "a warm person" who likes to hug people when they're being photographed with him, but clearly, his embrace "crossed a line for some women," his statement said.

Franken vowed to move ahead with an effort to regain the trust of his constituents, the Star Tribune said.

Sports broadcaster and former model Leeann Tweeden was the first alleged victim to come forward, accusing Franken of touching her while she slept and kissing her without her consent in 2006.

A second woman, Lindsay Menz, then told CNN that she took a photograph with Franken at a Minnesota fair in 2010, and that he "pulled me in really close, like awkward close, and as my husband took the picture, he put his hand full-fledged on my rear."

Franken said he felt "badly" about Menz's feelings after their encounter. He also apologised profusely to Tweeden and said he would welcome a congressional investigation into his conduct.

it/qan/ceb

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

Trump within reach of shock White House win



NEW YORK - Billionaire populist Donald Trump was poised for a possible shock victory over Hillary Clinton in Tuesday's historic US presidential election, as a string of swing state victories for the Republican jolted world markets and stunned her supporters.

As polls closed and media called state races one-by-one, giving the key battleground states of Ohio, Florida and North Carolina to the Republican maverick, pollsters scrambled to update their forecasts and point to an improbable upset.

Clinton -- the 69-year-old Democratic former first lady, senator and secretary of state -- began the day as the narrow favorite to win the White House and become America's first female president.

But Trump's string of successes reflected how deeply divided the American electorate has become, and showcased his ability to tap into white blue-collar voters' resentment of cultural change linked to immigration and the loss of manufacturing jobs at home.

World markets plunged as US observers awaited results from the Rust Belt state of Pennsylvania, the northeastern state of New Hampshire, and the northern states of Michigan and Wisconsin -- all now vital to Clinton's hopes.

Mexico's peso plummeted over fears that Trump will make good on his vow to wall off America's neighbor to the south.

Safe haven assets rallied, with the yen and gold rushing higher, and Wall Street futures fell 3.7 percent in after-hours trade. Asian markets were in turmoil, with Indian stocks dropping six percent.

Clinton supporters who had gathered at a glittering reception in New York expecting to hear a victory speech from Clinton fell quiet and jabbed nervously at their phones.

Major donors had tears in their eyes as they stared stupefied at the screens, and an audible gasp filled the room when North Carolina went into Trump's win column.

"Not great," muttered railroad retiree Joan Divenuti, who came all the way from Massachusetts to cheer her heroine. "Florida was always a problem," she added.

Across town at the Trump election party, the 70-year-old property tycoon's supporters -- a more well-heeled crowd than the blue-collar Midwesterners he is counting on for victory -- cheered and pumped their fists at each advance.

"I think we're going to win," said 22-year-old Brendon Pena, who works for a company that leases office space in the soaring Trump Tower.

"I was always positive. I think Donald Trump is a really smart guy. He knows what we're going to do and we're going to win the election."

At 11:30 pm (0430 GMT), Trump was projected to win 24 states worth 229 electoral college votes, within striking distance of the 270 he needs.

Clinton stood at a projected 209 electoral votes.

- 'Whatever happens, thank you' -

This team has so much to be proud of. Whatever happens tonight, thank you for everything. pic.twitter.com/x13iWOzILL

— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) November 9, 2016

On the legislative side, the Republicans were on course to retain their majority in the US House of Representatives, according to network projections -- a situation that has been a thorn in the side of incumbent President Barack Obama.

Clinton tweeted: "This team has so much to be proud of. Whatever happens tonight, thank you for everything."

She and her husband, former president Bill Clinton, huddled in a hotel near the venue to prepare a victory -- or concession -- speech.

Earlier, the Clintons voted near their home in Chappaqua, before emerging to shake hands and chat with the crowd.

An exit poll by CNN found that only four in 10 voters were optimistic that Obama's successor would do any better than he has during his two terms in office.

Trump, 70, cast his ballot alongside his wife Melania in a Manhattan school gymnasium.

"Right now it's looking very good," he told reporters -- paying no heed to protesters who welcomed him with chants of "New York hates you!"

- Tough contest -



The 2016 race was the most bruising in modern memory.

Obama's election eight years ago as the nation's first black president had raised hopes of uniting Americans, but the current contest has only highlighted the country's divisions -- and the fact that voters are not necessarily happy with their options.

Exit polls by ABC News and NBC News found that both Clinton and Trump are seen as untrustworthy by majorities of voters, while most find Trump's temperament unpresidential.

But his supporters flocked to the polls.

"It's unbelievable. I didn't know Trump was really going to pull it off," said Glenn Ruti, a New Yorker who works in telecommunications.

"I think he's going to go all the way. The country wants change."

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Monday, May 6, 2013

Will enough Americans sign up for Obamacare?


WASHINGTON - Healthcare reform should be the signature Democratic achievement of President Barack Obama's presidency.

But with "Obamacare" five months from show time, Democrats are worried about whether enough Americans will sign up to make the sweeping healthcare overhaul a success - and what failure might mean for Congress heading into the 2016 presidential race.

Some of the law's main advocates fear that not enough of America's 49 million uninsured will know about health coverage offered in their own states. Even if they do, new insurance plans may not be attractive to young, healthy consumers needed to offset an expected influx of older and sicker patients.

Only a handful of states are beginning campaigns to promote the online health insurance marketplaces created by the law. Known as exchanges, the markets will offer private coverage at federally subsidized rates to individuals and families with low-to-moderate incomes, with enrollment set to begin Oct. 1.

The federal government has kept quiet about its promotion plans, which are expected to begin in earnest over the summer.

While Obama and his administration say they are working nonstop on reform, analysts believe a poor performance could make the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act a big enough campaign issue in 2014 to jeopardize Democratic control of the Senate - particularly if insurance costs rise sharply.

"There is reason to be very concerned about what's going to happen with young people. If their (insurance) premiums shoot up, I can tell you, that is going to wash into the United States Senate in a hurry," said Senator Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat.

Some Democrats are frustrated about the lack of details surrounding administration plans to promote the exchanges.

Senator Max Baucus, a chief architect of the reform law, said federal outreach efforts deserve a failing grade so far and could be heading for a "huge train wreck." He criticized Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius for the scant information her department has provided.

Funding embargo

"Why in late April can't they show us any of what they've got planned? The rollout plan should already be in existence," an exasperated Democratic Senate aide said separately.

The law is expected to cover 15 million Americans next year through the exchanges and an expansion of Medicaid. The overall number is forecast to jump to 38 million by 2022.

Reform is facing challenges on several fronts. Big insurers appear wary of participating, raising questions about how competitive the exchanges will be. Businesses are mounting a new legal effort to stop the use of federal subsidies in exchanges run by Washington. And most states have balked at the exchanges and the Medicaid expansion.

Meanwhile, the enrollment effort is under threat from months of delay, a congressional Republican embargo on new funding and worries about how affordable the new plans will be, according to analysts, lawmakers, congressional aides and former officials.

"I don't see how what they're planning to do is going to be adequate. The resources are too limited, the (law's) penalties are too weak and elite opposition in much of the country will undermine" enrollment, said Paul Starr, a Princeton professor and former health adviser to President Bill Clinton.

Add to that the challenge of reaching a public that is highly skeptical and often misinformed about the most complex social legislation since Medicare and Medicaid in the mid-1960s.

A Kaiser Family Foundation poll found that 77 percent of Americans know little or nothing about exchanges, while 40 percent erroneously think reforms create a government panel to make end-of-life decisions for people on Medicare.

An April survey of 1,003 people by HealthPocket, an online company that helps consumers find insurance, also found that the law's penalty for not buying coverage would not induce most 25-to-34-year-olds or 18-to-24-year-olds to purchase it.

Glitches and bumps

Obama this week defended the pace of implementation, telling reporters that the government was working hard to "make sure that we're hitting all the deadlines and the benchmarks" even with the challenge of building the new online exchanges.

"That's still a big, complicated piece of business," Obama said, adding the task was made harder by a dedicated Republican opposition still determined to block the law's implementation.

"Even if we do everything perfectly, there'll still be, you know, glitches and bumps," he said.

The administration is building exchanges in 33 states that are unwilling or unable to do so on their own, and has limited funds for marketing. The remaining 17 states are building their own and have received sizable budgets for outreach.

Among states taking the lead, Vermont has launched radio advertising to raise public awareness. Colorado begins its public outreach this month, while California, Maryland and the District of Columbia will hold off until later in the year.

For the federal exchanges, HHS has a contract worth at least $8 million with public relations firm Weber Shandwick and $54 million to train and pay "navigators," or counselors who will help consumers choose a health plan. It also has a $28 million contract with General Dynamics to set up a call center and will make its Healthcare.gov website consumer-oriented.

The administration is seeking help from major U.S. insurance providers to market aggressively to consumers on the federally run exchanges and help convince healthy citizens between 26 to 45 to pay for insurance instead of a first-year penalty amounting to $95 per person or 1 percent of household income.

Blowing up

But reform advocates worry that the HHS budget is too small and the spigot for new funding from Congress is shut off by partisan politics. The "navigator" program allocates just $600,000 each for 13 states including Delaware, Iowa, Kansas and New Hampshire.

"There's a limited amount of money that should be increased. But that's subject to appropriations and Congress is not likely to appropriate additional money," said Ron Pollack of the advocacy group Families USA. "It's going to require a very robust effort in the private sector."

Analysts say reform could be as big an issue in next year's congressional midterm elections as it was in 2010, when dislike for the law among senior citizens helped install a Republican majority in the House of Representatives. This time, failed implementation could end Democratic hopes of recapturing the House and leave enough Senate Democrats vulnerable to give Republicans an edge in that chamber.

"We have to see how bad it is. This issue blowing up on Democrats would make the Republicans' job a lot easier," said Jennifer Duffy of the Cook Political Report.

But Democrats believe implementation will also provide favorable coverage of deserving individuals and families finally being able to secure adequate and affordable health coverage after a long sojourn through the current marketplace.

There has been encouraging news for consumers. Vermont says 2014 premium rates will save money for residents. A family of four with an annual income of $75,000 would pay less than $600 per month for coverage with a federal subsidy, versus $900 for the cheapest small group plan available today.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Romney wins big in Florida primary


TAMPA -- Mitt Romney trounced main rival Newt Gingrich in Florida's Republican primary on Tuesday, putting himself in a commanding position to win the nomination to take on President Barack Obama in November, US media projections showed.

The margin of victory -- 47 percent to 31 percent with more than two-thirds of the roughly two million votes counted -- dealt a bitter blow to former House speaker Gingrich, who faces a Herculean task to turn the race around.

Gingrich, 68, shocked the party establishment when he thumped Romney, 64, in South Carolina earlier this month, but his support sank fast in Florida and Romney is now the one with all the momentum.

While the battle for the right to challenge Obama, a Democrat, in November is still in the relatively early stages, Romney's thumping win in Florida demonstrates his ability to carry a major general election battleground state.

At the end of what had been a caustic Florida campaign, the multimillionaire former Massachusetts governor and venture capitalist summed up what the victory in the large, diverse state meant to him.

"How important is Florida? Today it is the most important thing in the world to me," he told reporters in Tampa, while defending his campaign's tactics and taking a few more shots at Gingrich.

"If we are successful here it will be pretty clear that when attacked, you have to respond and you can't let charges go unanswered."

Gingrich "really can't whine about negative campaigning," Romney added.

"His comments most recently are really quite sad and I think painfully revealing about the speaker and what he is willing to say and do to try to get the nomination."

The atmosphere inside the Tampa ballroom where Romney was to give his victory speech was euphoric as supporters watched the results trickle in, punctuating each gain with chants of "Mitt, Mitt, Mitt!"

"I'm pleased, but I'm not surprised -- it is really what I expected," Barbara Jaehne, a doctor from the Florida coastal town of Sarasota, told AFP as the growing crowd waved small American flags to the beat of country music.

"I feel like Newt is very polarizing -- he is like the guy on the volleyball team who didn't get picked, he is lashing out and people don't like that."

Gingrich acknowledged he faced an uphill battle in Florida, but promised to wage a long-haul battle for the nomination, taking the fight all the way to the party convention in August when the nominee will ultimately be crowned.

"I think ultimately it's going to come down to a conservative versus Massachusetts moderate primary fight across the whole country," he said at a campaign stop in Orlando.

Gingrich has urged fellow conservative Rick Santorum, who won the Iowa caucuses but has struggled since and looked set to finish a distant third in Florida, to drop out of the race.

Santorum, a former Pennsylvania senator, and libertarian-leaning Texas congressman Ron Paul did little campaigning in Florida.

The economy seemed to be on the minds of many voters, including businessman Paul Jackson, who said he voted for Romney.

"I voted for him because I think he has the best chance of beating the president -- the current president. I don't agree with everything that he stands for, but I need to see a change that satisfied my selfish needs as a small business owner," he said.

Florida has been badly hit by the "Great Recession" wrought by the 2008 financial crisis -- unemployment is close to 10 percent and the state was at the epicenter of the housing bubble.

Many residents have seen their homes repossessed or have mortgages now worth more than the value of their homes.

After the South Carolina setback, Romney used his much deeper campaign war chest to unleash an unrelenting barrage of negative ads in Florida.

Hitting Gingrich on ethics, Romney also frequently mentioned the former speaker's work as a highly paid consultant for mortgage giant Freddie Mac -- which is seen by some as complicit in the housing meltdown of 2008.

Romney admitted Tuesday that the defeat in South Carolina had helped steel his spine and toughen his resolve.

In recent days, he has appeared more relaxed and self-assured.

The usually stiff candidate even broke into song on the eve of the vote, warbling several bars of the patriotic anthem "America the Beautiful" at a campaign event as the crowd sang along.

Gingrich meanwhile has vowed to fight on, accusing his rival, one of the wealthiest individuals to ever seek the presidency, of trying to spend his way to the White House.

But with seven states voting in the next four weeks, Romney's deep pockets and political organization could play a key role as the candidates battle on multiple fronts.

Romney won five of those seven states in 2008, despite losing the eventual nomination to Senator John McCain. The next contests will take place in Nevada and Maine on Saturday.

source: interaksyon.com