What Obama Will Say Tonight

Here are the excerpts from President Obama’s speech tonight, which have been released by the White House:

I am not the first President to take up this cause, but I am determined to be the last.  It has now been nearly a century since Theodore Roosevelt first called for health care reform.  And ever since, nearly every President and Congress, whether Democrat or Republican, has attempted to meet this challenge in some way.  A bill for comprehensive health reform was first introduced by John Dingell Sr. in 1943.  Sixty-five years later, his son continues to introduce that same bill at the beginning of each session.

More after the jump:

Our collective failure to meet this challenge – year after year, decade after decade – has led us to a breaking point.  Everyone understands the extraordinary hardships that are placed on the uninsured, who live every day just one accident or illness away from bankruptcy.  These are not primarily people on welfare.  These are middle-class Americans.  Some can’t get insurance on the job.  Others are self-employed, and can’t afford it, since buying insurance on your own costs you three times as much as the coverage you get from your employer.   Many other Americans who are willing and able to pay are still denied insurance due to previous illnesses or conditions that insurance companies decide are too risky or expensive to cover.

***

During that time, we have seen Washington at its best and its worst.

We have seen many in this chamber work tirelessly for the better part of this year to offer thoughtful ideas about how to achieve reform.  Of the five committees asked to develop bills, four have completed their work, and the Senate Finance Committee announced today that it will move forward next week.  That has never happened before.  Our overall efforts have been supported by an unprecedented coalition of doctors and nurses; hospitals, seniors’ groups and even drug companies – many of whom opposed reform in the past.  And there is agreement in this chamber on about eighty percent of what needs to be done, putting us closer to the goal of reform than we have ever been.

But what we have also seen in these last months is the same partisan spectacle that only hardens the disdain many Americans have toward their own government.  Instead of honest debate, we have seen scare tactics.  Some have dug into unyielding ideological camps that offer no hope of compromise.  Too many have used this as an opportunity to score short-term political points, even if it robs the country of our opportunity to solve a long-term challenge.  And out of this blizzard of charges and counter-charges, confusion has reigned.

Well the time for bickering is over.  The time for games has passed.  Now is the season for action.  Now is when we must bring the best ideas of both parties together, and show the American people that we can still do what we were sent here to do.  Now is the time to deliver on health care.

The plan I’m announcing tonight would meet three basic goals:

It will provide more security and stability to those who have health insurance.  It will provide insurance to those who don’t.  And it will slow the growth of health care costs for our families, our businesses, and our government.  It’s a plan that asks everyone to take responsibility for meeting this challenge – not just government and insurance companies, but employers and individuals.  And it’s a plan that incorporates ideas from Senators and Congressmen; from Democrats and Republicans – and yes, from some of my opponents in both the primary and general election.

***

Here are the details that every American needs to know about this plan:

First, if you are among the hundreds of millions of Americans who already have health insurance through your job, Medicare, Medicaid, or the VA, nothing in this plan will require you or your employer to change the coverage or the doctor you have.  Let me repeat this:  nothing in our plan requires you to change what you have.

What this plan will do is to make the insurance you have work better for you.  Under this plan, it will be against the law for insurance companies to deny you coverage because of a pre-existing condition.  As soon as I sign this bill, it will be against the law for insurance companies to drop your coverage when you get sick or water it down when you need it most.  They will no longer be able to place some arbitrary cap on the amount of coverage you can receive in a given year or a lifetime.  We will place a limit on how much you can be charged for out-of-pocket expenses, because in the United States of America, no one should go broke because they get sick.  And insurance companies will be required to cover, with no extra charge, routine checkups and preventive care, like mammograms and colonoscopies – because there’s no reason we shouldn’t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse.  That makes sense, it saves money, and it saves lives.

That’s what Americans who have health insurance can expect from this plan – more security and stability.

Now, if you’re one of the tens of millions of Americans who don’t currently have health insurance, the second part of this plan will finally offer you quality, affordable choices.  If you lose your job or change your job, you will be able to get coverage.  If you strike out on your own and start a small business, you will be able to get coverage.  We will do this by creating a new insurance exchange – a marketplace where individuals and small businesses will be able to shop for health insurance at competitive prices.  Insurance companies will have an incentive to participate in this exchange because it lets them compete for millions of new customers.  As one big group, these customers will have greater leverage to bargain with the insurance companies for better prices and quality coverage.  This is how large companies and government employees get affordable insurance.  It’s how everyone in this Congress gets affordable insurance.  And it’s time to give every American the same opportunity that we’ve given ourselves.

***

This is the plan I’m proposing.  It’s a plan that incorporates ideas from many of the people in this room tonight – Democrats and Republicans.  And I will continue to seek common ground in the weeks ahead.  If you come to me with a serious set of proposals, I will be there to listen.  My door is always open.

But know this:  I will not waste time with those who have made the calculation that it’s better politics to kill this plan than improve it.  I will not stand by while the special interests use the same old tactics to keep things exactly the way they are.  If you misrepresent what’s in the plan, we will call you out.  And I will not accept the status quo as a solution.  Not this time.  Not now.

Everyone in this room knows what will happen if we do nothing.  Our deficit will grow.  More families will go bankrupt.  More businesses will close.  More Americans will lose their coverage when they are sick and need it most.  And more will die as a result.  We know these things to be true.

That is why we cannot fail.  Because there are too many Americans counting on us to succeed – the ones who suffer silently, and the ones who shared their stories with us at town hall meetings, in emails, and in letters.

Related Topics: Barack Obama, Health Care
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  • destor23

    So if you have insurance it does very little for you, unless the limits on out of pocket expenses force some high deductible plans to lower them.

    What’s really telling is Obama’s promise to be the last president to have to deal with this. Anyone hoping for incremental change can forget it. This is it, love it or not.

  • nflfoghorn

    Did he just say “public option” without saying “public option”?

  • constantweader

    On the upside, the President will introduce a new brand of snake oil.

    Constant Weader at http://www.RealityChex.com

  • square1

    If you watch closely, you may be able to see Teddy Roosevelt’s ghost lay a gentle hand on Obama’s shoulder and whisper, “If only I had thought of triggers…”

  • Dee in Columbia MD

    I just wish that more progressives would understand that the public option was only going to be an option in the exchange open to those who are currently uninsured so they would stop drawing this line in the sand over something that most won’t be eligible for anyway.
    .
    Like I always say: “A line in the sand is for establishing the perimeters of a sandcastle not establishing the parameters of a debate.”
    .
    And maybe it would hep MS if you would tell your fellow Republicans that nobody is fooled by their insistence on allowing insurance to be sold across state lines. We don’t want that junk insurance being sold to your dumb a$$ ditto heads in Texas any where near the east coast, where responsible blue states have made laws against them.

  • darius3

    I don’t see any references to anything resembling a public option in those remarks. (Exchanges are a completely different concept.)

  • freeinpa

    “Let me repeat this: nothing in our plan requires you to change what you have.”

    “Nice spin but what will the bill dictate to insurers who now can’t eliminate pre-existing conditions, no caps, limit on out of pocket. Where does that money come from: higher premiums, higher taxes.

    “The exchange will provide affordable insurance”- By magic no idea how it gets paid or by who.

    “My door is always open” That explains the meeting at the White House with out a single Republican.

    WH keeps talking about misrepresentations about health care unfortunately only Obama has not figured out that the biggest source of misrepresentation is him.

    He will need to summon more than the teleprompter and all 57 states he visited to get this pig through.

  • darius3

    I just wish that more progressives would understand that the public option was only going to be an option in the exchange open to those who are currently uninsured so they would stop drawing this line in the sand over something that most won’t be eligible for anyway.

    Well, the progressives I’ve spoken to realize that, which is why they would like to see Obama advocate for a stronger public option that would be available to more people, instead of ditching the concept entirely. And I think they’ve got a point.

  • rustyreturns

    “And maybe it would hep MS if you would tell your fellow Republicans that nobody is fooled by their insistence on allowing insurance to be sold across state lines. We don’t want that junk insurance being sold to your dumb a$$ ditto heads in Texas any where near the east coast, where responsible blue states have made laws against them.”

    .
    I only have one question. Why does the more sane liberals on this site call you out for what you are. Simply the biggest TROLL on this site.

  • Dee in Columbia MD

    Destor — you are taking that element of the speech way too literal and applying it to the wrong part of the speech. He’s talking about no president will face the same issue and that’s getting the initial, transformation legislation passed. The incremental part is much easier once you’ve gotten over the hump of the initial legislation he’s talking abouit. He doesn’t mean that you can’t go back to make it better — that’s a given. And that’s why the GOP keep saying this is the precursor to single payer.

  • destor23

    Dee, I see what you’re saying but what’s frustrating is that at no point in this debate was the public option ever held open for everyone. At no point. And at no point did our mainstream media every really present it as a serious option. Those of us who might want such an option have been pushed out of the debate entirely. Obama’s part of the problem there. When he says things like “If you like the plan you have you can keep it,” it kind of implies that if you don’t like it you can exchange it for something else.

  • dunedweller

    “What’s really telling is Obama’s promise to be the last president to have to deal with this. Anyone hoping for incremental change can forget it. This is it, love it or not.”
    .
    Unless the incremental change is intended to happen within the next 7.5 years?

  • rustyreturns

    Waterloo: Let me allow you all the opportunity to refresh your memories on this once lauded event in history.
    .

    In the Battle of Waterloo (Sunday 18 June 1815[5] near Waterloo, Belgium) forces of the French Empire under Napoleon Bonaparte and Michel Ney were defeated by those of the Seventh Coalition, including an Anglo-Allied army under the command of the Duke of Wellington and a Prussian army under the command of Gebhard von Blücher. It was the decisive battle of the Waterloo Campaign and Bonaparte’s last. The defeat at Waterloo put an end to Napoleon’s rule as the French emperor, and marked the end of Napoleon’s Hundred Days of return from exile.”

    .
    “Napoleon” Obama, you Sir have met your Waterloo. This speech says nothing you have not said in the past 2 years even. Hundreds of speeches which have been made by Obama, and THIS is the “game-changer”?
    .
    Ronald McDonald could give a better speech on the value meal, and garner more support than Obama will get from presenting this speech.
    .
    I said a week ago. Go back to the White House and actually WORK on a solution, rather than just “talk” about it.
    .
    You are simply, nothing more than a big bag of wind Mr President. Nothing more.

  • freeinpa

    Here is the trigger for the HC plan: If the bill at any point limits service, payments to health care professionals, or misses the estimates of cost, any and all folks in the WH Administration and Congress who vote for the bill resign immediately and all PAC money and federal pensions will be immediately forfeited to the Treasury.

    Now that’s a trigger we can believe in!

  • Dee in Columbia MD

    Sorry, but I’m afraid the exchanges is the same concept. The public option was only ever going to be one of several options in the exchange. It was never going to be open to those 80% of Americans who are already covered by their employers. It was going to be one of several choices in a health exchange open to the uninsured or those in the private market who are paying an exorbitant amount for insurance. He believes that he can get the cost constraints on the exchange through regulation and a trigger to input the public option to the exchange if they don’t lower prices.

  • freeinpa

    Rusty

    You have to give Dee credit her stupidity only lasted 3 paragraphs this time. Any more and you could have invoked the Geneva Convention

  • Dee in Columbia MD

    freepa if you want to demand claw backs how about you start with those in your own party who ran this country into a ditch.

  • pirate wench (demwoman)

    Rusty – I did call ‘er out, bu’ Stuart slapped me an’ told me I weren’t bein’ nice :) .

  • nflfoghorn

    Leave it to Rusty to travel 200 years to come to a thorough conclusion when the event in question (i.e., speech) hasn’t been delivered for an hour yet. “Work” in your estimation must = what Repubs want Obama to do so that obviously means he is lazy and shiftless.

  • freeinpa

    Dee:

    I am sorry clawbacks for what? Defense? Protecting this country so you can continue espousing stupidity?

    It never fails the generosity and compassion by liberals is never constrained by someone else’s pocket.

    Medicare came it at ten times original estimates this will exceed that. This is a President who 7 months ago told us unemployment would not hit 8% if we passed that porkulus bill quickly. We are on our way to 10+ and he still spending

  • nflfoghorn

    Thx. I kinda feel the same way about it. I get this picture of a great big insurance flea market in my head when he says “exchange”. He’s compromising to get whatever he can passed…whether that’s CWCBI is open to question but it’s better than nothing.

  • freeinpa

    How unlike a liberal -you left out Rusty being a racist because he disagrees with a plan of action a majority of Americans don’t want. hey wan tot be heard not lectured to by another “we know better” liberal

  • nflfoghorn

    Free/PA – I obviously don’t know anyone here well enough to call him/her such. I hope that I would never stoop to that level even when I think your opinion is closer to Mars than to the truth. Admittedly, the lazy & shiftless stuff could be construed as stereotypical, though.

    Tivo-ing the speech – hope to comment l8r tonight.

  • pirate wench (demwoman)

    So, why’s Dee drawin’ a line in th’ sand now regardin’ “junk” insurance policies?
    .
    Don’t she be realizin; she mi’ be killin reform by refusin’ t’ be takin’ wha’ever cr*ppy policy she be offered? She ought t’ be happy she even be havin’ th’ opportunity t’ buy a cr*ppy policy, thanks to ‘er support o’ “reform”!
    .
    Won’t she be havin’ plenty o’ time t’ be workin’ on gettin’ a better deal after th’ legislation be safely passed? Why make this an issue now, when it be a line in th’ sand, preventin’ “reform” fr’m gettin’ started?
    .
    She don’t be wantin’ no lines drawn regardin’ a Public Option, ’cause tha’ mi’ sink th’ wonderful “reform” she be so lookin’ for’ard to, bu no’ be seemin’ t’ realize tha’ junk insurance be exact wha’ she’ll be havin’ t’ take fer ‘er cowardly capitulation – don’t go drawin’ no lines, now, Dee – ye made yer bed an’ ye’re goin’ t’ have t’ sleep wi’ wha’ever bugs th’ insurance corporations be puttin’ in there wi’ ye!
    .
    YARR!

  • donovong

    It no longer serves any purpose to comment here. Toodles.

  • pirate wench (demwoman)

    An’ how like bloody idiot freeper t’ be able t’ be ignorin’ near ev’ry poll that’s been done showin’ between 50 an’ 70% o’ Americans be wantin’ a Public Option.
    ,
    Oh, wait, I be fergettin – freeper’s “majority” be th’ small number o’loudmouth ignoramuses who take their cues fr’m th’ rantin’s o’ Beck, Hannity, Rushie, an’ th’ rest o’ th’ “no’- encumbered-by-objective-reality” miniscule fringe.
    .
    ‘E be confusin’ volume wi’ majority – I be guessin’ mathematics weren’t one o’ ‘is stronger traits, intellectually speakin’.
    .
    Come t’ think o’ it, I can’t say tha’ engagin’ any logical rational part o’ ‘is gray matter be strong points wi’ freeper!
    .
    .Yarr!

  • rustyreturns

    Perhaps he will trash this, and he’d be smart if he did, and talk about how he is going to put cost controls and restrictions in place to lower healthcare to all people. He’d be smart to say, “I am going to lower the cost of all medical treatments, supplies, and drugs. I will see to it we have a lower cost for healthcare than any other industrialized country in the world”.
    .
    Perhaps he will say to his lawyer buddies from Harvard, “you know, you have ripped off enough people. You’ve ripped off the poor people in this country. You’ve created a health-care system that feels totally hog-tied, and will not do anything for a patient unless every test under the sun is ordered, YOU Mr. Trial Lawyer are simply what they say you are, ambulance chasers. Your day is over. We will pass sane and rational Tort reform.
    ,
    Perhaps he will look straight into the camera, and say to all the private insurance executives, “you have 30 days to clean up your practices. You have 30 days to eliminate the gouging of people for health care insurance. Drop the cost of healthcare to ALL citizens of this country or we WILL pass a Government Health Care Insurance for ALL Americans. You have 30 days Gentlemen and Ladies of the Insurance Industry.
    .
    If he came off with this, I would immediately get in my car, drive to Washington and crawl on my hands and knees to personally thank him.
    .
    I’m not worried that he will ever come even close to any of these ideas. Obama is simply, another corrupt politician occupying the People’s house in Washington, DC. The day any politician would pass, sign or legislate anything with this in it, look to the sky because you will see for the first time, PIGS WILL FLY!

  • freeinpa

    wench

    As I said this afternoon lay off the hooch

    I be guessin’ gray matter weren’t one o’ ‘er stronger parts

  • rustyreturns

    I did see you call her out, PW. I did indeed.

  • Dee in Columbia MD

    Well pirate I guess at this point the pass is over because if you’re uniting with Rusty that must mean only one point of view is acceptable on this site. Apparently, the message now is that either I with you or I’m the enemy — well sweetie, I wasn’t intimidated by having to go it alone in high school and I am sure not going be knickers in a twist from an anonymous commenter who I may have just misunderstood.
    .
    Politics is my passion and its what I live and breath everyday. I will continue to comment to the reporters here at time, I suggest that you ignore my comments since they enrage you so that you would seek the company of liars and thugs. I think the media has corrupted this process and that the public option has been blown up so far out of proportion that it has become more symbol that real. You can get mad that it isn’t what you thought it was going to be, but don’t get mad at me because I always knew it wasn’t what you were making it out to be.
    .
    You want to fight for a strong public option, by all means do so — just know the version you support isn’t in in any of the bills currently pending in the house or the senate — however if what is available passes, by all means feel free to build on it to get what you want inevitably.

  • Dee in Columbia MD

    Pirate, how unfair are you going to be? You starting to remind me of the othreside that just throw out anything to make themselves feel good. First I’m supposedly willing to take any crappy thing they offer, because I advocate against my own interest (since I am one of those who are eligible for the public option) in order to make sure we achieve the broadest possible foundation to build upon. Now, I’m drawing lines in the sand because I’m against dismantling the hard won state protections against fake insurance policies like the ones KT wrote about in her brothers article.
    .
    Frankly, it doesn’t even make sense — if I’m advocating for building on what we have why would I advocate for dismantling what the gains we’ve already made.

  • http://phd9.blogspot.com Paul Dirks

    Nice spin but what will the bill dictate to insurers who now can’t eliminate pre-existing conditions, no caps, limit on out of pocket. Where does that money come from: higher premiums, higher taxes.
    .
    It comes from more paying customers. The point is to get people not currently insured to start paying into the system. they use Medical care anyway, they might as well participate.

  • http://theblindspotsofgod.wordpress.com lawyermommy

    I am constantly baffled the raging opposition to this bill. I sincerely hope the speech helps to allay peoples fears. This hysteria has to be reigned in.

    Palin will not stop her death panel hysteria outcry. Beck will continue to dun his warlock costume and slimy crystal ball as he searches for more people to witch hunt in the Obama Administration.

    These people will not stop, they are doing their job which is to thwart the success of any major initiatives from the Obama Administration.
    The Obama folks should be doing their own digging and vetting of people and issues and prepare preemptive responses to the inevitable “Party of Never” outcry. Nothing Obama says will change the minds of Right wing anti-Obama folks. To me, their rigid stance reeks of high level politicking without regard to the issue at stake.

    I will be watching the speech and hope it makes people stop and think. I want this bill passed.

    The Health care system is broken and from what I read on this site http://www.kff.org/healthreform/sidebyside.cfm- the proposed changes are really needed to stop the already failing system from getting worse.

    http://theblindspotsofgod.wordpress.com/

  • http://swampland.blogs.time.com/2009/09/09/john-dingell-sr-a-legacy/ John Dingell Sr.: A Legacy – Swampland – TIME.com

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