The LuLac Edition #4,236, March 12th, 2020
But what has happened is Biden has increased his delegate lead and has become the presumptive front runner in terms of likability and delegates.
Bernie Sanders says he's moving ahead with his Democratic presidential campaign.
He told reporters in Burlington on Wednesday that he's not quitting despite key primary losses to Joe Biden the night before. The Vermont senator's path to the presidential nomination considerably narrowed after decisive losses to Biden in Michigan, Missouri and Mississippi.
Sanders acknowledged “we are losing the debate over electability" to a candidate many Democrats think will have a better chance of defeating President Donald Trump in the fall. But he said he wants to force Biden to confront issues of economic inequality and other issues important to Sanders' supporters.
Sanders will stay in but I think he has reconciled himself to the fact that he might not do well in terms of popular vote and delegates. What he might be satisfied with is moving Biden to the left for the General Election. I have no doubt Sanders will support the nominee, let’s hope his supporters will.
The debate between Bernie Sanders and Joe Biden on Sunday night will be crucial to both. Sanders will get a chance to ask pointed questions to Biden. Biden will have the chance to answer them and make a case for himself.
Sanders needs to be less strident, Biden needs to be measured and think, really think before he speaks. The debate will also test Biden’s stamina in one on one contest.
The Arizona debate takes place in Phoenix on Sunday, March 15 at 8 p.m. (5 p.m. PT) and will be broadcast live on CNN and Univision.
On Feb. 6, Cartwright and Wild, along with members of the Pennsylvania Democratic Congressional delegation, sent out a loud-and-clear message in opposition of the Healthy Adult Opportunity, a demonstration that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services at the Department of Health and Human Services claims will “increase flexibility” for states to expand health care options.
The Healthy Adult Opportunity, which was introduced on Jan. 30 by the CMS, would allow for states to extend Medicaid coverage to adults under the age of 65 who do not otherwise qualify on the basis of disability, with the possibility to include other groups as well.
However, in order to participate in the opportunity, states have to opt for a cap on federal financing.
States that meet set performance standards and opt for the cap could access between 25% and 50& of the federal savings if their actual spending falls under the cap.
Currently, Medicaid, which is administered at a state level, is jointly funded by states and the federal government. The federal government provides matching payments without a pre-set limit.
According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, capping federal financing might result in challenges for health care programs. The organization cited the fact that “U.S. territories operate Medicaid under a federal cap, which has been set too low to meet enrollees’ needs,” and that such programs are “inflexible when responses to emerging health issues and natural disasters” occur.
Cartwright, Wild and the other members of the PDC made it clear in a letter to Seema Verma, MPH, administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicare Services, that distributing Medicaid funding as lump sum annual payments could lead to “tough choices that would put beneficiaries at risk.”
“Let’s be clear about what the Medicaid block grant plan would do: it would put health care for the most vulnerable among us on the chopping block,” Cartwright said. “Across our state, nearly three million people are covered by Medicaid, including 800,000 who gained coverage as a result of the expansion.”
Cartwright and the group were particularly concerned that the Healthy Adult Opportunity would make room for states to limit access to prescription drugs and impose eligibility criteria that could limit health care access to those in need, among other issues.
“Medicaid is also a lifeline for rural hospitals,” Cartwright said. “Before the expansion, we lost two hospitals in Northeastern Pennsylvania alone, both from financial distress. When your local hospital closes, your health care suffers, even if you still have your own insurance. Now is not the time to turn back the clock on this successful program that has helped millions of Americans get the care they need.”
On Feb. 6, Wild announced via a Facebook post that she would vote in favor of a House resolution to block the HAO proposal.
“Bottom line: the administration’s Medicaid block grants would hurt the very people Medicaid is intended to help,” Wild said in the post. “This is an outrageous attack on hard-working families struggling to make ends meet.”
The CMS has stated that the HAO will “enhance the Medicaid program’s integrity through its focus on accountability for results and quality improvement, making the Medicaid program stronger for states and beneficiaries.”
The letter from the Democratic Congress members, however, called out the HAO as “a cynical ploy to cut benefits and raise costs for the millions of individuals who benefited from Medicaid expansion over the last several years,” and applauded Gov. Tom Wolf for rejecting the proposal.
“The ‘Health Adult Opportunity’ proposal is yet another attempt to undermine what is working with our healthcare system and to cut access to affordable healthcare for seniors, children, people with disabilities, and low-income adults,” the letter reads. “We oppose this proposal and urge the Administration to reconsider, and instead work with the Congress to expand – not restrict – access to affordable, quality healthcare for all Americans.”
Tune in Sunday morning at 6 on 94.3 The Talker; 6:30 on 1400-The Game, NEPA's Fox .Sports Radio and 106.7 fm; and at 7:30 on 105 The River.
"PREVIEW" host David DeCosmo welcomes retiring Red Cross Executive Director Bill Goldsworthy and his successor, Michele Baehr, to the program during the week of March 16th to unveil plans for a merger of chapters this April.
PREVIEW is seen 3 times daily on Comcast channel 19 and on the electric city television YouTube page.
Want to hear some great parodies on the news? Tune in to WILK Radio at 6:20 and 8:20 AM on Mondays. As Ralph Cramden used to say, “It’s a laugh riot!”
A mine lift cage at the Vaal Reefs gold mine in South Africa falls 1.9 kilometres (1.2 mi), killing 23……The Norwegian oil platform Alexander L. Kielland collapses in the North Sea, killing 123 of its crew of 2…and forty years ago the number one song in LuLac land and America was “Working My Way Back to You/Forgive Me, Girl” by The Spinners.
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