CLAY COUNTY REPUBLICANS
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PARTIES READY FOR UPCOMING ELECTIONS

CLAY COUNTY OFFICERS

Chairman

Bonnie Stephens: (931) 258-3367
Secretary

Larry Smith: (931) 243-3479
Treasurer

Joy Key: (931) 243-2384

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Political Parties in Tennessee are winding up for election season.

Here is a run-down of current candidates for Governor.

GOVERNOR:

Kim McMillan (D)
Mike McWherter (D)
William L. "Bill" Gibbons (R)
Bill Haslam (R)
Ronald Ramsey (R)
Zach Wamp (R)
June Griffin (I)
Carl C "Two Feathers" Whitaker (I)

Here is a good run-down of the Republican Primary.
http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=333369

Here is a good run-down of the Democratic Primary.
http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=333364

DISTRICT 6 : US HOUSE

OPEN SEAT:  Thirteen-term Democratic incumbent Bart Gordon is retiring in 2010.

GOP Candidates

  • Diane Black - Tennessee State Senator
  • Jim Tracy - Tennessee State Senator
  • Dave Evans
  • John Farmer
  • Gary Mann
  • Kerry Roberts
  • Lou Ann Zelenik

    DEM Candidates

  • George Erdel
  •  

    HEALTH CARE

    • Scary Medicare Demographics.

    ACROSS STATE LINES (summary from the WSJ)

    "Competition" has become a watchword of Team Obama's push for its health-care bill. Specifically, the Administration has defended its public insurance option as a necessary competitive goad to the private health insurance industry.

    Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius routinely calls for more choice and competition in health care.

    It is no secret that this page is all for competition in the marketplace. If indeed that's the goal, allow us to suggest a path to it that will be a lot easier than erecting the impossible dream of a public option: Let insurance companies sell health-care policies across state lines.

    This excellent idea has been before Congress since at least 2005, when Rep. John Shadegg of Arizona proposed it. It came up again recently in an exchange between Chris Wallace of Fox News Sunday and John Rother, executive vice president of AARP.

    Mr. Wallace: "If you really want competition why not remove the restriction which now says that if I live in Washington, D.C. I've got to buy a D.C. health plan, and instead create a national market for health insurance, so that if there's a cheaper plan in Pennsylvania, I could buy in Pennsylvania?"

    Mr. Rother: "There are states and localities where health care is much less expensive than others, and if we allow people to buy all their insurance from those places, it will raise the rates there. And it's called risk selection. It's a real problem, given the fact that health care costs can vary substantially from one place to another. So I think while the idea sounds appealing, the consequence would be it would make health care more expensive for those people who live in those low-cost areas."

    How did Mr. Rother arrive at this conclusion?

    His claim assumes that what makes insurance expensive in places like New Jersey—where the annual cost of an individual plan for a 25-year-old male in 2006 was $5,880—is merely the higher cost of medical services in the Garden State. He sounds an alarm in the rest of the country by suggesting that an individual living in, say, Kentucky—where an annual plan for a 25-year-old male cost less than $1,000 in 2006—would be asked to subsidize plan members living in high-priced states.

    That's not how interstate insurance would work. Devon Herrick, a senior fellow with the National Center for Policy Analysis who has written extensively on this subject, notes that insurance companies operating nationally would compete nationally. The reason a Kentucky plan written for an individual from New Jersey would save the New Jerseyan money is that New Jersey is highly regulated, with costly mandated benefits and guaranteed access to insurance.

    Affordability would improve if consumers could escape states where each policy is loaded with mandates. "If consumers do not want expensive 'Cadillac' health plans that pay for acupuncture, fertility treatments or hairpieces, they could buy from insurers in a state that does not mandate such benefits," Mr. Herrick has written.

    A 2008 publication "Consumer Response to a National Marketplace in Individual Insurance," (Parente et al., University of Minnesota) estimated that if individuals in New Jersey could buy health insurance in a national market, 49% more New Jerseyans in the individual and small-group market would have coverage. Competition among states would produce a more rational regulatory environment in all states.

    This doesn't mean sick people who have kept up their coverage but are more difficult to insure would be left out. Congressman Shadegg advocates government funding for high-risk pools, noting that their numbers are tiny. The big benefit would come from a market supply of affordable insurance.

    Mr. Rother also said "risk selection" is a problem. But the coverage mandates cause that. As more healthy people opt out of health insurance because it is too expensive relative to what they consume, the pool transforms into a group of older, sicker people. Prices go higher still and more healthy people flee. High-mandate states are in what experts call an "adverse selection death spiral."

    Interstate competition made the U.S. one of the world's most efficient, consumer driven markets. But health insurance is a glaring exception. When the competition caucus in Team Obama has to look for Plan B, this is it.

     
    Capitol Club