Posted on 10/26/2009 10:30:46 AM PDT by jazusamo
AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka warned Senate Democratic leaders not to include a tax on high-cost healthcare plans in a bill that is expected to reach the floor in coming days.
Trumka dismissed the notion that Democratic leaders could placate the powerful union by raising the threshold on plans that would be subject to the tax. Under the Senate Finance Committees bill, plans costing more than $8,000 for individuals and $21,000 for families would be hit with a 40-percent excise tax.
Working families struggling to pay for healthcare should not be required to pay even more in the form of a new tax, said Trumka in a telephone call with reporters. When you fail to force [insurance] companies to be competitive and employers to pay their fair share, you have to come up with money elsewhere.
Its a bad policy, bad politics, and totally unacceptable to put the cost of healthcare on the backs of working families, he said.
Trumkas press call came as Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) took steps toward bringing the Senate bill to the floor.
Multiple media outlets reported Monday that Reid was sending legislation to the Congressional Budget Office for scoring. Reid has been working for nearly two weeks on combining different healthcare measures approved by the Senate Finance Committee and the Senate Health Committee.
Reid has scheduled a 3:15 press conference, where is expected to talk about what is in the final bill, which will reportedly include a public health insurance option that allows states to opt-out.
Trumka also said his union does not support establish a national government-run health insurance program that allow states to opt out, which has emerged as a possible comprise over in recent weeks.
Asked Monday if he would support the new opt in/opt out public option, Trumka said flatly: no.
Trumka praised the House health bill as having a more effective public option and fairer financing compared to its Senate counterpart, which Trumka said would effectively tax middle class workers through the tax on so-called Cadillac plans.
At the same time, Trumka expressed optimism that a deal will be reached on healthcare reform, saying the debate is moving in the right direction.
The AFL-CIO president, who took office in September, said that the opt-out provision in the Senate bill falls short of the robust public option the union supports, but suggested the provision is on its way toward being something the organization could support.
We cannot be in favor of reform for reform's sake. This is the moment to make sure that it's real, Trumka said in a conference call with reporters on Monday. The fight now is about what reform will look like.
As the House and Senate bills near completion in each chamber, Trumka said that the AFL-CIO, along with the labor coalition Change to Win, would organize a push next Thursday, November 5th, in which union members will wage a public phone call campaign encouraging lawmakers to support their preferred outcomes in the health reform debate.
Tax thee but not me.
I love this stuff!
A union threatning an elected legislator.
a 40% excise tax!
Yep, and since Zer0 was elected the union thugs have been crawling out of the woodwork for payback.
If the unions protest this bill...all the better.
They can keep some of the Senate dems from voting for it..and we only need a few.
Now, if the really liberal ones want to protest that there is an opt out provision...I hope they do.
The more “special interest” groups that don’t like it, the better.
Amen to that, we’ll take “no” votes no matter where they come from.
Doesn’t this kind of scream that the unions have “Cadillac” health care plans? They want all their bloated benefits, they want us to pay for them (auto bailout, $10B in the health care legislation for “reinsurance”) and they don’t want to pay taxes on any of it. Unions! Puhtooey!
Yes! Check out a followup thread on this, Reid placates Trumka.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2371332/posts
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