A Letter From Brooke Rollins…

Dear friend of liberty,    Today marks a very important anniversary. On a grassy field not far from here, 178 years ago, the Texas Revolution began with a simple act of citizen defiance.    You may know the story of how the small town of Gonzales, increasingly restive under the growing tyranny of the Mexicans, was confronted by a Mexican army unit under the command of one Lieutenant Castañeda. The Lieutenant had arrived to disarm the town. The people of Gonzales had a single cannon to protect themselves from Indian attack and, as they became more and more insistent upon their liberties throughout the fateful year of 1835, it dawned upon the Mexicans who lent them the cannon that perhaps they ought to take it back. And so Lieutenant Castañeda conveyed his demand to the Texians: surrender your cannon.    But what he really meant was: surrender your freedom.    The men and women of Gonzales knew exactly what was at stake. They knew that if they gave up their cannon, a small and simple weapon though it was, that they were giving up their liberties. The decision on the face of it seemed like a simple one. The Mexicans had every advantage. The Mexicans had an army. The Mexicans had arms. The Mexicans had a government. The Mexicans had a treasury. And the Mexicans had a proven and ruthless determination to suppress all dissent.    The Texians, on the other hand, had just one tiny cannon and the indomitable determination to be free within their hearts. They searched their consciences and decided that this was enough.    The message from Gonzales went back out to Lieutenant Castañeda, and it was a message emblazoned upon the hearts and souls of every liberty-loving Texan in the 178 years since.     The defiance at Gonzales that started the Texas Revolution was rooted in the most ancient human impulses for liberty. They took their inspiration from what they knew to be their God-given nature as free people and from what they understood to be their heritage as the inheritors of the free peoples that went before them.    They fought because they loved liberty and because they understood history. And that is why we, 178 years later, must remember them. Partly it is because we must honor their achievements. But it is also because, in remembering and understanding the history of the fights for freedom that came before, we draw inspiration and resolve for the fights for freedom that lie ahead.    Today we recollect the spark that lit the flame of the Texas Revolution. That spark was kindled in the minds and souls of men and women who knew that life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness were worth fighting for. They did not stop to calculate the odds because they knew, to paraphrase Winston Churchill, that the destiny of man is more than material computation. A moral vision of freedom of prosperity, and of dignity is perhaps the most powerful thing in human history. It is the reason Texas became free.   Please join me in remembering the heroes of Gonzales who fought and died and won for us 178 years ago, today. In Liberty,   Brooke Rollins President & CEO

Press Release October 4, 2013

TPPF statement on the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report

“The United Nation's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) just issued its Fifth Assessment Report – considered by many to be the scientific gospel behind theories of man-made global warming. IPCC issued its first Assessment Report in 1990. For the first time in 23 years, undeniable facts raise fundamental doubt about the credibility of IPCC’s science. The last 17 years of flat-lined global temperatures directly contradict IPCC’s key assumptions and their predictions of catastrophic warming. These facts, not computer models, reasonably invalidate IPCC’s basic assertion that carbon dioxide emissions from human activity somehow dominate the natural forces of climate such as solar activity. “At a time when public support for onerous government mandates to reduce CO2 is the lowest in twenty years and when IPCC science is now rightly in question, U.S. policy makers should demand a vigorous review of the increasingly uncertain science behind government programs to avert rising temperatures.”

Press Release October 1, 2013

TPPF statement on the launch of the federal health care exchanges

AUSTIN – The Texas Public Policy Foundation issued the following statement regarding the launch of the 36 federal health insurance exchanges operated by the federal government: “Today, the ObamaCare Health Insurance Exchange (HIX) opens to the public against popular opinion and fiscal practicality,” said Arlene Wohlgemuth, Executive Director and Director for the Center for Health Care Policy. “Last week, the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services released data from 36 federal health insurance exchanges that confirms what the Texas Public Policy Foundation has long argued: health care premiums for plans offered on the federal exchange are significantly higher than pre-ObamaCare costs.” According to John Davidson, analyst for the Center for Health Care Policy, rising health care costs are a particular concern for young people seeking coverage on the exchange. “According to Health and Human Service’s data, the average cost of a catastrophic plan for a 27-year-old in Texas will be $153 a month on the federal exchange. Compare that to an average of the three cheapest catastrophic plans currently available to that same 27-year-old in Austin, which is $59 a month, that’s a 158 percent increase. Premiums won’t go up for everyone seeking insurance on the exchange because of federal subsidies that will offset higher costs. However, rates will go up for most young people who earn more than $30,000 a year. The bottom line is that ObamaCare will make health insurance less affordable for most Americans at a time when many people are struggling financially,” said Davidson.

Press Release October 1, 2013

MONDAY: Media conference call to discuss health care exchanges and ObamaCare

AUSTIN – The Texas Public Policy Foundation will host a conference call briefing for media on Monday, September 30, at 2:00 p.m. Central Time, to discuss the opening of the online health care exchanges and the Patient Protection Affordable Care Act (PPACA), or ObamaCare. The Foundation’s Arlene Wohlgemuth, Executive Director and Director for the Center for Health Care Policy, and John Davidson, Center for Health Care Policy Analyst, will discuss what these changes will mean for Texans.   WHO:                                         Arlene Wohlgemuth, Executive Director and Director, Center for HealthCare Policy                         John Davidson, Center for Health Care Policy Analyst     WHAT:                                     Conference call to discuss the opening of the online health care exchanges and                         the Patient Protection Affordable Care Act (PPACA), or ObamaCare.   WHEN:                                       Monday, September 30, 2013                         2:00 p.m. Central Time   WHERE:                                     Telephone press briefing                         Conference call number: 877-275-6071                         Passcode: 5167775#   A Q&A period will be provided.   To schedule an interview with Mrs. Wohlgemuth or Mr. Davidson, please contact Kristen Indriago at [email protected] or 512.472.2700.

Press Release September 27, 2013

TPPF scholars to speak at Texas Tribune Festival

AUSTIN – The Texas Public Policy Foundation’s Kathleen Hartnett White, Distinguished Senior Fellow-in-Residence and Director for the Armstrong Center for Energy and Environment, John Davidson, Center for Health Care Policy Analyst, and Vikrant Reddy, Center for Effective Justice Policy Analyst, are panelists at the Texas Tribune Festival that takes place September 27-29 in Austin, Texas at the University of Texas at Austin.   WHO:                             Vikrant Reddy, Center for Effective Justice Policy Analyst                 John Davidson, Center for Health Care Policy Analyst                      Kathleen Hartnett White, Distinguished Senior Fellow-in-Residence                      & Director for the Armstrong Center for Energy and Environment   WHAT:                                 Texas Tribune Festival panel discussions: The Fight Over Climate Change,                       The Fight Over Medicaid, and Guilt and Innocence   WHEN:                                  Saturday, September 28, 2013                      Vikrant Reddy, Guilt and Innocence                      8:30 a.m. in the AT&T Center Conference Room 301                        Saturday, September 28, 2013                      John Davidson, The Fight Over Medicaid                      11:10 a.m. in the Student Activity Center North Ballroom                        Saturday, September 28, 2013                      Kathleen Hartnett White, The Fight Over Climate Change                      4:25 p.m. in the College of Liberal Arts Room 0130   WHERE:                                The University of Texas at Austin                      1900 University Avenue                      Austin, TX 78705

Press Release September 26, 2013

TPPF statement on the federal health care exchange premiums

AUSTIN – The Texas Public Policy Foundation issued the following statement on the release of health insurance premium rates in the 36 federal health insurance exchanges operated by the federal government: “The recent data released about the federal health insurance exchanges confirms what the Texas Public Policy Foundation, and others, have been saying for months – premiums on the exchange will be significantly higher than pre-ObamaCare premiums,” said Arlene Wohlgemuth, Executive Director and Director of the Center for Health Care Policy. “According to Health and Human Service’s data, the average cost of a catastrophic plan for a 27-year-old in Texas will be $153 a month on the federal exchange. Compare that to an average of the three cheapest catastrophic plans currently available to that same 27-year-old in Austin, which is $59 a month – that’s a 158 percent increase.” “Although premiums won’t go up for everyone seeking insurance on the exchange, they will go up for most people. Bottom line is, ObamaCare actually makes health insurance less affordable,” said John Davidson, Center for Health Care Policy Analyst. “The reason is simple: the ObamaCare exchanges are designed to work only if large numbers of young, healthy people purchase more expensive coverage and offset the cost of insuring older and sicker people. Despite the federal government’s attempt to put a positive spin on these numbers, the data clearly shows that the price of premiums is going up relative to pre-ObamaCare rates.” Texas Public Policy Foundation has published a comparison of average catastrophic plans in Texas pre-ObamaCare and post-ObamaCare that can be found on www.TexasPolicy.com.

Press Release September 25, 2013

Texas vs. California: The Uninsured

Based on the Census Bureau’s newly released report on national income, poverty, and health insurance coverage in 2012, the rates of those without health insurance declined nationally and in many states, including Texas and California. Considering there is much noise in annual uninsured data, let us consider 2-year average datafrom 2009-2010 to 2011-2012. These data show that across the nation the number of uninsured fell by 1.2 million to 48.2 million, decreasing the uninsured rate by 0.6 percent to 15.6 percent. Between these two periods, California and Texas, the nation's largest economies and populations, also noticed declines in their uninsured rates but for different reasons. While Texas' total uninsured remained essentially unchanged at 6.3 million, the uninsured rate fell by 0.9 percent to 24.2 percent. California's uninsured decreased by 66,000 to 7.1 million, in which its uninsured rate fell by 0.6 percent to 18.8 percent. Although the greater decline in California's total uninsured compared with Texas indicates that the Golden State's health care coverage condition improved more than the Lone Star State’s (and this tends to make the headlines), this discounts the fact that the uninsured rate declined faster in Texas (see chart below) and overall does not tell the whole story. There are several issues we must consider: 1. Population growth, 2. Uninsured characteristics, and 3. Access to care.   Over these two-year periods, Texas’ population increased by 3.5 percent, or 911,000, and California’s increased by only 2 percent, or 767,000. With California’s total population totaling 1.5 times larger than in Texas, this 144,000 greater population increase in Texas reveals more about how much more substantial the decline in the poverty rate of 0.9percent is compared with 0.6percent. The flood of people looking for more opportunity in Texas also comes at a price of potentially more uninsured. We must also consider the make-up of the uninsured. A recent report notes that only a small percentage of Texans who want health insurance cannot afford it. Other uninsured Texans can afford to purchase it but choose not to, are eligible for Medicaid or CHIP but have not enrolled, or are undocumented workers. Finally, the larger increase in health insurance coverage does not necessarily equate to increase in health care services. This is clear from California’s Medi-Cal program that has the lowest Medicaid reimbursement rates to doctors in the nation, forcing many doctors to refuse those patients. Despite other states having a lower uninsured rate than Texas, this does not mean that they are able to get more health care services.     Some would like to believe that these data reveal how terrible the Texas Model is because so many Texans do not have health coverage. However, even without overlooking the issues above, Texas' health care sector has room for improvement. Through more choice given to individuals and pro-market reforms, Texas' health care services can be the best in the nation.  Chart Below: Texas Uninsured Rate Declines Faster Than California's

Press Release September 20, 2013