Call

blenderbender1811:

blenderbender1811:

blenderbender1811:

Call your senators about the health care bill and tell them you do not want the ACA repealed. Today was a vote to proceed on the vote for this. Tell them you do not want this bill.

Call if you have a Dem senator and tell them you appreciate fighting the bill. Call  if you have a GOP senator and tell them you don’t want it. Call YOUR senators. Other people’s senators will not tally your call and may use it to ‘prove’ their constituents support it because the opposition is from outside. 

Can’t get through in DC office? Call district offices.

They turned off the phones or you have phone anxiety? Send emails.

Emails aren’t getting through? FaxZero is being very helpful with faxes.

No access to faxes? Snail mail. 

5calls and it’s-time-to-fight.weebly.com both offer scripts.

Now light up those lines.

Guys, keep calling. The vote could be today or tomorrow. This is important. A million jobs are on the line and, more importantly, so is healthcare for millions.

Social media is not the same as calling, emails, faxing, or letters. Social media does nothing federally. There’s too much of it. 

Call. 

You guys have seven hours of debate left. We still haven’t even SEEN the dang bill, so definitely light up those phone lines.

Also – if you see anything about Dems voting against a single payer amendment, it’s because the amendment is only there to troll – it was never going to be taken seriously and the vote does not necessarily reflect their feelings about single payer.

Guys. Now. Nownownonwonwnow. Get your friends and family to do this too.

Call

Call your senators about the health care bill and tell them you do not want the ACA repealed. Today was a vote to proceed on the vote for this. Tell them you do not want this bill.

Call if you have a Dem senator and tell them you appreciate fighting the bill. Call  if you have a GOP senator and tell them you don’t want it. Call YOUR senators. Other people’s senators will not tally your call and may use it to ‘prove’ their constituents support it because the opposition is from outside. 

Can’t get through in DC office? Call district offices.

They turned off the phones or you have phone anxiety? Send emails.

Emails aren’t getting through? FaxZero is being very helpful with faxes.

No access to faxes? Snail mail. 

5calls and it’s-time-to-fight.weebly.com both offer scripts.

Now light up those lines.

BREAKING: Senate GOP, White House plan final, urgent blitz to pass health-care law

tpfnewslive:

The White House and Senate Republican leaders are planning a final, urgent blitz to pressure reluctant GOP senators to pass an overhaul of the Affordable Care Act before their month-long August recess.

Aware that the next 14 days probably represent their last chance to salvage their flagging endeavor, President Trump, Vice President Pence and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) intend to single out individual senators and escalate a broad defense of the evolving proposal, according to Republicans familiar with their plans.

When Trump returns from Europe, he plans to counter the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office’s analysis of the legislation — which shows that 22 million fewer peoplewould have insurance coverage by 2026 than under the current law — with figures and analyses from conservative groups and Republicans that show more benefits and less disruption, should the bill pass, according to a White House official familiar with the strategy.

Pence, meanwhile, is being asked to help bring along skeptical GOP senators, including Sen. Dean Heller (Nev.), to whom he has already reached out personally.

McConnell is expected to place greater responsibility on Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) to pitch his controversial amendment that would allow insurers to offer plans that don’t meet ACA requirements — provided they also offer some that do. McConnell could ask Cruz to speak to Republican senators as soon as Tuesday, according to a person familiar with his strategy. Cruz has often talked about his amendment in the senators’ regular Tuesday lunches, but the burden of building support for the bill could be left to the firebrand conservative.

The plans, which the Republicans described on the condition of anonymity, reflect the immense pressure GOP leaders feel as they aim to bring their bill to a vote on the Senate floor the week after next.

It is far from clear that the strategy will work. Even as Trump has sought to complement McConnell’s efforts with his own, he has also complicated the majority leader’s life — most notably urging a voteon strictly repealing the law if the current effort is unsuccessful. McConnell has floated a different backup plan: working with Democrats to stabilize the insurance markets.

The biggest challenge the leaders face is the widespread disagreement among Republican senators about how the nation’s health-care laws should be structured, as well as frustration about the secretive process McConnell used to craft his bill. It was that anger and discord that spoiled McConnell’s plan to vote on the bill before the Fourth of July recess and forced him to rewrite his draft.

“It may be that there is another discussion draft. If there is, I can’t tell you what’s in it. That’s what happens when you don’t have an open process,” Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) said Friday at an event with constituents in Homer, Alaska.

Murkowski is one of several key moderate senators whom McConnell desperately needs to win over with his next draft, the details of which could be released as soon as early next week. He can afford to lose only two of the 52 Republican senators if he hopes to pass the bill. No Democrats plan to vote for the measure, but Pence is ready to cast a tiebreaking vote if needed.

McConnell must also woo recalcitrant conservatives who came out against the initial draft the day it was released. They include Cruz, who has been pushing his amendment as a means of winning his own vote as well as those of his conservative allies.

“It adds additional choices so that people who can’t afford insurance now will be able to purchase some form of insurance that they want, that they desire, that helps meet their needs,” Cruz said Thursday at a town hall in Austin hosted by Concerned Veterans for America, a group backed by the billionaire conservative Koch brothers.

But Cruz’s amendment has drawn concern from critics who worry that it would destabilize the risk pool that brings together healthy and sick individuals, and that it could mean higher coverage costs for less-healthy people.

“There’s a real feeling that that’s subterfuge to get around preexisting conditions,” said Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa), according to Iowa Public Radio. “If it is subterfuge and it has the effect of annihilating the preexisting-condition requirement that we have in the existing bill, then obviously I would object to that.”

It’s not yet clear whether Cruz’s proposal would be allowed under arcane Senate rules that Republicans are using to pass their bill with a simple majority rather than the supermajority required of most legislation. It’s also unclear what the impact would be on coverage levels or the deficit. The CBO is reviewing it along with other proposed changes, according to Republicans familiar with the situation. To some in McConnell’s orbit, Cruz is taking a risk by waging such a public campaign for his measure before those aspects are determined.

Cruz stands to be left responsible for the success or failure of a conservative amendment that could alienate other Republicans or undermine the special protections allowing the bill to pass along GOP party lines.

A Cruz spokeswoman did not respond to a request for comment Friday.

GOP leaders are also trying to win the support of Mike Lee (R-Utah) and Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), two Cruz allies who also opposed the draft legislation.

Inside the West Wing, Trump associates are working closely with McConnell’s legislative aides to track Republican senators. White House legislative director Marc Short speaks regularly with McConnell chief of staff Sharon Soderstrom and with GOP Senate leaders to hear their concerns, according to two Republicans involved in the discussions.

But while the relationship between the White House and McConnell’s operation has been tight, it is far from the only nexus driving the process.

Other influential White House figures, such as chief strategist Stephen K. Bannon, have their own networks of friendly lawmakers and aides on Capitol Hill, at times vexing the McConnell orbit as it tries to hold together the Senate Republican conference. Bannon, for instance, has built a strong rapport with Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.), the chairman of the House Freedom Caucus, who is known for telling the White House what could or could not pass muster among his colleagues in the House even as the Senate leadership toils over the bill.

McConnell’s proposal to work with Democrats if things fall apart could be an equally stiff challenge, given the intense partisanship that has gripped lawmakers in recent years. Nevertheless, some Republicans are hopeful.

Murkowski said she has personally contacted Democrats to see whether they might be more willing partners in fixing the health-care system in a way that fits the needs of her state. She is one of a number of rank-and-file Republicans who are warming to the idea of abandoning plans for repeal and working with Democrats to fix the existing system.

This week, Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), another critic of the GOP bill, said she had also been in contact with Democrats who say they are waiting for McConnell to abandon repeal so they can move on to work with moderate Republicans on bipartisan health-care legislation.

“I had one Democratic senator call me last Thursday morning at 6:54 a.m. and say to me, ‘I really want to negotiate, but until this bill fails I’m prohibited from doing so,’ ” Collins said in an interview.

McConnell’s troubles have spread in recent weeks from the roughly half-dozen early GOP skeptics on either ideological flank. Even reliable leadership allies such as Sen. Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) have raised questions about the bill. Moran was the only Republican senator to face constituents at an unregulated town hall meeting this week, and he found himself flooded with voters demanding that he not support the Senate bill.

“I think there are many senators — more senators than are having town hall meetings — more senators out there who have genuine concerns with this legislation,” Moran told reporters after the meeting.

Keep calling your senators, keep up the pressure. 

BREAKING: Senate GOP, White House plan final, urgent blitz to pass health-care law

If you haven’t been paying attention:

leviolson:

-First, Republicans in the House failed to pass an Obamacare repeal because their bill couldn’t thread the needle between the ultra-conservative Freedom Caucus (who struggle to admit that they want a government to exist at all) and moderate Republican representatives who want to be able to sleep at night without having totally condemned millions of Americans to preventable bankruptcies and/or deaths.

-Then they tried again and passed such a terrible compromise between the Freedom Caucus and the moderates that the Senate did not even consider working with the House’s repeal bill, and started over from scratch for their own bill.

-The Senate bill is having a similar problem, with moderate Republicans from swing states recognizing that their political careers are over if they vote to take away healthcare from their constituents, and libertarian bullshitters like Ted Cruz and Rand Paul thinking that taking away healthcare from 23 million Americans isn’t repealing Obamacare ENOUGH. The Senate wanted to ram through the bill before their July 4th recess, but didn’t have the votes, and now Mitch McConnell is attempting to bribe holdout Republican senators with billions of dollars in pork spending for their districts.

-Virtually everyone who isn’t a Republican Congressperson thinks this bill should absolutely not be passed, and literally no organizations representing doctors, nurses, and hospital think that the Senate bill will help at all. Instead, it will put rural hospitals out of business because the rural people they service will lose their insurance, it will bring back lifetime caps for children who are born unlucky with health issues, and it will raise premiums for your grandparents many times over. Meanwhile, everyone’s insurance will get worse, even if it becomes marginally cheaper, because insurance companies will no longer be required to cover the things Obamacare forced them to, things like pregnancy & birth, mental health services, prescription drug coverage, and even hospital care.

-Oh, and Medicare will be critically slashed ruining the standard of living for tens of millions of people so that already rich people’s tax rate goes down a couple percentage points.

-If the Senate somehow passes this bill, the House will have to vote on it. To avoid the messy work of actually doing their jobs, Paul Ryan will maneuver a simple up or down vote so that the House won’t debate the bill or offer any amendments at all, and if House Republicans vote it into law, the entire process will have excluded Democrats’ participation as well as the vast majority of this nation’s opposition to it. Simply to make Obama look bad.

-If the Senate doesn’t pass the bill, President Trump recommended the Senate simply repeal Obamacare without ANY alternative at all.

THE REPUBLICAN PARTY DOES NOT DESERVE TO GOVERN WHATSOEVER.

Call your senators. Tell them you do not want their bill under any circumstances, or any repeal.

That goes double if they’re GOP and triple if you don’t think it’ll work. They definitely won’t vote this down unless their constituents seriously turn up the pressure. 

So You’re Worried About the AHCA

blenderbender1811:

blenderbender1811:

What can you do about it?

1) Call your Senators. If they’re GOP, tell them you do not want the AHCA, or any ACA repeal and to vote no. Especially considering they didn’t reveal it to the public until yesterday and the debate and discussion time is paltry. It’s been rushed and that’s not good for anybody. The ACA had hundreds of meetings and debates. If they’re Democrats, tell them the same thing and thank them for their party line against the AHCA. That is a good way to legitimize their position. They can point at their constituents and say you gave them a mandate.

2) Phone anxiety? Leave a voice message after hours or email

3) itstimetofight.weebly.com and 5calls offer contact info for your Senators.

4) Do this every single day. The vote is next week. It’s not the time to let up.

5) Spread posts encouraging people to call – share on Facebook, retweet, reblog. You can do this step even if you don’t live in the US. Get your friends to call or email. 

Now, light up those phone lines!

You guys cannot let up. Call every day. The whip counts aren’t absolute until the vote is over. So keep calling. 

To kill the health bill:

wilwheaton:

yeahiwasintheshit:

sixbucks:

Senator Elizabeth Warren’s staff says what would help THE MOST is calling the five Republican senators who have broken away from the GOP in an attempt to slow down the healthcare repeal. Tell them how much you appreciate their efforts and urge them to vote against the bill:
Senator Bob Corker – (202) 224-3344
Senator Lisa Murkowski – (202) 224-6665
Senator Rob Portman – (202) 224-3353
Senator Susan Collins – (202) 224-2523
Senator Bill Cassidy – (202) 224-5824

Signal Boost?

DO THIS! i already did

DO THIS. Do not waste your time with Ted Cruz and Rand Paul.

GUYS I hate to be a buzzkill, but let me give some advice.

Do not call senators who are not your own. Do not ever do that. Because staffers can tell when you’re not really a constituent. That’s why it’s a good idea to give your full address, including your ZIP code, so they can verify you’re a constituent. If you’re not their constituent, they might listen, but they won’t tally your call, and they can use your call to say ‘Well, all the opposition aren’t REALLY my constituents, so I’m okay to disregard them’. 

CALL YOUR OWN SENATORS. Even if it’s someone awful like Rand Paul or Ted Cruz, you can at least say you tried to work on your elected. 

And please don’t stop calling because the vote might be delayed. The house vote got delayed too and then it ended up passing because they got enough deals together. Keep calling, every day. Call outside office hours and leave a voice message or send an email if you have phone anxiety. Include your ZIP code. And send it to YOUR Senators.