
[cnn-photo-caption image= http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2009/images/07/21/jindal.cnn.art.jpg caption="Governor Bobby Jindal says the House Democrats' health care proposal would put the government between doctors and their patients."]
Key House Democrats are being summoned to the White House today for some not so subtle arm-twisting on health care reform. President Obama's looking for every vote that he can get to push health care reform through Congress by the August recess. Republicans, though, are fighting him every step of the way.
Louisiana's Republican Governor Bobby Jindal has been a vocal critic of the president’s plan. He spoke to John Roberts on CNN’s “American Morning” Tuesday.
John Roberts: You penned a rather scathing editorial for Politico.com on the Democrats' health care proposals. But your state ranks dead last in the United Health Foundation survey of overall health. It also had the fourth highest Medicare cost per patient in the country from 1996 through 2006, according to the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Some people out there might be wondering if you're the best person to be criticizing the administration's plans for health care reform?
Bobby Jindal: Well John, a couple of things. We've actually got a very aggressive waiver in front of the federal government allowing us – asking them for permission to allow us to revamp our public health care programs to put more of an emphasis on outcomes. Louisiana's a great example of what's wrong with many of our government-run health care programs. You look at Medicare – the Dartmouth data shows that higher spending doesn't always correlate to better outcomes.
Here's my concern with the House Democratic proposal, what's being discussed. You know, they say that if you like your health care, you can keep it. But that's not what this plan does. They say they're going to control costs, but even their own budget office says their plan doesn't do it. They say they’re going to expand access. Look at what their plan really does: Increases the deficit by nearly a quarter of a trillion dollars. You’ve got a plan that in reality, their own budget office says, doesn't reduce costs. It increases taxes at a time that we may be in one of the worst recessions since the Great Depression. No economist thinks we should be increasing taxes right now on employers, on small businesses, on families that don't want to participate in this health care program.
And then finally, finally you've got a plan – the House Democratic plan – that puts the government in between doctors and their patients. That's no way to improve quality. And so, if they were actually doing what they said they were doing, that'd be one thing, but that's not what their plan does. At least you've got to give Senator Kennedy credit. In Newsweek this past week, he admitted that his ideal had been to have a single-payer, government-run health care system. I don't think that's the answer for our country. I think we should actually do what the rhetoric says. Let’s focus on reducing costs. Let’s focus on increasing quality. Let's not expand the government's role in running our health care.
There are some disturbing claims of racism in the Philadelphia Police Department. African-American officers have filed a federal lawsuit, alleging that the department allowed fellow officers to post "blatantly racist, anti-minority, and offensive content” on a popular Web site used by police officers.
Rochelle Bilal is a Philadelphia police officer and the president of the Guardian Civic League, an African-American police organization. She and the league’s attorney, Brian Mildenberg, spoke to Kiran Chetry on CNN’s “American Morning” Tuesday.
Kiran Chetry: Michelle, just set the stage. This Web site is called domelights.com. What is it?
Rochelle Bilal: It's supposed to be a forum where police officers can discuss the ills of society.
Chetry: All right. And what has it sort of turned into? When did you notice it turned into a site where there was a lot of racial bashing going on?
Bilal: Probably when they kicked me out after I went on to try to discuss some of the things that was going on and I was kicked out. From that point I haven't went on it.
Chetry: Brian, you have been monitoring this Web site for ten years? Did you bring it to the attention of the department that you thought perhaps there were some things written on here that were not in the best interest of a lot of the police officers on the force?
Brian Mildenberg: We haven't been monitoring the site for ten years. The site has been up for ten years. My law firm investigated the site for the past year. And there have been racist postings on this Web site from day one by the active duty Philadelphia police sergeant who created this Web site. The Web site contains very racist postings like this one, which says “guns don't kill people, dangerous minorities do.”
[cnn-photo-caption image= http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2009/images/07/21/pelosi.health.care.getty.art.jpg caption="Speaker of the House Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) speaks during a news conference on the health care reform bill July 17, 2009 on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC."]
In the 1938 film version of "The Adventures of Robin Hood", Prince John asks if there were "any objections to the new tax?" The reaction among the Saxons was to embrace Robin Hood as he and his Merry Men went about stealing from the rich to give to the poor.
As for that proposed tax on national health care, could this possibly be construed as a 2009 version of Robin Hood? Will the rich really be soaked to pay for a health care plan that disproportionately helps the poor?
Well, it may depend on what the definition of rich, is. What about $350,000?
The current House bill would tax families making $350,000 and up – and that has more than a few people very upset. Congressmen have gotten so much heat from some of their wealthier constituents that a large group of the legislators, all freshmen, made a beeline to the White House last Friday to express their concerns. Many of them were upset about the effect that the proposed tax would have on small businesses. Rep. Gerald Connolly, D-Va., who led the group, happens to represent a congressional district that boasts some the wealthiest people in America.
Even Nancy Pelosi, who didn't become speaker of the House by championing the cause OF the rich, seems to have gotten the message. Her office told CNN and Politico.com that she's considering changing the House's health care surcharge so it no longer affects the rich – only the really, REALLY rich. That would include families that make $1 million or more.
The speaker told Politico.com, "...you hear '$500,000 a year,' you think, 'My God, that's not me...'"
All of which leads to the question, does any of this really matter? Will taxing the rich, whatever your definition, provide enough to pay for expanded health care?
It turns out it might not matter, says University of Maryland business professor Peter Morici. He says there's not enough tax money to pay for all the president's proposals. "We simply can't reform health care," he says, "and do all the other domestic initiatives he wants to undertake by simply taxing the top 5% of the population." And restricting a health care tax to people who make $500,000 a year, which is less than 1% of all taxpayers, won't even come close to paying for the program.
President Obama sees it differently. He's looking at costs as well as revenues. On Monday the president said once again that huge savings can be made by streamlining health care and cutting unnecessary expenses. "The bill I sign must reflect my commitment and the commitment of Congress to slow the growth of health care costs over the long run… Let's fight our way through the politics of the moment. Let's pass reform by the end of this year."
What do you think? Tax the rich to pay for health care? How do you define "rich" in the U.S.?

Here are the big stores and guests lined up for today:
A six-month setback and a big backlash. The White House admits it will miss today's deadline for two terrorism reports. The info is a key part of a plan to shut down Guantanamo Bay. And the president is hearing it from the left this morning. So what does this mean for the president's executive order to close the prison camp by January?
Friends and family of a soldier captured by the Taliban are telling him to "stand tall and stand firm," this morning. His entire town is rallying around the family and the Pentagon says it's doing everything it can to rescue Private Bowe Bergdahl. We're live at the Pentagon with the latest, and talking to the kidnapped soldier's former landlord and family spokesman.
Two rivals going at it again over the status of the stimulus. Senator John McCain is joining in a fight between his state and the Obama Administration, over stimulus spending. He’ll join us live from Capitol Hill.
Editor's Note: Monday’s American Morning feedback was solely focused on President Obama's health care reform. While the majority were in favor of reform, those opposed remarked that “the swampland of government we have” will not provide decent health care.
Pro-Reform
Anti-Reform
What is your major concern about heath care reform? Share your thoughts with us.
No matter where you live in the country, chances are you've seen some strange weather this summer. The experts say that it might have something to do with the weather phenomenon known as El Niño. It's making a comeback.
Gene Norman worked on weather monitoring technology for NASA and is now the chief meteorologist at KHOU-TV in Houston. Norman spoke to John Roberts on CNN’s “American Morning” Monday.
John Roberts: We know how much you love El Niño. Explain what happens here in an El Niño year.
Gene Norman: The way to think about El Niño is it's kind of like a pendulum out in the Pacific Ocean. The water temperatures fluctuate between being warmer than normal and being cooler than normal. Now we are back into an El Niño phase. We’re monitoring abnormally warm water out there and what that tends to do is shift the pattern of jet streams. It intensifies the subtropical jet streams so it brings that tropical air from the Pacific out across the southern United States. That should lead to a wetter winter and stormier spring for us here in the South. And with Texas being in a drought for the last two years, that's great news. Across the Northern Plains and over to the Great Lakes and the Northeast, we're looking for a somewhat warmer winter with perhaps less snowfall than you all have been experiencing.

