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<center>This email was intended for abel-tasman@coredump.buug.de
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">sidetracked after conservatives,
many of them elected with tea party support, objected to any attempt
to improve the current law rather than scuttle it.With the rank and
file growing more conservative, some Republicans acknowledge that without
changes, they likely couldn't pass the alternative measure they backed when
Democrats won approval for Obama's bill in 2010. Among other provisions,
it encouraged employers to sign up their workers for health insurance automatically,
so that employees would have to "opt out" of coverage if they
didn't want it, and provided federal money for state-run high-risk pools
for individuals and for reinsurance in the small group market.The current
state of intentions contrasts sharply with the Pledge to America, the manifesto
that Republicans campaigned on in 2010 when they took power away from
the Democrats. That included a plan to "repeal and replace" what it
termed a government takeover of health care.It promised "common-sense solutions
focused on lowering costs and protecting American jobs," including steps
to overhaul medical malpractice laws and permit the sale of insurance across
state lines. Republicans said they would "empower small businesses with
greater purchasing power and create new incentives to save for future health
care needs." They promised to "protect the doctor-patient relationship,
and ensure that those with pre-existing conditions gain access to the coverage
they need."But Rep. Paul
sidetracked after conservatives,
many of them elected with tea party support, objected to any attempt
to improve the current law rather than scuttle it.With the rank and
file growing more conservative, some Republicans acknowledge that without
changes, they likely couldn't pass the alternative measure they backed when
Democrats won approval for Obama's bill in 2010. Among other provisions,
it encouraged employers to sign up their workers for health insurance automatically,
so that employees would have to "opt out" of coverage if they
didn't want it, and provided federal money for state-run high-risk pools
for individuals and for reinsurance in the small group market.The current
state of intentions contrasts sharply with the Pledge to America, the manifesto
that Republicans campaigned on in 2010 when they took power away from
the Democrats. That included a plan to "repeal and replace" what it
termed a government takeover of health care.It promised "common-sense solutions
focused on lowering costs and protecting American jobs," including steps
to overhaul medical malpractice laws and permit the sale of insurance across
state lines. Republicans said they would "empower small businesses with
greater purchasing power and create new incentives to save for future health
care needs." They promised to "protect the doctor-patient relationship,
and ensure that those with pre-existing conditions gain access to the coverage
they need."But Rep. Paul
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