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7:30 AM Eastern - December 17, 2009

Letter from President Andy Stern to SEIU members: Where do we go from here?

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

A little over a year ago, you stood up and showed a nation that Yes, We Can. You knocked on doors, picked up phones, wrote your friends and family and neighbors and helped ring in a resounding victory. It was a win not just for a candidate, but for a people. For a country. For a promise of a better future for all of our kids and grandkids and generations to come.

And after that bright and shining day in November, you hung in there. At a time when people usually pack up, go home, and play the spectator sport of complaining about the system, you got up each and every day and did things both heroic and small to make sure that this time, we didn't leave change to chance.

For nearly a century, Presidents and congressional leaders have debated how to fix our health insurance system. It has become a given that we can and must do better as a nation. But as surely as each generation has tried, each time, politics, special interests and scare tactics have blocked progress and made us come to believe we can't: We can't change, we can't make our country better - plain and simple, we just can't.

I am writing to you today because I believe this is the moment when we must stand as one and say enough.

We talked to more than 200,000 of our sisters and brothers all around the country as part of a Town Hall-style telephone call last week to talk about your questions, your concerns and your frustrations about what is happening in Washington with health insurance reform.

Cynthia from Maryland was worried about her health benefits being taxed.

Maria in California didn't understand why the public option might be off the table.

Gerry from West Virginia wanted to know if he would be able to afford his health coverage.

One thing was clear: When SEIU stands up for affordable care every American can count on, we stand 2.2 million strong and ready to fight for the change our families, friends and neighbors; our patients and our nation need.

But at the very moment that we saw real and meaningful changes within our grasp, one Senator came forward to say "no we can't." He can't let the Senate have an up-or-down vote on health insurance reform.

And the result of this Senator saying "we can't?" The public option is declared impossible. Americans cannot purchase Medicare at an earlier age. The health insurance reform effort we have needed for a century is at risk.

SEIU does not accept that this monumental effort - that this reform that is so necessary to the health and wellbeing of our economy, our families and our future - can be over without a fight. A fight to make it work for you and your families.

Last night, we held a meeting with your International Executive Board--leaders from across the country. Leaders who know you, who understand what you are going through, and above all else, who believe that every one of you deserves a chance to weigh in on our next steps.

We talked about everything that makes this reform meaningful:

  • The 30 million more people who will have healthcare they can count on;
  • The people who will no longer lose their coverage if they get sick;
  • All of us who no longer have to worry about being denied coverage because of pre-existing conditions;
  • Women who will no longer be discriminated against just because of their gender.
  • But we also recognized, that like you, we have concerns.

And while it is not entirely clear what the Senate bill will look like, it is becoming clearer that:

  • For many people, care will still be too expensive to afford.
  • Some of you would face an additional burden because your health insurance benefits would be taxed.
  • And the best way we saw possible to hold insurance companies accountable was no longer an option.

So we asked ourselves - and we are asking you - the most critical question we have of this entire debate: where do we go from here?

We know we will fight. We will continue to fight for everything we know is important. We will fight to make care affordable. We will fight for real health insurance reforms. We will fight for employers to provide their employees with coverage.  And, we will fight to pay for all of it responsibly without a tax on your benefits.

But we aren't the only ones who must fight.

President Obama must remember his own words from the campaign. His call of "Yes We Can" was not just to us, not just to the millions of people who voted for him, but to himself. We all stood shoulder to shoulder with the President during his hard fought campaign. And, we will continue to stand with him but he must fight for the reform we all know is possible. He must fight for Cynthia, Maria, and Gerry - for every American.

Our challenge to you, to the President, to the Senate and to the House of Representatives is to fight. Now, more than ever, all of us must stand up, remember what health insurance reform is all about, and fight like hell to deliver real and meaningful reform to the American people.

In Solidarity,
Andy Stern

17 Comments

Comments are working!

What is left of health reform but a windfall for the health insurance companies?

I very strongly urge all SEIU members to scream loud and long to scrap both Senate & House versions of health care bills, and start over.

Why have we not considered "tro-ing all da bums out" of Congress, as well as deposing a President who is bed with Wall Street?

Should we all buy Vaseline, or should we consider organizing a nationwide strike?

"The 30 million more people who will have healthcare they can count on;"

This is misleading. The bill does not give these people healthcare. It says that they must buy it from a private insurance company or be fined and taxed by the government.

Lieberman/Palin 2012

We need a new, New Deal. Get corporate money out of politics and put the government back on the side of the people.

To profit at the expense of denying health care is a moral outrage that has to end!

"Unhappy events abroad have retaught us two simple truths about the liberty of a democratic people. The first truth is that the liberty of a democracy is not safe if the people tolerate the growth of private power to a point where it becomes stronger than their democratic State itself. That, in its essence, is fascism — ownership of government by an individual, by a group or by any other controlling private power.
The second truth is that the liberty of a democracy is not safe if its business system does not provide employment and produce and distribute goods in such a way as to sustain an acceptable standard of living. Both lessons hit home. Among us today a concentration of private power without equal in history is growing." - FDR

Let's oppose this giveaway to the health insurance racket who's death panels kill 45,000 and bankrupt millions each year!

Why is it that 3000 plus dead are a cause for war but 45,000 is business as usual?

I'm all for a NATIONAL STRIKE! Enough is enough!

BRAVO, SIR!

You and the SEIU are one of the very few who have shown true leadership during this crisis. Enough indeed! It is time for everyone to make their voice heard -- the louder and more frequently, the better. Every voice counts, so I ask everyone to press their family members over the holidays and ask them to get involved in any way they can! And if a nationwide strike is the only way to make it happen, so be it!

I think it's wonderful you want to fight for health care reform. So does the rest of America.

The difference is that the Left is fighting for socialism and government control of nearly every aspect of our lives. When your family doctor has his has tied behind his back by Washington Bureaucrats the govt has you and me by the balls.

This isn't freedom. It's something short of slavery.

And when Americans fight for reform, they're fighting for REDUCED cost, LESS taxes. You list many wonderful benefits, like no denial of coverage, which we all love. But there's no such thing as a free lunch. What's the cost? How much more will we have to pay in order to force the insurance companies with yet more regulations?

Any free-thinking American knows you can't add millions of freeloaders onto healthcare and provide more benefit without it cost more. And we all know who's going to pay for it: regular, hard-working SEIU members like you and me who pay our taxes today.

That's not fair. That's not Equality. That's friggin' communism, pure and simple: take money from one group to give it to another.

I agree. Lets fight. Lets fight for reform. Lets fight to remove government-induced cost-increases. Lets fight for tort-reform so lawyers like Edwards don't get to play the lotto game when doctors make a mistake (as we all do). Lets fight to let insurance companies compete with one another.

Lets fight to give us all the freedom to buy exactly the kind of healthcare we want, NOT the kind of healthcare that the government says we should have.

I'm ready. Lets fight. But lets fight for what America stands for: Freedom, Liberty, LIMITED GOVERNMENT, LESS TAXES.

Kudos to Andy Stern for saying that President Obama must remember the words from his campaign, and that means he must remember ALL of them, including the ones saying that the entire process relating to health care reform would be open and transparent, carried start to finish on CSPAN. This has not happened. I agree that we need some reform to the health care system, but something that would take up one-sixth of our economy needs to be debated openly and in plain view of the American public, not behind closed doors using strongarm tactics!

Too bad SEIU and other liberal organizations don't have tens of millions of dollars to buy Congresscritters in the way that Big Pharma and the health insurance companies do. If we had the dollars, perhaps we could buy 60 votes and get something done.
Slate published a fictional letter from a Congresscritter to his/her constituents, which contained more truth than any of the b.s. produced on Capitol Hill. I found it in mp3 format by http://www.mp3hunting.com

I agree. Lets fight. Lets fight for reform. at Lets fight to remove government-induced cost-increases. Lets fight for tort-reform so lawyers like Edwards don't get to play the lotto game when doctors make a mistake (as we all do). Lets fight to let insurance companies compete with one another

Too bad SEIU and other liberal organizations labatterie
don't have tens of millions of dollars to buy Congresscritters in the way that Big Pharma and the health insurance companies do

You and the SEIU are one of the very few who have shown true leadership during this crisis

You and the SEIU are one of the very few who have shown true leadership during this crisis. Enough indeed! It is time for everyone to make their voice heard -- the louder and more frequently, the better. Every voice counts, so I ask everyone to press their family members over the holidays and ask them to get involved in any way they can! And if a nationwide strike is the only way to make it happen, so be it!

Lets fight to let insurance companies compete with one batterie another

I agree that we need some reform Rolex watches to the health care system

Reading this via abbmp3.com/, couldn't decide whether to cue Henry V music or Les Mis. ah, democracy...imperfect but inspiring.

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SEIU

Service Employees International Union
Change to Win Federation USA
Canadian Labour Congress
1800 Massachusetts Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20036
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SEIU

Service Employees International Union
Change to Win Federation USA | Canadian Labour Congress
1800 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20036
© SEIU | Privacy Policy