Democrats feeling
desperate to reach out to seniors ATLANTA (August 20, 2010)-According to the
August 16, 2010 article "Seniors to get checks", released by the Atlanta
Journal Constitution
and written by the Associated Press's Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar, the Democrats
are doing everything in their ability to overcome the senior mistrust
over the new health care law that has been building over the past months.
President Obama's administration and Congressional Democrats will
continue to pay close attention to seniors as we head into the November
elections. More than 750,000 Medicare recipients with high
prescription drug costs received a $250 check in the mail this summer. The
individual checks were enclosed in a letter addressed to the Medicare
beneficiaries stating the purpose of the money: to bring needed relief to
individuals with high drug costs, and to bring America one step closer to
closing the donut hole or coverage gap within Medicare. The letter ended with
what the AJC referred to as a "sales pitch" signed by the Health
Secretary Kathleen Sebelius telling seniors to 'stay tuned for more
information... on how this new law will help make Medicare more financially
secure and provide you with higher quality and more affordable health
care." How are seniors reacting to the checks arriving
in the mail? Deborah Johnson-Scheid of Raleigh, NC is quoted 'I'm not impressed
at all. I appreciate Obama trying, but it still does not help the people who
are on drugs that cost $800 or $1,000.' She goes on to claim 'I may be dead by
then,' when referring to the law being phased in for 2011 that will provide a
50 percent discount on brand name prescription drugs and a lesser discount on
generic drugs for those who fall in the coverage gap. An Arizona native, Virginia Brant, compared the
check to a "free spin on the wheel" in Vegas. She sees the check as a
teaser to prepare her for what is coming to her and other seniors under the new
health care law. She is one of the few seniors in support of the law, claiming
the check is a sign of the Obama administration listening and working to please
seniors.
In reality, the check is a nice gesture. But a nice gesture is not always
a solution. "Giving an individual a $250 check, when their out-of-pocket
expenses are in the thousands, is comparable to giving a soldier a band-aid
after being shot forty times," says the American Seniors Association
President Stuart Barton. The significance of the band-aid, if any at all,
is lost within a brief moment, just as the significance of the $250 check
instantly disappears in the reality of high prescription drug prices. Over three million more checks will be going out
to those seniors who fall in Medicare's coverage gap this year. Democrats are
holding information sessions about the new health care law, as well as
'birthday parties' for Social Security in their home towns this month. They
have gone as far as running a nationwide advertisement starring TV's popular
sheriff of Mayberry, Actor Andy Griffith, to reassure seniors on the benefits of
the new law. Each of the recent political gestures of the Democrats is a
reaction to current polls demonstrating the difficult position the Obama
administration and the Democrats are in with seniors. The AP-Gfk poll shows
that 56 percent of seniors oppose the new health care law. Washington officials have high and somewhat
unrealistic hopes that seniors will "come around" in time, given the
bill is implemented effectively. Despite the change in attitude of seniors on
the new health care law, it will be interesting to see what more the Democrats
resort to as America approaches the November elections. ###






























