Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The public option was featured in three bills considered by the United States House of Representatives in 2009: the proposed Affordable Health Care for America Act (), which was passed by the House in 2009, its predecessor, the proposed America's Affordable Health Choices Act (), and a third bill, the Public Option Act, also referred to as the Medicare You Can Buy Into Act, ().
Of these two national plans, at least one will have to be a private non-profit plan. [125] [126] Insurance Exchanges A single national insurance exchange will be created to house private insurance plans as well as a public option. Individual states could run their own exchanges under federal guidelines.
In January 2013, Representative Jan Schakowsky and 44 other U.S. House of Representatives Democrats introduced H.R. 261, the "Public Option Deficit Reduction Act" which would amend the 2010 Affordable Care Act to create a public option. The bill would set up a government-run health insurance plan with premiums 5% to 7% percent lower than ...
The Homes Act changes that by creating a robust public option for housing. As both a public developer and public bank, it would be an efficient one-stop-shop for financing, grants and technical ...
Earlier versions of the bill included a publicly run insurer that could compete to cover those without employer sponsored coverage (the so-called public option), but this was ultimately stripped to secure the support of moderates. The bill passed the Senate in December 2009 with all Democrats voting in favor and the House in March 2010 with the ...
Project 2025 is a policy plan for a conservative president created by a think tank. It includes 900 pages of radical ideas for federal government. What is Project 2025?
Click any item to view a summary of your data linked to that product or service. If you'd like to see all of your data, instead of a summary, you can use the "Download My Data" option to download and view your data (instructions below).
Hard-line left-wing blogs are OPPOSED to the public plan; they want single payer. Squicks, your edit summaries betray your POV bias ("far-left" vs. "right-wing"). Public option is centrist; it is supported by the majority of the public. --Dr.enh 20:58, 3 November 2009 (UTC) You also have a clear POV-bias in favor of the public option.