(Promoted by Colorado Pols)
You’ve probably never heard of Initiative 20….unless you listen to right wing talk radio, or hang out on right wing websites. Then, you might believe that Initiative 20 is a Communist plot to ration your health care, run all private insurors out of Colorado, take away your Medicaid, and generally make your life miserable.
Initiative 20, the ColoradoCareYes plan, is the beginning of the end of the Federal Affordable Care Act (ACA or Obamacare) in Colorado, and Koch-funded attack groups are trying to stop it before it begins.
Republicans, after having tried to repeal the ACA 54 times, (but still having no plan to replace it) should be rejoicing that a coalition of groups in Colorado, inspired by Senator Irene Aguilar, M.D, is promoting an alternative to the ACA. I mean really…the end of mandates? The end of Obama’s name on your health care plan? No price discrimination against rural consumers? No deductibles? It’s a Tea Party dream!
In the original ACA legislation is an “innovation” provision, article 1332, which allows states to opt out of the ACA, if they can prove that their own programs have as good or better outcomes for consumers. The ColoradoCare plan as written would be simpler, more fair, and less expensive than the ACA.
Instead of rejoicing that Democrats are accomplishing their goal of replacing the ACA, however, Republican operatives and organizations quickly stomped on the rollout of Initiative 20 with a Koch-brothers funded website, and talk radio diatribes about how the ColoradoCareYES Initiative must be stopped.
Some background information:
Why replace Colorado’s Health Exchange?
Yet, problems persist with Colorado’s implementation of the ACA
What will Initiative 20 do?
The Initiative 20 signature drive will need to collect 99,000 valid signatures by October 23rd to get on the ballot in November 2016. As a kick-off activity, ColoradoCare volunteers danced as a “flash mob” at Union Square and on the 16th Street mall.
Initiative 20, if passed in November 2016 election, would set up a process by which Colorado would gradually opt out of the Affordable Care Act and discontinue the ConnectforHealth Colorado Exchange. Twenty-one trustees would be elected to administer it, representing all parts of Colorado.
Every employee would pay 3.3 % into the fund, and every employer would pay 6.6 %. This adds to 10%, and the financial summaries on the ColoradoCare site suggest that it would cost around 25 billion dollars. This is, of course, much lower in terms of premiums and overall cost than the present system – streamlining, centralization of administration, and eliminating duplication of effort are looked to save costs.
The ColoradoCare ballot initiative is the culmination of years (since 2008) of work from many dedicated organizations and individuals: Healthcare for All Colorado, Colorado Health Care Cooperative, and the unceasing persistence and leadership of Doctor and Senator Irene Aguilar, who actually became a Senator to make it easier to pass universal health care for Coloradans.
Who is opposing ColoradoCare’s Initiative 20?
Advancing Colorado itself drew my attention to Initiative 20 – On a right wing site, I was surprised to see Advancing Colorado’s link to their own video of the flash mob, and heavy hitters lining up against this little, barely known ballot initiative. So, of course, I had to research who these heavy hitters were, and why they were so vehemently opposed to this health care initiative.
Advancing Colorado, Inc is the main organization opposing Initiative 20. It has a new website, and was founded in 2014. The Secretary of State lists it as a nonprofit business. The Articles of Incorporation list:
Although Advancing Colorado claims to be an organization of “Colorado citizens concerned with government overreach and abuse of power,” and its website also claims that it is a nonpartisan group, it is clearly not nonpartisan; all of its board and staff are Republican operatives. And it is not a simple grassroots Colorado coalition. The incorporation paperwork came from a Wisconsin insurance law firm. The Koch brothers have paid Lockwood’s salary for the last year, either through the Koch Institute, or through the Generation Opportunity payroll. Koch funding is convoluted – see the diagram under sources below. Generation Opportunity’s funds can be traced back to the Koch Brothers.
Ken Clark, Advancing Colorado’s registered agent, and radio host of Freedom560 on KLZ at 1 pm daily, lost no time in attacking Initiative 20 and the ColoradoCare proposal. A podcast of the 5/26/2015 show includes Mr. Clark stating many falsehoods about the program, and failing to disclose his own conflict of interest as the opposing organization’s registered agent.
Jason Salzman monitored Clark’s 5/27 show, and heard more of the same, plus
Advancing Colorado, through Director Lockwood’s tweets, claims that the ColoradoCares program will be funded via a “25 Billion Dollar tax increase”.
.@ColoradoCareYES is a $25 billion trojan horse http://www.advancingco.org/media/blog/coloradocare-is-a-25-billion-trojan-horse-2/ … #copolitics #cohealth
T. R. Reid says, “It is absurd to suggest that ColoradoCare will increase costs. Whether you call the payment a ‘premium’ or a ‘tax,” it is going to be lower –less than half, in many cases –than the insurance premiums we’re paying now. Colorado Care takes in $25 billion, and replaces premiums that cost more than $40 billion. Anybody who passed 3rd-grade arithmetic can see that this saves money– for families, for business, and for the state government.”
Universal health care is what we as progressives, as moderates, as conservatives, always wanted. We want to be like every other industrialized country that has a simple, affordable, fair health care system for all. Colorado can be a model for other states struggling to come up with a workable model for healthcare. We shouldn’t let these slick, lying, Koch-funded groups decide our future for us.
Sources:
Detailed county data about health is available from coloradohealthinstitute.org.
Full text of Initiative 20/ Colorado Cares Proposal
The graphic below is the work of OpenSecrets.org. They traced the network of Koch funding in 2012. 2013 is the latest year that I could find 990s for Generation Opportunity, YEM Trust, Center to Protect Patient Rights, and other funding sources who share a common mission: to attack and undermine the Affordable Care Act, and now the ColoradoCareYes proposal. So while I was unable to find definitive links between the Koch funding streams and Advancing Colorado in 2014, a reasonable reader can infer that if its Director was on the Koch payroll 1 week before Advancing Colorado came online, and had worked for the Kochs, or other extreme right wing dark-money groups, in one capacity or another for the last three years, that he is still working for them.
Further, it’s clear that these organizations (GenOp, Advancing Colorado, Compass Colorado, Center to Protect Patient Rights, Koch Institute) have a common mission to defeat any consumer-friendly health plans in Colorado and elsewhere.
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The young man who is second from the left looks familiar. Does anyone know who he is and if so, did he work on the Beauprez campaign?
I don't know who he is…probably Elliot does, if he drops by here.
I have to apologize for the slideshow in the middle of the diary. I tried to post a video of the flash mob, asked Pols to do it, and apparently I gave them a link to a slideshow of every image in my photobucket. So enjoy….
Here's the video of the ColoradoCare flash mob to promote the kickoff of the signature gathering effort:
Duke, they are all GenOp employees, but not all working in Colorado. The young man you're asking about is, I believe, Kevin Gardner from this list of Genop employees. Lockwood's Instagram caption for this photo read: "All of Genop's State Directors".
Employee contribution is 3.3%. My bad.
Anyone wanting to dive deep into the numbers should check the financial impact statements on the ColoradoCareYes website. http://coloradocareyes.co/initiative20/economic-analysis/
Thanks for this. Sounds good on ColoradoCareYes site.
Factual Corrections:
1. In the intro paragraph, the linked text "coalition of nonprofits" should be "coalition of groups".(not all are nonprofits)
2. Under the heading "Why Replace Colorado's Health Exchange", on item 3, the word Anthem should be Kaiser, at this link:
http://kff.org/health-reform/press-release/premiums-set-to-decline-slightly-for-benchmark-aca-marketplace-insurance-plans-in-2015/
and change the numbers from "9-22%" to ".8%"
I confused "premium decline" with "uninsured decline" on that one. In CO, uninsured have declined 22% since ACA came on board. Premiums, only .8%.
Premiums are not declining much, or are slightly increasing, on average. It's a good reason to look at the ColoradoCare system. We're unlikely to see any significant decline in premiums with the Health Exchange as it is now.
3. Under "What will Initiative 20 do?" Instead of 3.6%, the correct number is 3.3%.
4. Under the quotes from Ken Clark's radio program, item 5, the wording at "8:36 should be:
Clark disputes that ColoradoCare will be a "non-governmental health care system". I think this is a legitimate criticism – although technically true that CC would be a subdivision of a state system, it's hard to see why that would be "nongovernmental" to the average voter.
I didn't want to make these corrections while the diary was still on the front page, as it would make it drop off.