Health Care

It appears that Ravalli County commissioners are continuing the Montana Republican Party’s war against poor women, threatening, as the Ravalli Republic reports, to not accept federal Title X money for no other reason than their ideological opposition to helping low-income people lead healthier and more productive lives.

The “reasoning” for the proposed move comes from Ravalli County Commissioner Matt Kanenwisher, who offered his personal objection to private reproductive care for minors and emergency contraception as reasons to refuse the federal money. He also fascinatingly argued that pregnancy is not a “public health issue.”

Perhaps Mr. Kanewisher should visit a public school sometime. Unplanned pregnancies among young people are a public health crisis–in the short term for young people who experience unplanned pregnancies, and in the long term for their children, who often experience extreme poverty.

The decision would not only be cruel, but counter-productive. Limiting access to family planning services has one clear impact, increased abortions, as Laura Bassett notes:

Ironically, cutting Title X funding might actually increase the incidence of abortions. Family planning services at Title X-funded clinics helped prevent 973,00 unintended pregnancies in 2008, which would have caused more that 400,000 unintended births and more than 400,000 abortions, according to a report by the Guttmacher Institute released that year.

Title X is a forty year old program which provides education and health services for low-income Americans, including cancer screening, HIV prevention and education, and pregnancy counseling, among other critical services. That Republicans nationally and locally would attack this successful, cost-effective program which improves public health demonstrates just how far out of touch with American values and common sense they’ve become.

And of course, it’s worth noting that “by law, Title X funds may not be used in programs where abortion is a method of family planning.”

The proposed inaction by the Ravalli County commissioners, of course, is part of an ongoing war being waged on poor Montanans, especially women, by the Republican Party. Following a legislative session characterized by increasingly hostile language and even more damaging policy directed at the poor, it’s little wonder that the Ravalli commissioners are acting in this fashion.

Montana Republicans certainly have fascinating ideas about personal responsibility and public health. On one hand, they seem eager to excuse and defend Exxon, a multinational corporation who has polluted one of Montana’s great rivers and jeopardized health while on the other, they are willing to condemn and abandon young people who simply need access to low-cost reproductive health care.

Shame on them.

Governor Schweitzer bullies the poor Republicans in the Legislature:

He is also asking that the 93 legislators who voted for SB 106 give up about half a year’s worth of their state funded health insurance – about $409,000 – to cover the state’s cost of joining the suit.

In his letter to the Senate,  he wrote, “I find it particularly ironic that some legislators are willing to spend Montana taxpayers’ money to challenge the federal health care reform act for symbolic reasons, while at the same time deriving personal advantage from state health care laws and policies that allow them, as legislators, to receive taxpayer-funded health insurance benefits.”

Seems fair to me.

All good patriots in the Montana TEA Party should surely be up in arms today, as socialism has been exposed at the Montana Legislature. Through the efforts of the Lee Newspapers (kudos to Mike Dennison and the other reporters who fought to get this information released), Montanans were finally able to learn just how many defenders of liberty in the Republican caucus receive state health benefits.

Of course, the Legislature did not need to be compelled release the information. Senator Anders Blewett wrote a bill requiring the Legislators to disclose their health benefits, but it was blocked by House Republicans on a 54-38 vote.

As always, Representative Knox best  represented the values of today’s Republican Party. He voted against the blast motion on SB 284 today, despite championing transparency about state spending two days earlier:

knox transparency

But let’s not end with Representative Knox today. Another well-known champion of liberty has apparently been seduced by the Marxist wiles of state bureaucracy and largesse. Even Representative Derek Skees has been transformed from a Galtian hero into a puppet of the state, gladly accepting benefits he knows to be socialistic.

Consider his arguments against socialism, just yesterday:

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Skees also voted against the blast motion for transparency about his health benefits.

I wonder why. I expect the TEA Party rally against these two to begin shortly.

During the protracted debate over the budget in the Montana House today, the Montaniban decided to defund Planned Parenthood to meet the needs of their ideologically-driven, logic deficient constituents. Among those most excited about the action, which will jeopardize access to a wide array of healthcare needs of Montana women, was Havre’s own Wendy Warburton, who was so excited that she posted about it repeatedly on Twitter.

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Pretty exciting stuff for Representative Warburton, who partially justified her vote by citing an article from the Daily Beast by Fox New Democrat Kirsten Powers:

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As I pointed out at the time, and others have noted subsequently, Warburton is relying on an article that is so factually challenged that the author had to offer the most complete retraction I have ever seen. Powers wrote:

Author’s Note: I made a serious error in reporting this column that undermines the conclusion I drew. I compared statistics on contraceptive use from a January 2011 Guttmacher Institute fact sheet to a year 2000 study on the same issue.  However, I did not realize that the 2011 fact sheet derived its statistics from the year 2000 numbers, so my argument was not supported by the data. I am deeply sorry for the error, which invalidates my piece.

That’s the kind of decision making the Republican Party is bringing to Montana. On a close vote, they passed devastating cuts to Planned Parenthood, based in part on an absolute distortion of the truth. If Representative Warburton has any honor at all, she will retract her remarks tomorrow and apologize, both to the Legislature she misled and the Montana women this vote will do real harm to.

Somehow, I don’t see that happening.Do the right thing, Representative Warburton. Maybe it will set a precedent for the rest of the session.

When he’s not making empty political gestures, you can usually count onrehberg Representative Rehberg to fall back on his other campaign strategy, right wing, dishonest fear mongering. In a brief interview with Dan Testa at the Flathead Beacon, Rehberg went to both wells, drawing a long drink of the crazy each time.

Let’s start with the empty political gestures. Rehberg’s really trying to get a lot of mileage out of his plan to not support federal money coming to Montana, but the purported benefits of this grandstanding gesture that will actually hurt Montanans seem to get more illogical every day.  Nothing would excite me more than the prospect of this financial wizard making more important decisions as a member of the Appropriations Committee:

“Everybody says, ‘Oh, that’s a pittance.’ OK, so a pittance doesn’t matter? Alright. Good. Why don’t you go ahead and give me that billion dollars from Montana and the billion across the country because for every dollar Montana gets remember, I’m just one of 435, and then there are a hundred senators,” he said. “So all of a sudden, it starts adding up.”

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