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Showing posts with label Whistleblower Wendell Potter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Whistleblower Wendell Potter. Show all posts

Friday, February 11, 2011

Cryptome editorial: Whistle-blower law is killed

Published: February 10, 2011 

All those Capitol budget hawks searching out waste, fraud and abuse should first find out why some mystery lawmaker killed a long-needed whistle-blower protection bill in the final hours of the last Congress.

The measure would have greatly bolstered Washington’s ability to recoup wasted multimillions by encouraging government workers to alert superiors to how bad things really are and guaranteeing that they won’t be punished for doing the right thing.

Both houses unanimously approved versions of whistle-blower protection in the lame-duck Congress in December.

But just as the final compromise was about to pass, the 12-year campaign was snuffed out by a still unknown senator exercising an anonymous hold. The Senate could use its own whistle-blower right now to let the taxpayers and voters know who is to blame.

Revival of the measure should be a top priority, particularly since the new Senate supposedly will no longer tolerate the skulduggery of secret holds. In the House, Representative Darrell Issa, the zealous new chairman of government oversight, should be the first to drumbeat for the measure.

Mr. Issa already has his own Web site inviting government workers and the public to send his office tips about abuses. But, so far, it’s more an outlet for antigovernment ranters than knowledgeable whistle-blowers understandably wary of the reprisals they can suffer.

The measure, which should also be a no-brainer for the Capitol’s new Tea Party ethic, would strengthen the free speech and due process rights of whistle-blowers.

It would allow jury trials for documenting bureaucratic retaliations and enlarge the covered agencies to include airport baggage screeners, nuclear plant workers and other vital jobs.

In the lame-duck session, some Republicans warned that the measure might somehow facilitate more of WikiLeaks’s wholesale disclosure of government business.

The issues are unrelated, except on the red-meat talk-radio circuit. And what could possibly be more patriotic, or budget-minded, than protecting government workers who have the courage and good sense to raise the alarm when taxpayers are being cheated?

source: http://cryptome.org/0003/wikileaks-dis2.htm

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Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Insurance Industry Whistleblower Wendell Potter: ‘Americans Need To Be Alert’

August 12th, 2009 by Karina
Today, Rules Chair Louise Slaughter met and held a press conference with Wendell Potter, a former CIGNA Vice President who left the insurance industry after a 20 year career.
Potter has since become a whistleblower, testifying before a Senate committee in June about insurance company practices such as hiking up premiums for small businesses and cutting people’s coverage off altogether if they make minor mistakes or omissions in their application paperwork.


Louise Slaughter and Wendell Potter. At today’s press conference, Wendell Potter talked about the insurance industry “dirty tricks” Americans can expect to see as America’s Affordable Health Choices Act moves through Congress, including “industry-funded front groups” and “scare tactics.”
Potter explained:

The industry has conducted duplicitous and well-financed PR and lobbying campaigns every time Congress has tried to reform our health care system–and how its current behind-scenes-efforts may well shape reform in a way that benefits Wall Street far more than average Americans.
I noted that, just as they did 15 years ago when the insurance industry led the effort to kill the Clinton reform plan, it is using shills and front groups to spread lies and disinformation to scare Americans away from the very reform that would benefit them most.
Make no mistake, the industry, despite its public assurances to be good-faith partners with the President and Congress, has been at work for months laying the groundwork for devious and often sinister campaigns to manipulate public opinion.

The industry goes to great lengths to keep its involvement in these campaigns hidden from public view. I know from having served on numerous trade group committees and industry-funded front groups, however, that industry leaders are always full partners in developing strategies to derail any reform that might interfere with insurers’ ability to increase profits.

…With this history, you can rest assured that the insurance industry is up to the same dirty tricks, using the same devious PR practices it has used for many years, to kill reform this year, or even better, to shape it so that it benefits insurance companies and their Wall Street investors far more than average Americans.

Potter also discussed the tactics that the insurance industry will use to scare us:

Americans and the media need to pay close attention to the efforts insurers and their ideological buddies will undertake…they must realize that every time they hear that by creating a public insurance option, we will be heading down “the slippery slope toward socialism,” some insurance flack like I used to be wrote that, too.

Every time you hear about the shortcomings of what they call “government-run” health care, remember this: what we have now in this country, and what the insurers are determined to keep in place, is Wall Street-run health care.
And know that for all practical purposes we already have one of the most insidious means of rationing care in the worldnot by people we can hold accountable on election day but by insurance company accountants, underwriters and executives who are held accountable by a few wealthy investors and hedge fund managers who care far more about earnings per share than your health and well-being.

Chair Louise Slaughter concluded:

The industry has a vested interest in the status quo and protecting its profit margin. This is just what they did in 1993 the last time we tried to reform health care. The public must be aware that the industry is not going to willingly change the way it does things and I hope the public understands what’s at stake. As Wendell Potter said, these insurance companies do what’s good for Wall Street, not main street. 

Watch video highlights of today’s press conference:

        source: The Gavel
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source: http://speaker.house.gov/blog/

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