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Effort centers on ensuring reform
doesn't shortchange immigrants |
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Hispanic Advocates Jump into Health
Debate
WASHINGTON (By Krissah Thompson,
Washington Post) November 12,
2009
― After trying to
carefully balance their interests in
health-care reform and immigration, the
nation's Hispanic lawmakers and largest
advocacy groups are scrambling to
develop a strategy to counter what they
see as efforts to shortchange immigrants
in health bills on Capitol Hill.
They had tried to keep the two issues
apart, concerned, they said, that
immigration would distract from health
care. But other lawmakers and activists
have inserted the immigration issue into
the middle of the health-care debate,
causing a collision between what
Hispanic leaders call their two top
policy priorities.
Many of them that believe a health-care
overhaul is vital to their community,
which is disproportionately uninsured
and suffers from a host of chronic
illnesses. But with the current bills
excluding more than a million Hispanics
-- mostly legal immigrants -- the debate
runs into the issue of immigrants'
rights.
"In every policy debate, as long as
immigration remains unresolved, there is
going to be a question of what happens
to immigrants in this country," said
Jennifer Ng'andu, deputy director of
health policy at the National Council of
La Raza. "One of the reasons that there
is so much concern is that our nation's
leaders have not dealt with these
issues."
Under the health bill passed in the
House on Saturday, illegal immigrants
would be allowed to buy insurance on a
newly created exchange with their own
money and without government subsidies.
The bill expected in the Senate would
bar illegal immigrants from the exchange
altogether. In both the Senate and
House, all legal immigrants are eligible
for government subsidies to buy
insurance on the exchange, but
immigrants who have been in the country
for less than five years would remain
barred by existing law from enrolling in
Medicaid and Medicare.
At a meeting in May with Hispanic groups
and members of the Congressional
Hispanic Caucus, activists pushed for
dealing with immigration reform within
the health-care debate, recalled Elena
Rios, president of the National Hispanic
Medical Association.
"They told us, 'Don't you dare,' " she
said of lawmakers. " 'Don't distract.
This is about health-care reform and
eliminating health-care disparities.' I
thought that was smart. We realized that
wasn't the focus."
Now, however, she says she is worried
that the health-care bills moving
through Congress will not do enough to
help immigrants and alleviate
health-care disparities in the Latino
community.
Similarly, a September meeting with
White House policy advisers included a
"warning" against confronting the
health-care barriers immigrants face
because of "fears that conservatives in
the Senate could use the issue to kill
the bill," Rios wrote on her Web site.
Immigration has become a major political
hurdle, regardless.
"We assume the Republicans are prepared
to offer any number of
immigration-related amendments to slow
down the process and score political
points," said Jim Manley, a spokesman
for Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid
(Nev.).
The issue isn't clear cut among
Democrats, either. Tensions have emerged
between the Hispanic Caucus, the White
House and Senate Democrats.
After Rep. Joe Wilson (R-S.C.) shouted
"You lie!" when President Obama pledged
that the reforms he proposed "would not
apply to those who are here illegally,"
the White House promoted language
barring undocumented immigrants from the
exchange, which was adopted by the
Senate Finance Committee.
Members of the Hispanic Caucus balked,
saying that rule was more restrictive
than current policy. According to the
Pew Hispanic Center, about 40 percent of
illegal immigrants have some form of
health insurance.
"I am not going to vote for a
health-care bill that includes
provisions that exclude people using
their own money to go to the exchange
regardless of their immigration status,"
said Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-Ill.). "It
is silly and stupid. If we do not allow
them to purchase it, their communities
will suffer. Their children will
suffer."
On Saturday, House leaders worked to
satisfy the concerns of Hispanic
lawmakers after a majority of their
22-member caucus pledged to vote against
a bill that did not allow all immigrants
access. Leaders of the caucus have also
met with the White House and Senate
leadership in recent days to outline
their concerns.
In the Senate, advocacy groups are
looking to Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.),
who pushed in the Senate Finance
Committee to allow undocumented
immigrants to buy health insurance on
the exchange without taxpayer subsidies.
But he has not decided whether to
introduce similar amendments when the
Senate's floor debate begins, an aide
said.
Several Republicans in the committee,
including Sen. Charles E. Grassley
(R-Iowa) and Senate Minority Whip Jon
Kyl (R-Ariz.), introduced
immigration-related amendments. The
Federation for American Immigration
Reform, an advocacy group that supports
limiting immigration, is encouraging
them to push for barring illegal
immigrants from the exchange and denying
tax subsidies for health care to legal
immigrants who have been in the country
for less than five years.
"The Senate is going to have to deal
with these red hot issues right at the
start of their process, otherwise it is
going to dog them during the debate,"
said Bob Dane, a spokesman for the
group. "We see the health-care bill as
having been hijacked and reshaping
immigration policy."
Some Hispanic activists believe their
early cautious stand may have backfired,
and they are turning up their advocacy,
said Lillian Rodriguez Lopez, president
of the Hispanic Federation.
Recently, the largest advocacy groups,
including the Federation, La Raza and
League of United Latin American
Citizens, launched a lobbying campaign
focused on removing the five-year ban
for legal immigrants and on getting
coverage for all families, even families
in which the children are legal
immigrants and the parents are illegal.
The groups applauded the House's passage
of its bill last week, but stressed that
they want more coverage for the 4.2
million legal immigrants who are
uninsured, according to a study by the
Migration Policy Institute, and
consideration for the estimated 7.2
million illegal immigrants who do not
have health insurance.
"We feel that our community is not being
fully represented in the conversation
and needs to be more aggressively
represented," Rodriguez Lopez said.
Letter of concern
Ten Hispanic organizations sent a joint
letter to members of Congress on
Wednesday to express their concern about
pending health-care legislation. Led by
Hector Barreto, who served as a chief of
the Small Business Administration under
President George W. Bush, the groups
said the bill passed Saturday by the
House would place unfair mandates on
Hispanic small businesses and families.
Barreto, now chairman of the Latino
Coalition, said in a statement that "the
House vote illustrated Congress's
refusal to come up with a bipartisan
solution on real health-care reform. We
will not support a bill that creates an
inefficient and ineffective
government-run health care system for
America."
Other groups that signed the letter
include the Virginia Hispanic Chamber of
Commerce, U.S.-Mexico Chamber of
Commerce and the Hispanic Alliance for
Prosperity Institute.
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