One might wonder why the single-payer movement is still mobilizing and making sacrifices for healthcare reform after so many stunning defeats last week.
Between Thursday and Saturday, the movement witnessed Pelosi's refusal to allow any amendments on single-payer to come to the floor, Obama's message to Congress to not allow a vote on single-payer so close to a vote on his health insurance bill, Kucinich's and Conyers' decision to not support a vote on single-payer in the House, and a vote on an anti-choice amendment brought to the floor by conservative Democrats and Republicans after Pelosi declared no amendments to the bill would be allowed to come up for a vote.
But, assistant national coordinator of Healthcare-Now!, Katie Robbins, suggested people look past recent failures to build support in Congress and remember how far the single-payer movement has come this year.
� ���"We've come from being completely blocked out of the conversation in many ways to leveraging our way in to having congressional hearings and having single-payer advocates testify in Congress,� �� � said Robbins. � ���"I don't think Democratic leadership expected single-payer legislation to be alive at this point.� �� �
Robbins and other advocates now turn their attention to the Senate as the health insurance enrichment bill moves onward.
As Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) contends that the House bill with a weak public option is � ���"dead on arrival,� �� � as Senate Democrats and Obama continue to suggest this for-profit healthcare system can be made to work for the American people, single-payer advocates now turn their attention to Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT), who they hope will bring his single-payer amendment (S.703) to the Senate floor.
� ���"As a movement, it's important for us to continue to educate people that this is not enough, it's not sufficient, it's not addressing the problem that we have, it's not going to be universal or financially sustainable,� �� � said Dr. Margaret Flowers, who is with Physicians for a National Health Program. � ���"And, at this point, it's important to turn our attention to the Senate. We still have an opportunity at the very least to try and get the Sanders single-payer amendment that would allow states to pass single-payer legislation.� �� �
(Note: You can view every article as one long page if you sign up as an Advocate Member, or higher).