US Midterm Elections - Predictions and Post-mortems

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In summary, this thread is for discussing today's midterms. Predictions can be made until 4:00pm ET for the Senate, House, and Statehouses. Names of candidates can also be shared. After results come out, post-analysis mode will begin. Some predictions have been made for individual races. There is also a link to an article about voters' feelings towards the election. A comment is made about wanting to see certain candidates win. There is a prediction for the House. An article about early analysis and races to watch is shared. A comment is made about voters' reasons for voting. There is a link to an article about Media Matters retracting a prediction. A comment is made about voter turnout and information received. Another
  • #71
Ivan Seeking said:
Imo, I would add, if someone wants to use the fillabuster, they should have to actually fillabuster and not just threaten to use it. They have made it far too easy to use. If they had to actually fillabuster, it would be used far less often.

:biggrin: Every senator will need to keep a copy of the local phone book handy, in case they need to filibuster.
 
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  • #72
I wonder how many politicians talking about the "donut hole" actually understand how it works or even how many people are actually reaching the catastrophic phase?

A quick overview for PF members:

In 2010 the deductible for a Part D prescription plan can range from $0 up to $310. Most plans offer 3 to 5 tiers of structured co-pays and "standard designs" offer a 25% co-insurance through the "initial coverage phase". The initial coverage phase will be described as ($0 to $310) after deductible the prescriptions purchased at the combined cost the beneficiary pays combined with the amount the insurance company pays up to the cumulative value of $2,830.

For example, if a standard design is in use, (2,830 - 310 = 2,520) 25% co-insurance = $630 cost to beneficiary and 75% $1,890 insurance company cost.
At this point ($2,830 total) the donut hole is reached and the beneficiary pays 100% of the cost until their out of pocket cost reaches $4,550 (4,550 - 630 = $3,920)

At $4,550, the beneficiary has a co-pay of $2.50 to $6.30 or 5% co-insurance.

If the beneficiary has $100,000 worth of prescriptions per year, they would pay $4,550 + (5% of $93,560) $4,678 = $9,228 (less a check for $250) and the insurance company would pay $90.772.

This is an example of a lower premium basic plan with no "gap coverage". A higher premium (typically $45 to $100 per month) might offer a continuation of pre-set co-pays on certain prescription through the donut hole.

In 2011, the donut hole will start at $2,840. The $250 check will still be available. Instead of 100% cost in the donut hole, generics will cost 93% (typically) and some brands will be discounted (estimated at up to 50%) by the manufacturing companies.

Worth mentioning, I've noticed (personal observation and opinion only) a few of the formulaies (list of covered drugs by each filed plan) have changed in the past quarter and for 2011.

For more information, visit www.medicare.gov[/URL].
 
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  • #73
Ivan Seeking said:
Yes, that is why passage required the political maneuvering that was used. The only way to pass the bill was to get the two Independents on board, which made passage fillabuster proof. When it became impossible to pass the desired bill due to the fillabuster, a bill passed previously in the Senate was passed in the House retroactively.

The Republicans called this dirty politics when a clear majority - 58 votes - had supported the abandoned bill in the Senate. This is what killed Universal Health Care and the reason to many liberals are ticked off. The liberals blame Obama when he got the only bill possible.

Everyone is mad for the wrong reasons on both sides of the aisle. It is insanity! And the Tea Party caters to the insanity.

If I recall, the Dems did some back room deal making, there was no deliberation, no time to read or review the 2,000 pages, etc.
 
  • #74
Astronuc said:
I really would like to see more grey or purple or some other color, which represents a true indpendent not beholden to democratic or republican party.
Unfortunately, this is unlikely to happen any time soon as most people think voting for anyone other than a Republican or a Democrat is a wasted vote since independents are almost always assured of losing an election because of this type of thinking. It's a self-fulfilling prophesy. It's paradoxical as these same people complain how nothing really ever changes in Washington yet send the same people back time after time. It certainly doesn't help that the major parties have stacked the rules to make life difficult for third-party candidates, like requiring more signatures to get on the ballot, excluding them from debates, etc.
 
  • #75
WhoWee said:
I said "narrow and specific".
If I recall correctly, the reasoning from Republicans for filibustering the Small Business Bill was that it was too narrow and didn't do enough. I'll look for a reference later tonight.**

CRGreathouse said:
I can't imagine anything but gridlock with different parties controlling the two chambers.
Reagan had a split Congress for his first 6 yrs, and my impression of that period is not what I'd describe as gridlock.

Ivan Seeking said:
Wow, Bennet [D] won in Colorado!

Edit: Whoops, not official yet.
It was as good as official since early this morning. The only precincts not finished were in Dem districts. (The only one remaining now is Boulder, which is doing better than 2:1 for Benett).**Edit: Found http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2010/09/senate-democrats-overcome-gop-filibuster-of-small-business-bill.html from a quick search:
Earlier this month, the top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell even derided the measure as “a little itty-bitty small business bill that no one thinks will have much of an impact on the economy.”
 
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  • #76
I'm calling WA for Murray. The majority of uncounted votes are in King county, where he has a 25% lead so far, with 55% counted there.

With that, the Senate tally comes to D:52, R:48. I had guessed 51-49, and I had four individual mistakes (two offsetting each other, and one irrelevant to the party make-up): NV, WA, AK and PA.

No one else played, so I won! :biggrin:
 
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  • #77
Gokul43201 said:
And with that, one hopes the Alvin Green anomaly will resolve itself and vanish in a puff of sanity.
Well 358 thousand voted for Green none the less. Heck if someone wants to protest DeMint then at least do a write-in.
 
  • #78
Gokul43201 said:
If I recall correctly, the reasoning from Republicans for filibustering the Small Business Bill was that it was too narrow and didn't do enough. I'll look for a reference later tonight.**

I would contend that "Mr. Itty-Bitty" has become part of the problem. The notion that legislation has to be 2,000 pages and nobody is responsible for the waste and abuse is unacceptable.

I'm a strong believer in breaking those 3 to 4 massive Bills per year into 1,000 small Bills read and understood by everyone. If the contents are wasteful and abusive - dealt with accordingly. I believe our legislators should spend 8 to 10 hours per day in-session 5 to 6 days per week - for a maximum 2 terms (not on the campaign trail for half their term or on world wide discovery tours or perhaps visiting Castro/trying to help Cuban tourism).
http://www.nydailynews.com/latino/2009/04/03/2009-04-03_congressional_black_caucus_delegation_vi.html
https://nacla.org/node/5812
http://www.afrocubaweb.com/blackcaucus.htm
 
  • #79
Gokul43201 said:
Another interesting tidbit about a specific group of ballot measures:

http://money.cnn.com/2010/11/02/news/economy/ballot_measures/index.htm
Ugh, CNN just can't resists inserting commentary.

So they say ...
CNN said:
Voters in several states defeated major anti-tax measures on Tuesday, acknowledging that their financially-strapped governments need revenue to provide services.

[...]
At the same time, voters were not eager to raise taxes. A high-profile bid to tax millionaires in Washington state failed.

Which could have just as easily been said this way with the exact same fact set:
CNN said:
Voters in several states defeated major anti-tax measures on Tuesday. [Period].

[...]
At the same time, voters were not eager to raise taxes, acknowledging the common sense of holding down taxes in the midst of near record unemployment....
 
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  • #80
Jasongreat said:
As I see it the 2006 and 2008 elections were a rebuttal of the big spending, big government Rino's, or progressive republicans. There were huge numbers of independents and republicans who voted for change, too bad, the change was bigger spending and bigger government. Those same independents and republicans are who voted yesterday to give power back to republicans, but looking into my crystal ball, if those republicans now continue big government policies, they won't be in congress long, and as far as that goes if some democrats don't stand by them, they will also be booted next vote.
You really think the 2008 election result was a call for more conservatism? Have you come across a single person other than yourself that shares this view (just curious)?

In any case, I don't think you are basing this on an examination of the numbers, since they do not easily support your hypothesis. In fact, the exit polls clearly show that there were a lot fewer Republican voters (as a fraction of the electorate) that showed up at the polls in '08 than did yesterday. And there were a lot fewer Dem voters at the polls yesterday. But Independents did swing significantly from Obama in 2008 to the Republican vote this time.

http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/results/polls/#USP00p1
http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2010/results/polls/#USH00p1

Other noteworthy differences are in the age distribution and religiosity. The 2008 electorate was much younger than yesterday's, and attended church less often. And these numbers are consistent with reporting I've come across, such as the article below:
CNN said:
Christian conservative voters turn out big on election night

Ralph Reed and his Freedom and Faith Coalition did their best to sway the electorate Tuesday night. Between phone calls, mailings, and knocking on doors, Reed estimated his pro-family, pro-free market group had 58.8 million voter contacts aimed at the conservative faith community.

He described that group as "frequently mass-attending Catholics and evangelicals."

The coalition says it built a list of 7.7 million households before the midterms who fit that mold.

Reed said, "What we were trying to do was ensure those people turned out in the largest number possible and we think that effort was successful."

According to the group's polling information released Wednesday, 32 percent of voters identified themselves as members of the conservative Christian movement. That number represents an increase over their 2006 data. Of those voters in their survey who self-identified as conservative Christians, 78 percent voted Republican.

http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.co...vative-voters-turn-out-big-on-election-night/

Unrelated, but interesting, with this election is that among the voters, the opinion of the Dem Party was just as poor as the opinion of the Rep Party.
 
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  • #81
mheslep said:
Ugh, CNN just can't resists inserting commentary.
You still get ughed out by this stuff?
 
  • #82
Gokul43201 said:
You still get ughed out by this stuff?
Heh, good point.
 
  • #83
This might perk you up.
http://thehill.com/homenews/house/127597-pelosi-no-decision-yet-on-future-plans

"Pelosi hinted, however, that the decision could hinge most significantly on the sentiments of fellow Democrats.

"In our caucus we always do things by consensus," said the 70-year-old Pelosi. "And when we have that consensus, we’ll have some announcement to make."

Echoing Tuesday's defense of the Democrats' legislative record, Pelosi also indicated that, given the chance, she wouldn't do anything differently.

"No regrets," she told Sawyer. "We believe we did the right thing, and we worked very hard in our campaigns to convey that to the American people."

Speculation about Pelosi's future has swirled around Capitol Hill — and around the country — since it became apparent Tuesday night that Republicans would regain a House majority after just four years of Democratic control. The shift ends Pelosi's historic stint as the first female House Speaker."
 
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  • #84
mheslep said:
Ugh, CNN just can't resists inserting commentary.
Which is why I don't care to watch them.

Stephen Colbert (11/3) was pointing out the number of analysts in the CNN newsrooms and the number of opinions flying about.

Meanwhile - 'Vanity Fair' Writer: What Will Speaker Boehner Do?
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=131017915

Interesting insight.

Of Rand Paul, Todd Purdum points out that Paul would have a conflict with republican establishment (assuming he is true to his ideology). Boehner has close ties to lobbyists.
 
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  • #85
WhoWee said:
This might perk you up.
http://thehill.com/homenews/house/127597-pelosi-no-decision-yet-on-future-plans

"Pelosi hinted, however, that the decision could hinge most significantly on the sentiments of fellow Democrats.

"In our caucus we always do things by consensus," said the 70-year-old Pelosi. "And when we have that consensus, we’ll have some announcement to make."

Echoing Tuesday's defense of the Democrats' legislative record, Pelosi also indicated that, given the chance, she wouldn't do anything differently.

"No regrets," she told Sawyer. "We believe we did the right thing, and we worked very hard in our campaigns to convey that to the American people."

Speculation about Pelosi's future has swirled around Capitol Hill — and around the country — since it became apparent Tuesday night that Republicans would regain a House majority after just four years of Democratic control. The shift ends Pelosi's historic stint as the first female House Speaker."
Ugh! She unfortunately got re-elected with 80% of the votes in her district (District 8 in Ca). She seems to be in denial as well as being delusional - like so many in DC.
 
  • #86
Astronuc said:
Ugh! She unfortunately got re-elected with 80% of the votes in her district (District 8 in Ca). She seems to be in denial as well as being delusional - like so many in DC.

She has no regrets, and clearly nothing to fear, I have to wonder what she'll attempt to push through in her final days.
 
  • #87
WhoWee said:
She has no regrets, and clearly nothing to fear, I have to wonder what she'll attempt to push through in her final days.
Purdum made an interest comment in the NPR interview I posted above. It's toward the end. Pelosi apparently had iron-fist control on Congress - or rather the democrats.

Anyway - another piece by Purdum - Todd S. Purdum Asks, Can Washington Be Fixed?
http://www.vanityfair.com/online/daily/2010/08/can-washington-be-fixed.html
 
  • #88
Astronuc said:
Purdum made an interest comment in the NPR interview I posted above. It's toward the end. Pelosi apparently had iron-fist control on Congress - or rather the democrats.

Anyway - another piece by Purdum - Todd S. Purdum Asks, Can Washington Be Fixed?
http://www.vanityfair.com/online/daily/2010/08/can-washington-be-fixed.html

Interesting piece - one size fits all, coupled with every decision made in haste? This is why experience matters.

It makes me think of how I rationalized Bush (I was not a supporter) - I took comfort in knowing he could always call dad.
 
  • #89
Gokul43201 said:
How specifically do you suggest Obama will try to "continue with his agenda" (whatever that means)? Obama doesn't write legislation, he can only at best veto it. The Republicans have the House, and it's time for them to start writing some legislation.

By "Obama's agenda," I mean his plan to push for carbon cap-and-trade through the EPA, union card check, reforming the educational system, etc...he got the first parts of his agenda passed (healthcare and financial reform), although you are right, he needs the House and then Senate to write the bills first.
 
  • #90
Gokul43201 said:
The real bloodbath is not in the Senate or the House, but in the Statehouses.

Ivan Seeking said:
Eh, local stuff.

In 2000, having control of state legislatures netted Republicans over 30 seats in the US House of Representatives for the next election.

Redistricting affects more than just one election. It sets a bias towards one party or the other for next decade. Toss in that pro-Dem rust belt states are losing seats and pro-Rep states are gaining seats and the bloodbath in the state houses sets the '10's up to be a good decade for Republicans in the US House of Representatives.
 
  • #91
mheslep said:
Ugh, CNN just can't resists inserting commentary.

So they say ...


Which could have just as easily been said this way with the exact same fact set:

You consider that commentary? Please, I have see much worse in the Wall Street Journal.
 
  • #92
Astronuc said:
Ugh! She unfortunately got re-elected with 80% of the votes in her district (District 8 in Ca). She seems to be in denial as well as being delusional - like so many in DC.

She isn't in denial. She is standing on principle.

What exactly is she allegedly in denial about?

You think CNN introduces too much commentary but you cite Colbert? I am so confused!
 
  • #93
Gokul43201 said:
You really think the 2008 election result was a call for more conservatism? Have you come across a single person other than yourself that shares this view (just curious)?

Do you think people actually voted for Obama for big government? I would be interested in the numbers you refer to, not saying you are wrong on those at all, but I mean, I remember during the Bush years all sorts of railing about the deficits and debt and excessive spending done by the Bush administration. Was all of that for nought? Maybe the numbers show differently, but I think very much the people wanted more conservatism, because we didn't have conservatism during the Bush years. Bush governed more like a socially-conservative Democrat, not any fiscally-conservative Republican.

In 2006, many of the Democrats elected ran on center-right platforms. This was a strategy the Democrats used to build up their numbers.

Part of the reason for the reaction against Obama is because he and the Democrats saw the '08 election as a mandate for him to change America over to a European-style model. The "Era of Reagan" was declared as over.

But the reality it seems is that all of this was not true. The country did not shift to being center-left. So Obama gets elected and immediately seeks to change America. This leads to the Tea Party movement because America isn't like France or Germany.
 
  • #94
CAC1001 said:
Do you think people actually voted for Obama for big government?
What's the alternative? People had a choice between Obama and McCain, and they picked Obama because they thought he (the militant socialist/communist/most liberal Dem in the Senate/etc.) was more likely to bring back Conservatism?
I would be interested in the numbers you refer to, not saying you are wrong on those at all, but I mean, I remember during the Bush years all sorts of railing about the deficits and debt and excessive spending done by the Bush administration. Was all of that for nought?
Most of those people would have voted for McCain.

Maybe the numbers show differently, but I think very much the people wanted more conservatism, because we didn't have conservatism during the Bush years. Bush governed more like a socially-conservative Democrat, not any fiscally-conservative Republican.
Some segment of the electorate wanted more Conservatism. That was not the segment that showed up in record numbers to vote in Obama.

I've provided links to the exit polling numbers in the post you quoted.

But here's another set of numbers to consider: at least as many people think the healthcare bill doesn't go far enough as those who think it goes too far. And it's that first group that are much more likely to be people that voted in Obama.

[PLAIN]http://theplumline.whorunsgov.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/cbshealth3.jpg

http://www.cbsnews.com/htdocs/pdf/poll_obama_011110.pdf?tag=contentMain;contentBody
 
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  • #95
Ivan Seeking said:
She isn't in denial. She is standing on principle.

What exactly is she allegedly in denial about?

You think CNN introduces too much commentary but you cite Colbert? I am so confused!
CNN is supposed to be a news organization, as opposed to an entertainment organization. Colbert's program is entertainment.

I don't care for infotainment or entertainment disguised as news. I want the facts, not somebody's opinion of what they think the facts are.
 
  • #96
Gokul43201 said:
What's the alternative? People had a choice between Obama and McCain, and they picked Obama because they thought he (the militant socialist/communist/most liberal Dem in the Senate/etc.) was more likely to bring back Conservatism?

I would say they picked him because:

1) He didn't run as a hardcore liberal during the General, he ran that way during the Primary

2) McCain looked and sounded like a clueless idiot when the economy was on the verge of collapse (during the campaign, he had even said he "doesn't understand the economy")

3) The Republican party and Bush were hugely unpopular from corruption to people blaming Bush for the financial crises and seeing McCain as more of Bush.

4) Obama seemed like something truly fresh and new to many people

I do not think the people elected Obama in for big government.

Most of those people would have voted for McCain.

Would have to disagree. Plenty of Democrats railed about Bush's spending, Democrats railed about Ronald Reagan's spending as well during the 1980s as well. Many said Bush's Medicare program was unfunded.

That said, quite a few people did still vote for McCain. Obama won solidly, but it was not a smashing landslide victory.

Some segment of the electorate wanted more Conservatism. That was not the segment that showed up in record numbers to vote in Obama.

By "conservatism," were these people thinking more of George W. Bush and the Republicans or the literal definition of fiscal conservatism and limited government? Also not everyone who voted for Obama wanted big government. Many when asked why they were voting Obama said they didn't buy the Republican claim that Obama was some massive big-government guy or anything like that, center-left, sure, but not hard left.

But here's another set of numbers to consider: more people think the healthcare bill doesn't go far enough than those who think it goes too far. Moreover, it's that first group that are much more likely to be people that voted in Obama.

[PLAIN]http://theplumline.whorunsgov.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/cbshealth3.jpg

http://www.cbsnews.com/htdocs/pdf/poll_obama_011110.pdf?tag=contentMain;contentBody

I think it depends on what poll you look at:

http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/2825202/rasmussens_health_care_poll_shows_55.html?cat=9

http://thehill.com/blogs/healthwatc...112143-poll-majority-favors-healthcare-repeal

http://www.examiner.com/political-b...h-care-reform-bill-with-contradictory-results

http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2010-03-23-health-poll-favorable_N.htm
 
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  • #97
I was looking for some numbers on what the US government spends on medicare. Here's a reference:
http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/TRSUM/index.html

I wanted to see what the government spends in relation to the nearly $2 trillion spent on health care. Health care is supposed to be a growing field (more jobs), but who is supposed to pay for it if people can't afford it? Or do we just ration it to those who can afford it?
 
  • #98
CAC1001 said:
How many of those links provide a comparison between people that believed the bill didn't go far enough with those that believe it went too far?

While the numbers I cited show the "not far enough" group as exceeding the "too far" group by anywhere from 3% to 16% depending on the aspect of bill in question, I specifically used the words "at least as many" to cover any differences between polls. But that's just supplemental and not the direct answer to the question.

The direct answer is very clear in the exit polls. Despite asking for the numbers, it seems you've not looked at them yet. Let's make it easier:

Here's the link to the relevant page (pg 3) of the exit poll: http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/results/polls/#val=USP00p3

And here's the specific table:

261jg2v.png


To summarize, among the group that voted for Obama, about 77% wanted Govt to "do more" and about 23% believed it was "doing too much". I hope that's clear enough.
 
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  • #99
Astronuc said:
I was looking for some numbers on what the US government spends on medicare. Here's a reference:
http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/TRSUM/index.html

I wanted to see what the government spends in relation to the nearly $2 trillion spent on health care.
About http://www.gpoaccess.gov/usbudget/fy10/pdf/summary.pdf" next year for Medicare alone. The government's total health care tab, including Medicare, Medicaid, Veterans, is about half of the total medical dollars spent in the US.

Health care is supposed to be a growing field (more jobs), but who is supposed to pay for it if people can't afford it? Or do we just ration it to those who can afford it?
Seems to me that the answer is the same as it is for every other important product of our society - food, transportation, housing, entertainment - get the government out of the way and let the market do what it always does - produce an inexpensive product that nearly every American can afford.
 
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  • #100
If I may remind posters (including myself), this thread is about the elections. Let's try to keep discussion close to that topic.
 
  • #101
Jasongreat said:
As I see it the 2006 and 2008 elections were a rebuttal of the big spending, big government Rino's, or progressive republicans. There were huge numbers of independents and republicans who voted for change, too bad, the change was bigger spending and bigger government. Those same independents and republicans are who voted yesterday to give power back to republicans, but looking into my crystal ball, if those republicans now continue big government policies, they won't be in congress long, and as far as that goes if some democrats don't stand by them, they will also be booted next vote.

2006 & 2008 were a statement that voters were unhappy, period. Considering the Tea Party movement bucked the Republican establishment almost as it did Democrats, I'd say the 2010 election makes the same statement.

Gallup polls on the direction of the country immediately before the last 6 elections:

Year - Right track - Wrong track
2010 - 22% - 75%
2008 - 13% - 85%
2006 - 30% - 68%
2004 - 44% - 53%
2002 - 48% - 47%
2000 - 62% - 36%

Gallup polls on Congress's job ratings:

Year - Good job - Bad job
2010 - 21% - 73%
2008 - 18% - 77%
2006 - 26% - 63%
2004 - 40% - 51%
2002 - 50% - 40%
2000 - 49% - 42%

I think there's general dissatisfaction that has little to do with Congress, itself. If people are unhappy, they blame politicians. I think the real culprit is the economy (with Bush/Iraq being the culprit in 2006).

I also think that's the reason an Obama reelection is very likely in 2012. Government policies do have an effect on how big the dips and the humps, but they don't stop the economy's up and down cycles. (In fact, one might say government policies may push the economy ahead of where it should naturally be, meaning the economy has to eventually slow down to return it's natural path or government policies may slow the economy down, meaning the economy eventually has to boom to catch up to where it should naturally be - I'm not sure whether government interference smooths the curves or amplifies them).

One way or another, a recession only lasts for so long. Good news for winners of this year's election and good news for Obama. It's good to get elected in a recession.

Or I'm wrong and we'll still be in a recession in 2012. Horrible news for both Obama and this year's Congressional winners (not to mention bad news for the average person).
 
  • #102
mheslep said:
About http://www.gpoaccess.gov/usbudget/fy10/pdf/summary.pdf" next year for Medicare alone. The government's total health care tab, including Medicare, Medicaid, Veterans, is about half of the total medical dollars spent in the US.

Seems to me that the answer is the same as it is for every other important product of our society - food, transportation, housing, entertainment - get the government out of the way and let the market do what it always does - produce an inexpensive product that nearly every American can afford.
Um - my experience is that the market does not want to make a product that every American can afford. Some insurers from experience want to collect premiums but don't want to pay claims - family experience. And talking to doctors, the insurance company doesn't want to reimburse doctors, or pay for brand prescription drugs (sometimes generics just don't work).

And how about the quality of medical care which can be uneven.

I think the government has a role (in theory). However, it seems there are those who become involved in government in order to make sure it doesn't work for the people (consituents).

Why should the market operate any differently than the government. Isn't it the same people? We wouldn't need government regulation if the market observed ethical and moral standards. Similarly, government doesn't work if those involved do not observe ethical and moral standards.
 
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  • #103
Best victory speech I've seen: Marco Rubio Fla. Father a bartender, mother a maid. He became a lawyer and speaker of the Fla House. Started 35 points down in the polls, survived the squishy Christ running as an independent after loosing the primary. Hmm, young guy, will have two years in the Senate as of '12. Where have we seen that before?
http://www.marcorubio.com/marco-rubios-victory-remarks/

Rubio said:
[...]
Tomorrow or even now, the stories are being written about what this election is about. What does it mean? And we still don’t know all the results from around this country.

But we know that tonight, the power in the United States House of Representatives will change hands. We know tonight that a growing number of Republicans will now serve in the Senate as well. And we make a grave mistake if we believe that tonight these results are somehow an embrace of the Republican Party.

What they are is a second chance. A second chance for Republicans to be what they said they were going to be not so long ago.

Americans believe with all their heart, the vast majority of them, and the vast majority of Floridians, that the United States of America is simply the single greatest nation in all of human history, a place without equal in the history of all mankind.

You see, when you’re 35 points down in the polls, and the only people who think you can win live in your house, and four of them are under the age of 10, you better know why you’re running.

When you have to drive four hours to get back home after speaking to 50 people and it’s 1:30 in the morning and the Garmin says there’s still an hour and a half to go and you’re not sure how you’re going to stay awake, you better know why you’re running.
[...]
But it was about the fact that we are privileged and blessed to be citizens of this extraordinary society, and that that is something worth fighting for. That we have the opportunity to ensure that our children and grandchildren are the freest and most prosperous Americans that ever lived.
[...]
And that ultimately, what this is all about stands before us, even as we speak. It is about whether we are going to be the first generation of Americans to leave our children worse off than ourselves, or the next generation that allow them to inherit what they deserve, inherit what we inherited, give to them what every generation before us has given to the next, the single greatest nation in all of human history.
 
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  • #104
Astronuc said:
Um - my experience is that the market does not want to make a product that every American can afford.
The medical industry in the US is not much of a free market (my point); one is forced essentially to get coverage only through your employer because of the tax laws and almost nobody actually pays out of pocket for medical service, Medicare costs are shifted onto private coverage, if you live in state X you are prevented from buying cheaper healthcare in state Y, etc, etc. My larger point is that everywhere else we look - food, transportation, housing - these things are affordable at a least a base level for everyone in the US with even the most modest of incomes. Does your experience show otherwise in these areas? Because prior to this age, it was certainly not the case. Those things were only all available to the wealthy. That, to my mind, is the promise of America, and not some guarantee from the government that these things will be made available, at least until the money runs out.
 
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  • #105
The Democratic Party leaders in Ohio explained the losses today (on the radio) - low turnout is to blame - nothing else.

This news outlet should be happy to hear they were right...
http://www.newsnet5.com/dpp/news/political/elections_local/cuyahoga-county-board-of-elections-director-disappointed-with-low-voter-turnout
 
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