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3 Million and Counting

Written by: Mary R on Nov 6, 2009 12:47 PM EST

We've worked hard to pass a public option in the healthcare reform bill this year -- and we're winning. We have the majority votes needed in both houses of Congress to pass real reform.

The bad news is -- even though we're winning -- we could still lose.

All it would take is one senator in the 60-member Democratic Caucus to support a Republican filibuster and healthcare reform with a public option could be stopped dead in its tracks. We're not going to sit around and hope that it doesn't happen. It's up to us to be pro-active and stop a potential turncoat senator from killing President Obama's number one domestic priority.

Today, we join MoveOn members, in pledging support for a primary challenge of any Senator in the Democratic Caucus who supports a Republican filibuster of a public option. Here's how it works: You tell us how much you would give in support of a primary challenge. Then, MoveOn and DFA will make sure the media, Senate leadership, and conservative Democrats know just how many of us are willing to support a challenge against anyone who blocks reform.

You don't have to enter your credit card info. Just click on an amount below to pledge your support:

PLEDGE $25

PLEDGE $50

PLEDGE $100

PLEDGE $250

PLEDGE MORE THAN $250

Since Monday, MoveOn members have already pledged over $3 million in support of a primary challenge. With our help, we can reach $4 million by the end of the week.

There's no reason any senator should betray the caucus. Every member of the Senate Democratic Caucus should vote to pass a public option with majority votes. But if this nightmare scenario happens, we'll encourage viable primary challengers to come forward. And when they do, we'll make sure all of us who've pledged have a chance to support them.

In other words, potential primary challengers will know there's a huge group of Americans who are ready to help. And we'll deliver a warning shot to right-wing members of the Democratic Caucus they can't miss.

They'll know this is not something we will take lightly. Primary challenges happen once in a blue moon, generally when a candidate is terribly out of step with voters in their party. And if a Democratic senator helps block the most important progressive bill in a generation, voters in their state will be looking to support someone better.

Will you let us know how much you'd pledge right now, and ask all your friends who want health care reform to do the same?

PLEDGE YOUR SUPPORT NOW

Working together, we will pass real reform with a public option this year.

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- Gov. Howard Dean is first! Please tell the members of the DNC to fired Tim Kaine.

By Susan Rowe on Nov 7, 2009 8:36 PM EST

Right now, the House of Representatives is debating and about to vote on an amendment that could either roll back women's rights -- or destroy the health care bill. We can stop it now if you can make a call to two key California Representatives ASAP.

I'm taking a moment from facilitating at Camp Courage Sacramento to ask you to help me and the women I work with every day.

In addition to being a Deputy Field Organizer for the Courage Campaign, I work in a clinic helping young women in the Fresno area with their health care needs, including access to reproductive health services.

Many of these women cannot afford to buy their own health insurance and they have been eagerly awaiting the federal health care reform bill that will offer them subsidies to buy insurance. But that bill, and their access to reproductive health care services are in jeopardy. We need to act right now to stop this right-wing attack and save a woman's right to choose.

Rep. Bart Stupak, a conservative Democrat from Michigan, introduced an amendment that would ban abortion services from being covered by health care plans offered through the Exchange that is at the heart of the reform. This amendment would also prevent anyone receiving federal subsidies to purchase an insurance policy that covers abortion.

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- con't Please tell the DNC members to fired do nothing anti-choice Tim Kaine.

By Susan Rowe on Nov 7, 2009 8:40 PM EST

 

If this amendment passes, the women I work with in Fresno will be facing a de facto abortion ban. They won't be able to afford to pay for what is often an unanticipated and expensive procedure. Many will suffer. We can't let that happen.

Two California Democrats have not yet pledged to vote against this amendment. Dennis Cardoza and Jim Costa both represent the Central Valley. Many of the women I work with are their constituents. These women need Representatives Cardoza and Costa to stand up for their health and their rights by voting against the Stupak Amendment.

The fate of health care reform is now in your hands. Will you take just a moment to call the offices of California Representatives Dennis Cardoza and Jim Costa and tell them to vote NO on the Stupak Amendment and YES on health care reform? Even if you don't live in their district, they need to hear from you. The vote is imminent -- please call them ASAP:

Dennis Cardoza:
DC office: (202) 225-6131   
District offices: (209) 383-4455 or (209) 527-1914


Jim Costa:
DC office: (202) 225-3341
District offices: (661) 869-1620 or (559) 495-1620


Thank you for taking immediate action on behalf of women's rights.

Jasmine Leiva
Deputy Field Organizer, Courage Campaign     

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By Susan Rowe on Nov 7, 2009 8:52 PM EST

What is so surprising is that both of these corporate DCL Blue Dogs represent very blue gerrymanded pro-choice districts.  California is a pro-choice state. The DNC needs better leadership and should at least have a Chair who will stand up for the party's platform to protect the reproductive rights of women.

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By Susan Rowe on Nov 7, 2009 10:35 PM EST

The Stupidpak's amendment passed. 64 Dems vote to take away a women's reproductive freedom.

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By Susan Rowe on Nov 7, 2009 10:37 PM EST

Motion to Recommit is up.

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- Are US Bishops Responsible for Anti-Abortion Amendment in Health Care Reform?

By Susan Rowe on Nov 10, 2009 11:53 AM EST

The question so many are asking today is: How did we end up with a House bill on health insurance reform that dramatically undercuts abortion rights?

After all, we have a pro-choice president who supports public funding of abortion, a Democratic majority in the House and Senate, a Democratic party platform that supports choice and public funding, support for overturning the Hyde Amendment in the major Jewish and Christian denominations, and national polls that tell us that most Americans—including Catholics—believe that health insurance should cover abortion service.

Fingers are immediately pointed at the Catholic bishops, and there is no doubt that the lobby that exerted the most effort and probably money to defeat the inclusion of insurance for abortion services in the reform was the US Conference of Catholic Bishops. Their lobbyists have been on the Hill every day urging support for the Stupak Amendment and in the final hours they pulled out all the stops sending a bulletin to 19,000 parish churches across the US calling on those at Sunday mass to lobby in favor of excluding coverage for abortion services.

Every news article describes meetings between the bishops’ lobbyists and Nancy Pelosi and Henry Waxman. Yet, national polls tell us that only about 15% of Catholics agree with the bishops that abortion should be illegal, and Catholics, according to a CFC poll, are split on funding, 50% for and 50% against broad coverage for abortion based on the woman’s decision. Fifty/Fifty on funding is not a promising electoral margin and folks: political decisions are not made on the basis of national polls.

Elections are increasingly won on the basis of very small margins of victory and too many Democrats now run in highly polarized districts where a shift in 2% of the vote is the difference between a seat in Congress and defeat. When candidates and incumbents believe (as they do in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Colorado and the South) that the local bishop and parish priests can convince 2% of those Catholics in the pew to vote against them because they are pro-choice, the die is cast.

And when the Democratic party decided in 2004 to court anti-abortion, but otherwise progressive, candidates like Bob Casey in Pennsylvania, they set the stage for a Democratic majority that would be held hostage by a minority of anti-abortion Catholics, like Stupak and Blue Dog Democrat Travis Childers, who, if united, could determine the outcome of any vote and extract anti-abortion provisions to their heart’s content. The message the Party sent was that it is just as moral to be pro-choice as anti-abortion and we not only had to tolerate each other, we had to welcome those who were opposed to abortion with more than open arms. And the Party did. Howard Dean and Chuck Schumer then head of the Democratic Senate Campaign Committee set about recruiting anti-choice Democrats like Bob Casey to run in tough districts. They got what they wanted—a majority.

But the adage be careful what you wish for applies. Emboldened after being marginal for so long, the new guys and the old guys teamed up with 19 of them—all representatives affiliated with Democrats for Life—wrote Pelosi in June to tell her that if abortion funding was included in health care reform they would vote against it. Eleven of the 19 are Roman Catholics; eight have been elected since 2004.

The President added his two cents pontificating in papal tones, strangely prideful, assuring us that “no federal dollars will be used for abortion.” He made it sound like this was a good thing instead of the moral deficit that it is.

It was a knock out, a one-two punch. The bishops hit women hard, right in the belly and the coup de grace was the slap in the face from the anti-choice Democrats. Violence against women should come as no surprise.

And so, early Sunday morning, women were treated to the spectacle of the Democratic pro-choice president and the Democratic congressional leaders all smiles at the historic passage of a House bill authorizing modest but important reforms in health insurance. No one had the decency to note that it was accomplished—as much social progress has been for centuries—by limiting women’s reproductive freedom. Now there’s a moral crusade gone awry.

http://www.religiondispatches.org/archive/politics/2011/are_us_bishops_responsible_for_pro-life_amendment_in_health_care_reform/

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- The Rachel Maddow Show: Bart Stupak's C-Street Gang

By Susan Rowe on Nov 10, 2009 5:23 PM EST
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- The real heros of health care insurance reform.

By Susan Rowe on Nov 10, 2009 12:40 PM EST

IMO, if you are an advocate of the public option or may be now just some kind of insurance reform bill you had better keep up the pressure on the 64 democrats, who voted in favor of the Stupak-Pitts amendment, all through the process until you see a bill being sent to the President's desk.  The only reason that these Blue Dogs voted for that amendment was to prevent any final hc reform bill from ever happening.  The only reason the Blue Dogs from California voted for the house bill was because Dolores Huerta (who btw is pro-choice) and friends held a rolling fast vigil for several days in front of Costa's Fresno and Bakersfield offices until is was passed.  Their efforts made the local papers. They're the real heros not the Blue Dogs.  She and they also need your thanks for what they did for working people in America.

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- SEIU

By Douglas M on Nov 8, 2009 11:01 PM EST

www.seiu.org

SEIU is doing great work to help get President Obama's health care legislation passed through the Senate.

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- Unbelievable. The Tea Party express was allowed to role through the house. The right-wing's assault on women's rights is a disgrace.

By Susan Rowe on Nov 10, 2009 5:07 PM EST
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By Susan Rowe on Nov 10, 2009 6:11 PM EST

"I believe in an America where the separation of church and state is absolute -- where no Catholic prelate would tell the president (should he be Catholic) how to act, and no Protestant minister would tell his parishoners for whom to vote -- where no church or church school is granted any public funds or political preference -- and where no man is denied public office merely because his religion differs from the president who might appoint him or the people who might elect him." ~ John F. Kennedy (1917-1963) 35th US President [September 12, 1960 address to the Greater Houston Ministerial Association]

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Yes, Remember Me

Videos of some of the 64 House Healthcare Heroes standing strong for a public health insurance option

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