U.S. Census data clearly shows
(page 19) that the rate of uninsured in America has been unchanged for almost fifteen years.
But that doesn't stop some group called
Mathematica Policy Research from making this up:
SCHIP was enacted at a time when the number and rate of uninsured children were growing rapidly, especially among those just above the poverty threshold— too poor to purchase private coverage but not poor enough to qualify for Medicaid.
And, of course, Daily Kos
bit hard.
President Bush is promising to veto expansion of SCHIP, though his own original proposal was to expand it as well. He just wanted to expand it less than Congress wants to.
SCHIP has served mainly to increase government spending and increase the cost of health insurance. I'm not holding my breath, but the data strongly suggests scrapping the whole thing would be great fiscally. And I suspect that when the sky didn't fall, it would be a great thing politically as well.