Category Archives: State Children’s Health Insurance Program

Urge Your Member of Congress to Support the SCHIP Veto Override

Want to see that 4 million underprivileged children get the healthcare they deserve? Then contact your congressman.

 

It’s easy. Here’s the message I wrote to Congressman Elton Gallegly (CA-24) today:

 

I am writing to urge you to support the State Children’s Health Insurance Program legislation.

The $35 billion increase in funding for SCHIP over the next five years is certainly worth the benefit the legislation will deliver for the additional 4 million children who will be provided adequate health care.

I ask you to consider voting to override the president’s veto. Your constituents, myself included, would admire such a brave and independent step forward.

 

Gallegly probably will not read it. He almost certainly will not change his mind and go against the president. But it will help to let him know that there are thousands of us out there who support the SCHIP program and the legislation to expand the program by $35 billion over the next 5 years.

 

Here’s how to contact Gallegly. You can write a letter to his office in Thousand Oaks at 2829 Townsgate Road, Suite 315, Thousand Oaks, CA 91361-3018. Follow up with a phone call if you do not get a response. The office’s phone number is 805-497-2224. Do not bother writing to his Washington, D.C., office. Security procedures could delay your letter by up to two weeks.

 

If you prefer e-mail, use the Write Your Representative feature at the U.S. House of Representatives’ website. The url is www.house.gov/writerep/.

 

You can use this website to send e-mail to any representative.

 

CongressLink provides tips on contacting your member of Congress. In general, be polite, stick to one topic, keep it short, and be sure to identify the legislation you are writing about. SCHIP is HR 976.

 

You can also use the Democratic Party’s e-mail system. You put in your name, address, and e-mail information and the site’s software will send the e-mail to your representatives and senators. This can be found at www.democrats.org/FightForKids.

 

Bush’s Poodle: Why Gallegly Won’t Fund Children’s Health Care

Gallegly as a PoodleApparently funding the health care of poor children is not as important to Congressman Elton Gallegly (R-Thousand Oaks) as funding the war.

After all, poor children are certainly not going to vote Republican when they grow up. If they survive without health care, that is.

There’s no doubt about it, the State Children’s Health Insurance Program, which would cost taxpayers $60 billion over 5 years, would be expensive. But isn’t it the legitimate business of government to protect those who are most vulnerable?

Only if it is not too expensive, apparently.

Elton Gallegly“I understand where the president is, and I agree with him on this issue,” Gallegly told the Ventura County Star.

The president vetoed a bill to renew SCHIP on Wednesday, despite overwhelming support in the House and Senate.

The bill is popular with Republicans, Democrats, and most Americans. But not with Gallegly or Bush.

Both say the bill is too expensive. And, says the president, “government coverage would displace private health insurance for many children.”

This is certainly not true, but even if it were children with health insurance, even government-sponsored health insurance, are better off than children with none.

Senate Republicans have bent over backwards to meet the president’s demands.

“Frankly, I think the president has had pretty poor advice on this,” said Senator Orrin Hatch (R-Utah).

“I can answer every objection that they’ve made, and I’m very favorable to the president. I know he’s compassionate. I know he’s concerned about these kids, but he’s been sold a bill of goods.”

Gallegly told the Star that “this is a classic case of the ugliest part of our government process, which is taking something as critical as the healthcare of children and turning it into political spin. Today is a day that I think is an embarrassment to this institution.”

Wednesday certainly was an embarrassment. It was embarrassing for Gallegly, for Bush, for the Republican Party, and for the nation. It shows the world that we value a wasteful war in Iraq—a war that has nothing to do with terrorism—more than we do the health of our own children.

The proposed $35 billion increase in funding for the SCHIP program, an increase that will cover a five-year period, mind you, is about as much as it costs to finance the war in Iraq for a mere three months.

The president just asked Congress for an additional $200 billion in war funding. The war in Iraq has cost about $457 billion to date, and increasing at a rate of about $300 million a day, according to economist Scott Wallsten.

The Congressional Budget Office predicts the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the ineptly named war on terror will cost about $1.2 trillion between now and 2017.

Less than half of this amount, writes David Leonhardt in the New York Times, “would pay for an unprecedented public health campaign — a doubling of cancer research funding, treatment for every American whose diabetes or heart disease is now going unmanaged and a global immunization campaign to save millions of children’s lives.”

And yet the president and his obedient congressman can’t scrape up enough money, or moral courage, to help out 10 million poor kids.

Bush and his sycophants, like Gallegly, have been calling recently for more fiscal discipline. This is a laughable attempt to salvage some respectability at the last minute after six years of deficit spending.

The public debt is now up to more than $9 trillion, according to the Treasury Department. When Bill Clinton left office, there was a budget surplus of $127 billion.

And yet the president and his party continually tout themselves as being deficit hawks and Democrats as tax-and-spend liberals.

Nobody’s buying it, least of all now, and Republicans will pay a hefty fine at the ballot box in the 2008 elections.

The presidential veto is meant to be a check on congressional power. But in some cases, the president, be he (or soon, she) a Republican or Democrat, is just plain wrong.

This is one of those cases.

The Constitution provides Congress with the ability to override a presidential veto. The House needs 25 more votes to do this, and even Republicans are lining up to oppose the president.

These, ladies and gentlemen, are the last days of a failing presidency.

Gallegly Sinking ShipWill Gallegly go down with the ship?

That’s up to Ventura County voters. Let’s all turn out for the elections in November 2008 and show Gallegly the door.

Key Links:

Gallegly’s Voting Record, as reported by the Washington Post

Bush Vetoes Child Healthcare Bill,” by Michael Collins, Ventura County Star, October 4, 2007

Families Brace for SCHIP Demise,” by Carla Williams, ABC News, October 4, 2007

Bush Vetoes Health Measure,” by Michael Abramowitz and Jonathan Weisman, Washington Post, October 4, 2007

 

The Debt to the Penny and Who Holds It,” U.S. Department of the Treasury, Bureau of Public Debt, retrieved October 4, 2007

 

Estimated Costs of U.S. Operations in Iraq and Afghanistan and of Other Activities Related to the War on Terrorism,” Congressional Budget Office, testimony before the Committee on the Budget
U.S. House of Representatives, July 31, 2007.

 

What $1.2 Trillion Can Buy,” by David Leonhardt, New York Times, January 17, 2007.

 

President Clinton announces another record budget surplus,” by Kelly Wallace, CNN.com, September 27, 2000

 

Snow, Praising Bush on Budget, Calls Clinton’s Surplus `Mirage,’” by Alison Fitzgerald, Bloomberg.com, December 21, 2005.