- Posts: 14880
- Thank you received: 27
Topic Author
As Physicians’ Jobs Change, So Do Their Politics
AUGUSTA, Me. — With Republicans in complete control of Maine’s state government for the first time since 1962, State Senator Lois A. Snowe-Mello offered a bill in February to limit doctors’ liability that she was sure the powerful doctors’ lobby would cheer. Instead, it asked her to shelve the measure.
“It was like a slap in the face,” said Ms. Snowe-Mello, who describes herself as a conservative Republican. “The doctors in this state are increasingly going left.”
Doctors were once overwhelmingly male and usually owned their own practices. They generally favored lower taxes and regularly fought lawyers to restrict patient lawsuits. Ronald Reagan came to national political prominence in part by railing against “socialized medicine” on doctors’ behalf.
But doctors are changing. They are abandoning their own practices and taking salaried jobs in hospitals, particularly in the North, but increasingly in the South as well. Half of all younger doctors are women, and that share is likely to grow.
There are no national surveys that track doctors’ political leanings, but as more doctors move from business owner to shift worker, their historic alliance with the Republican Party is weakening from Maine as well as South Dakota, Arizona and Oregon, according to doctors’ advocates in those and other states.
That change could have a profound effect on the nation’s health care debate. Indeed, after opposing almost every major health overhaul proposal for nearly a century, the American Medical Association supported President Obama’s legislation last year because the new law would provide health insurance to the vast majority of the nation’s uninsured, improve competition and choice in insurance, and promote prevention and wellness, the group said.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Topic Author
PrintSmith wrote: I kinda see it a bit differently LJ. The more reliant upon government money the physicians become, the more they support the party of big government. The more self reliant the physician is, the more likely they are to support the party of the republic.
Not really all that surprising when you think about it.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Wow, you really stretched that one out to the idiot extreme.LadyJazzer wrote:
PrintSmith wrote: I kinda see it a bit differently LJ. The more reliant upon government money the physicians become, the more they support the party of big government. The more self reliant the physician is, the more likely they are to support the party of the republic.
Not really all that surprising when you think about it.
So, let me see if I understand you... Anyone who CHOOSES to work FOR a business rather than start their own is somehow a "supporter of big government"? So, ALL 300 MILLION of U.S. citizens should be in business for themselves and no one should work for anyone else? Got it... You are more delusional than I thought.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Wow, talk about your progressive exaggeration, you folks really need a new playbook. The one you are using is so tired and worn out that it can no longer be used to intentionally distort what was said into something that was not. What I was commenting on was one specific group of people employed in one specific area, not anyone and everyone in all areas, unless of course you are delusional enough to believe we have 300 million plus physicians running around, many of them minor children. Gives a whole new meaning to physician heal thyself.LadyJazzer wrote:
So, let me see if I understand you... Anyone who CHOOSES to work FOR a business rather than start their own is somehow a "supporter of big government"? So, ALL 300 MILLION of U.S. citizens should be in business for themselves and no one should work for anyone else? Got it... You are more delusional than I thought.PrintSmith wrote: I kinda see it a bit differently LJ. The more reliant upon government money the physicians become, the more they support the party of big government. The more self reliant the physician is, the more likely they are to support the party of the republic.
Not really all that surprising when you think about it.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Topic Author
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Tell me something LJ. Who is in a better position to pursue their altruistic ideals. The person who works for themselves or someone who must be accountable to someone else for their time? Wouldn't the doctor have a greater opportunity to be altruistic with their charity if they were the ones who decided how much a person should be charged for their services? Isn't the doctor who is self employed in a better position to barter with a patient for the health services they render? Aren't they also better positioned to reduce or eliminate their fees for someone who is poor or down on their luck at the moment?LadyJazzer wrote: The point of the OP stands... Doctors are changing their stance as they realize that bulls*** "compassionate conservatism" is a cruel joke, and many of them who went into medicine for reasons of altruism and care about their fellow-man--(a concept totally foreign to the teabaggers and right-wingers)--are realizing that the GOP's worship of profits at the cost of people going without health care is too disgusting even for them.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Topic Author
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.