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Keep Fighting for Healthcare Reform

0 Comments 08 February 2010

On January 30, the world lost a great activist named Melanie Shouse. She died Saturday January 30 at the age of 41 from breast cancer at her home in Overland. Melanie spent the last 4 1/2 years fighting tirelessly for health care reform and also to send Barack Obama to the White House. She lived to see the latter dream accomplished but died before a healthcare bill was signed into law.

I had the pleasure of meeting Melanie during the presidential primaries and campaigning alongside her for our nominee, Barack Obama. I can say unequivocally that she was one of the hardest working and most dedicated volunteers on the campaign. I will never forget Melanie’s speech on the Arch grounds in days before the historic election that sent Barack Obama to the White House. Melanie, speaking on the subject of healthcare reform, said we must “take on the big insurance monopoly and liberate American families form the slavery of skyrocketing insurance premiums and canceled coverage, which leave millions of us in a state of perpetual fear and insecurity …” Last year, we came closer than ever before to passing the kind of healthcare reform Melanie mentioned in her speech. Now, healthcare reform is in limbo because our congressional leaders do not have the courage to make tough decisions and send a final bill to the President’s desk.

This past weekend, during a speech to the Democratic National Committee, the President mentioned Melanie and used her story as an example of why we must continue working for healthcare reform. I will quote the President in full, because no one can articulate this message as well as he can. The President said:

“Think about this: She was fighting that whole time not just to get me elected, not even to get herself health insurance, but because she understood that there were others coming behind her who were going to find themselves in the same situation and she didn’t want somebody else going through that same thing. How can I say to her, “You know what? We’re giving up”? How can I say to her family, “This is too hard”? How can Democrats on the Hill say, “This is politically too risky”? How can Republicans on the Hill say, “We’re better off just blocking anything from happening.”

That can’t be the message that the American people are delivering. Yes, they’re nervous, they’re anxious, they’re in a tough time right now. The thing they want most are jobs. They really don’t like the process in Washington, the sausage-making. That part I understand. But I know that they don’t — but I know they don’t want to just offer nothing to the millions of people in America who are in the situation that that woman was in. That’s what we campaigned on. And we are going to keep on working to get it done -– with Democrats and I hope with Republicans and everybody else in between -– to bring down costs, to end the worst practices of the insurance industry, to finally give every American the chance to choose quality, affordable health care. We are going to keep on working to get it done.”

The President is right, we have come too far to quit. Melanie and the millions of Americans that cannot afford healthcare or are being denied access by greedy insurance companies deserve better. Congress and the White House should work around the clock to pass a bill that will extend coverage to the 31 million uninsured, put an end to some of the insurance industry’s worst and most abusive practices.

Democrats promised to deliver healthcare reform during the campaign cycle and now a year has passed. It is time to deliver on the promise – for all Americans, but particularly for our fallen friend Melanie. Let’s not let her work be in vain. Put pressure on our Federal representatives tell them not to back down, Melanie didn’t.

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