Throughout his career, Sen. John McCain has consistently opposed overarching supervision of financial institutions, and now he wants to deregulate the health insurance industry in the same way conservatives dismantled prudent supervision of Wall Street. To quote him, “opening up the health insurance market to more vigorous nationwide competition, as we have done over the last decade in banking, would provide more choices of innovative products less burdened by the worst excesses of state-based regulation."
Threaten the coverage of over 160 million people in the United States who receive health benefits through work. The Economic Policy Institute projects 11-27 million Americans could lose their coverage. In sheer numbers, the biggest impact comes in the states with the most population. In California, some 2.4 million people can be expected to lose employer coverage, followed by New York with losses estimated at 1.6 million, and Ohio and Texas at 0.9 million. The greatest percentage of losses in coverage would occur in a mix of large and small states, with the greatest losses of 16.4 percent of employer coverage in the District of Columbia followed by 15.5% in New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont, and by 15.4 percent in Connecticut. Sixteen states would see losses of at least 13 percent (The above list plus OR, MA, KS, MD, ME, OH, NJ, MT, and OK.)
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