Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's Healthcare Plan

Elizabeth Edwards was on the morning shows today talking healthcare, slamming John McCain's plan some more (keep it coming, Mrs. Edwards!) and advocating Clinton's plan over Obama's, undercutting Obama's claim that his provides universal coverage. Notice how she echoes Clinton when she questions why Obama has a mandate for just children, but not for everyone.

SCARBOROUGH: Which plan is better? Which plan covers more Americans? The Clinton plan or the Obama plan?

EDWARDS: In my view, the Clinton plan provides, because it provides a mandate. It means every American has to be covered. Senator Obama means every child has to be covered. I think we need to go the full nine yards and make certain we have -- I'm not very good at cliches, is that the cliche. It ought to be ten yards, wouldn't it?

SCARBOROUGH: Well, not if it's fourth and nine.

EDWARDS: In any event, we want to make certain that every American is covered. In fact, this is also -- Senator McCain does not cover every American. The way that you really keep down the costs of health insurance is that you have universality. You're still going to have everybody cost shifting, trying to cover the cost of the uninsured or cover the cost of people who have an exclusion that doesn't cover this particular condition. You're always going to have this cost-shifting, and that keeps costs up -- to keep costs down, you really need everybody covered.

You can watch it at Huffington Post.

Obama would say that his plan reduces costs to a degree that allows everyone to afford it and all those people would run right out and snatch it up, hence achieving universality in an ideal world. What Edwards is saying, and what Clinton has said many times, is that you need everyone to buy in in order to keep costs down and the only way to do that is to mandate that people do so a la car insurance. The fact is that neither achieves true universality (as single payer does) but Clinton and Edwards would argue that a mandate system would get us there more quickly because it at least shoots for universal coverage and draws a line in the sand on healthcare that it is something that everyone must have.

While the Edwards/Clinton nexus no doubt makes some Obama supporters' heads explode, the fact that Edwards would take Clinton's side on this should not be terribly surprising since this was really the one issue on which Hillary Clinton and John Edwards ever ganged up on Barack Obama in the debates; you'll recall that Edwards's plan also had a mandate for coverage.

Tags: Barack Obama, Elizabeth Edwards, Healthcare, Hillary Clinton (all tags)

Comments

87 Comments

Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For

One can quibble about whether Clinton's plan or Obama's plan is better on the details.  But what is truly important is who can get a major health care plan through Congress?   Clinton has already tried to do this once, and massively failed.    

Another (related) question is: who is likely to help more Democratic congresspeople get elected in swing districts?  

I think the answer to both questions is the same.  

by gobacktotexas 2008-04-02 04:21PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For

"Clinton has already tried to do this once, and massively failed."

Conservative Democrats, primarily Obama's current health care advisor/surrogate, Jim Cooper, who does not believe in universal health care, were the ones who first opposed her plan, and organized to kill it. She didn't just "fail", it was a concerted effort to stop a plan that was considered "too left" and they used any means necessary to protect their corporate constituents and stop a liberal plan from ever seeing the light of day.

If we elect more Democrats who don't want universal health care it will do us no good.    

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 04:44PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For

Clinton would have had a much better chance if she had followed Senator Moynihan's advice and had involved members of Congress as she was developing the plan, had made them part of the policy discussions.  

by politicsmatters 2008-04-02 04:53PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For

"Clinton would have had a much better chance if she had followed Senator Moynihan's advice and had involved members of Congress as she was developing the plan, had made them part of the policy discussions."

You are talking about including the very Democrats who were out to kill her plan. She was trying to put together a comprehensive plan, and they were trying to tear it down. They were conservatives, out to protect big business. So she should have not put up a fight?

Everyone for the past 60 years who has tried to pass a progressive health care plan has failed, Hillary was simply the most recent one.

Even when she turned her plan into the most complex proposal imaginable, trying to make it work by including all the business interests the conservative Democrats insisted on, they still weren't satisfied, and so then the insurance industry and AMA ganged up and along with the Democrats, killed her effort outright. There was no pleasing them. Too much money involved.

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 05:01PM | 0 recs
When Hillary tried to get it

through the first time, people could still afford to go to the doctor without having to pay an arm, a leg, and their firstborn child. Even people who have insurance now are getting buried by their 20%, because costs are skyrocketing. People that are just barely making ends meet as it is do everything they can to keep from going to a doctor or the ER, because they can't afford to pay their part of the bill. I think her plan would get a much better reception among the general populace now, because so many of them know that they are one serious illness or accident away from losing everything that they've worked all their lives for.

by georgiapeach 2008-04-02 06:03PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

i used to think that Clinton's plan was better because it covered more people.

However, I'm not sure that's so anymore. I'm actually in the belief that mandating people to purchase these policies could come back and haunt us in the future (in terms of getting a majority consensus for a single payer system).

government should have a mandate on itself to provide everyone with access to medical coverage. Not the other way around.

as much as i really adore Elizabeth, I wish she was advocating for the right approach to health care.

by alex100 2008-04-02 04:23PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

" I'm actually in the belief that mandating people to purchase these policies could come back and haunt us in the future (in terms of getting a majority consensus for a single payer system)."

There is no way to get to a single payer system without the mandate. Single payer has almost never polled above 35% support in the American public in the past 15 years, and it has been voted down by landslides in the few states which have had referenda on it, where it garners around 10% support.

Except for Canada, and recently Taiwan, all other industrialized countries have achieved universal coverage by using the mandate along with a variety of mixtures of public and private insurance. The mandate gets everyone into the system, so everyone has a stake in it. That is the means to building the political will to create an efficient, egalitarian system that covers everyone. Health care reform experts who want universal health care almost all agree that the mandate is the only way to get there.

Right now too many people prefer to keep what they have in the way of insurance - 85% of those who have insurance like what they have. In health care we recognize that coverage has degraded to the point where it doesn't provide people with what they need, and is degrading even more, continuously, without end. So we see a greater need for change than most voters do.

Single payer is the best system policy wise, but voters do not want to place health care in the hands of government, they do not trust government to administer it properly, and are afraid they would lose what they need and have worked for.

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 04:39PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

You're wrong on polls and single payer. It is actually quite popular in polls as long as you don't call it single payer. If people are asked if Medicare should cover everyone, the answer, overwhelmingly, is yes.

by politicsmatters 2008-04-02 04:54PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

"You're wrong on polls and single payer."

I am on the board of directors of Physicians for a National Health Program, the preeminent single payer organization in this country, and the polls I cite are correct, and the political impasse I describe is also correct.

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 05:03PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

"If people are asked if Medicare should cover everyone, the answer, overwhelmingly, is yes."

I know very well the polls you are referring to, and they didn't ask about single payer properly. Like the NYT poll that asked peopel, "Would you be willing to pay more in taxes to cover the uninsured?" Yes, 85 % of people favor covering the uninsured.

As soon as you explain what Medicare for All actually is, and that they will have to give up the insurance they have and pay taxes for the government single payer program, that support dips precipitously to 35% or lower.

When you just say "Medicare for All" people think, "Oh how nice, all those people who don't have health insurance will get it". But when they realize that they themselves will have to partake of the government plan, they want no part of it.

Even liberals now question single payer, because they have seen what 7 years of "starve the beast" has done to the social safety net, Medicare, and Medicaid, and they are afraid that if we had a single payer program that all had to depend on and it met the next Bush administration equivalent, we would all lose our health care. Or at least the quality would go way down. Then we wouldn't have the employer based ystem to fall back on, and we would all be at the mercy of the private health insurance industry.

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 05:13PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

"Single payer is the best system policy wise, but voters do not want to place health care in the hands of government, they do not trust government to administer it properly..."

well, like most things in U.S. politics, it is a P.R. battle that the right has framed and attacked more efficiently.

the political environment surrounding health care is changing and I'd hate to see the possibility of a single-payer system be drowned out by millions of poorer folks (the very people this could help the most) revolt against it due to the hardships incurred by these costs.

I guarantee you that our nation's military purse would dwindle if it recieved its revenues through a mandated 6-8% income tax on the paychecks of every American.

by alex100 2008-04-02 08:19PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

"well, like most things in U.S. politics, it is a P.R. battle that the right has framed and attacked more efficiently."

If you have any idea how to drown out the private  insurance industry and Big Phrma and the AMA who's profits depend on keeping the status quo, who represent a 3 trillion dollar industry that people feel their lives depend upon please speak up. They are awful good at what they do, however.

Michael Moore tried to help with Sicko and the cacophony attacking him, CNA, and PNHP was deafening.

Give us a shout anytime you want to help.

www.pnhp.org

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 10:55PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

government should have a mandate on itself to provide everyone with access to medical coverage. Not the other way around.


I understand the actuarial advantages to getting everyone into the risk pool, but to a lot of people this will just look too much like the government becoming the collection agency for the health insurance industry rather than moving to control it with regulations.  I think that many would rather have the government tax them than have the government force them to pay a private insurance company.

I can well believe it would be a political problem to include that sort of mandate in the first round of this and I am not in a position to weight this issue.

Hillary on this subject talked about how it was better starting asking for more rather than to give something up in the initial plan and that starting without a mandate Obama would be forced to give up even more to get his plan through, while she, starting with a mandate would be in a better position even if that provision had to be modified.

To me it all seems more like looking at details long before it is necessary.  When it come to getting a detailed plan both sold to the public and actually moved through congress I just am not in a position to know if Hillary or Obama is being more realistic.  And since I don't know I am not willing to give too much weight to this fight that may well become totally moot by the time any actual legislation is being worked on.

by Fred in Vermont 2008-04-02 05:54PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

"To me it all seems more like looking at details long before it is necessary. "

What is very important here is to run on the mandate plan, so that when you are elected you have the mandate from the voters to ask Congress to consider the plan. That is he purpose of giving all these policy details.

If people do not go for the mandate there really is no other mechanism to either lower health care costs or get to universal health care. Without the mandate we are stuck with the status quo, which is killing people daily. It is only getting worse, rapidly.

If this awful campaign wasn't so preoccupied with drivel over misstatements we would have the opportunity to actually talk to voters and explain what our alternatives are.

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 06:19PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

If people do not go for the mandate there really is no other mechanism to either lower health care costs or get to universal health care.


Yes but I don't buy the idea that even with the mandate you can actually lower health care costs and keep the plan affordable with reasonable taxes. See my comment below and this comment in the Nation

I also think that the "mandate" aspect of Hillary's plan would be easily cast in a general election as something very intrusive. Republicans could make Hillary Care II look like Big Nurse Ratchet coming after Jack and Jill Sixpack with wage garnishments and judgments on behalf of crooked health insurance companies that had paid her off -- and unfortunately they would not be completely wrong.

by Fred in Vermont 2008-04-02 07:27PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

"Yes but I don't buy the idea that even with the mandate you can actually lower health care costs and keep the plan affordable with reasonable taxes."

No one has claimed that you can control health care costs with only the mandate, unfortunately the mandate is only the start of a series of major reforms. Major investments into primary care, community health centers, and establishing best practices, restricting care to that which works, controlling drug costs, directing capital investments to match need, managed care based on team treatment for diseases such as diabetes, and having most physicians work on salary in team practice centers will actually help control costs.

Altogether with these reforms we could probably slow the rate of growth of costs to that of inflation, instead of the double digit yearly increases that now threaten to place health care outside the reach of most of the middle class.

We cannot do nothing, and the mandate is the first step, unfortunately. If it all must come to a crisis before we find the political will to do something about it, so be it. Already it has been calculated that 22,000 Americans died prematurely last year from lack of access to health care. To those of us working in the field it is a crisis already, but due to  the way illness and death is shunned in our culture it may be a long time before the public is ready to face what must be done. It's the culture of "I've got mine, you go get your's" that needs to change, and people will have to accept radical change in health care, and make a real commitment to fight for getting the best for all of us.

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 11:20PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

I heard a Yale professor (name escapes me) regarding campaign promises and she mentioned that the candidates are better aided by vague details regarding health-care. The less the plan has, the less there is to attack.

It's a sad testament to our society's inability to dissern spin from possible reward but I kind of agree with her.

so, paint a broad brush and don't dare explain it with details.

by alex100 2008-04-02 08:29PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

"so, paint a broad brush and don't dare explain it with details."

That's what the politicians do in their speeches, but the problem then remains that people don't understand the relative importance of things like the mandate that are essential.

It is also then easy to think Clinton and Obama's health care plans are almost the same, when they are very different in exceedingly important ways. Like, her's can work (barely, and as an interim plan only), while his cannot.

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 11:26PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

just because you talk about certain topics in a certain way doesn't make it a mandate.

democracy still has to play out. That means having public support and more importantly, support of congress.

and I've still not seen how his plan will 'not work', while hers will. i don't believe you're being consistent in how you measure their plans and how each will move forward.

are you telling me that if Obama's plan is successful that it can't build upwards towards full mandates? What about the flip? What if crippling increase in cost paired with the criminalizing or fining of those who do not pay their insurance tabs hurt public perception of how we cover people?

in any regard, I like neither proposal but agree that either one of these plans will be an improvement over doing nothing. While one plan has more of an upside if all things align properly (Clinton's) the other has the potential to build towards a better system while not alienating the very people it will most help.

and government needs to mandate itself to cover all people. I don't buy any other argument. mandating people to purchase insurance is pretty backwards IMO.

by alex100 2008-04-03 07:08AM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

You don't sound very objective when you argue political viability on one end and then willfully ignore it on the other. The fact is that starting the process with a mandate means getting into the pool with an anchor around your neck. It's just too easy to spin it negatively, and Clinton's public image makes that spin even easier.

You already seem to agree that the best way to get universal healthcare is to phase it in. As such, you acknowledge the political viability of universal availability with a mandate in lieu of a truly universal single payer plan. However, you seem unwilling to accept the viability of first working toward universal availability, and only then adding a mandate if it's necessary to reduce costs.

Think about it. The goal is to get Americans hooked on affordable healthcare first, than see what's needed to make it universal. Obama's plan can do that, and it sells a lot better than one that includes a mandate at the front end. Once the plan is in place, you can objectively evaluate the costs. Then, if appropriate, you can have the discussion about how much the willfully uninsured are costing America. However, at that point the tone of the conversation changes entirely. Instead of "forcing you to buy healthcare" a mandate becomes "making the freeloaders pay their way." Frankly, it's a much better sell.

by noop 2008-04-03 05:48AM | 0 recs
I would say forced heatlh insurance is a great

way to have people vote against you in the future.

by RLMcCauley 2008-04-02 04:25PM | 0 recs
Re: I would say forced heatlh insurance is a great

Did you say that with social security too?

by LindaSFNM 2008-04-02 04:32PM | 0 recs
Some people certainly do.

But of course SS you get back in the end. Health insurance you may never see a benefit from.

by RLMcCauley 2008-04-02 04:57PM | 0 recs
Re: Some people certainly do.

Please - do you never go for check ups and teeth cleanings?

And yes, Hillary's plan includes dental (and vision and psych)

by Turnpike Kid 2008-04-02 05:16PM | 0 recs
Me? Not enough to justify paying for

dental insurance.

by RLMcCauley 2008-04-02 05:21PM | 0 recs
Re: Me? Not enough to justify paying for

My condolences to your molars.

:)

by Turnpike Kid 2008-04-02 05:42PM | 0 recs
I have great teeth and take care of them

well. Most people I know who have health insurance don't have dental because it's not cost effective.

by RLMcCauley 2008-04-02 06:10PM | 0 recs
Re: I have great teeth and take care of them

Have you done a poll of all your friends, family, and neighbors? If you have, that would be quite odd but commendable I suppose.

Dental is actually surprisingly affordable when bundled with everything else. It's the bundling that we need to push for.  And yes, dental is important.  So is vision. So is mental health.  Hillary's plan addresses all three of those areas.  To my knowledge, Barack Obama's does not.  

by Turnpike Kid 2008-04-02 09:19PM | 0 recs
Almost everyone I know

has health insurance, no one I know has dental. The pay out of pocket for once a year cleanings and check ups (40 bucks). Is dental insurance that cheap? It's not around here (chicago).

by RLMcCauley 2008-04-03 05:54AM | 0 recs
Re: Almost everyone I know

Depends on your plan - it can be as cheap as an added $10-$20 bucks a month to your Blue Cross/Blue Shield, IIRC. Depends on group plans, etc.  Sold separately it is not as affordable.    

by Turnpike Kid 2008-04-03 01:06PM | 0 recs
Re: I have great teeth and take care of them

What you have is good genetics.  Lucky you.  Others aren't so lucky.  Like the kid who died from an infected tooth last year.

As for mandates, I believe Obama leaves them out of his plan not because he truly believes mandates are wrong -- otherwise there would be no mandate for children -- but because electorally it would  cost him with two of his strongest constituencies -- young people who generally don't want to pay for health insurance until they need it and independents who have a libertarian streak and don't want to have to buy into a system when they're healthy even if it helps other people who are not.

It's politics -- pure politics, but not about getting health care passed, but about getting elected.  I'm tired of people claiming otherwise and acting like it's a matter of principle.

by katerina 2008-04-02 09:34PM | 0 recs
Re: I have great teeth and take care of them

Yes lucky me.

by RLMcCauley 2008-04-03 05:55AM | 0 recs
On a more serious note

This whole "I may never see a benefit from health insurance" attitude is EXACTLY the reason we need universal mandates.  Too many naive people will opt out of the system and raise the prices for everyone else.  

That attitude is quite naive by the way.  

by Turnpike Kid 2008-04-02 05:44PM | 0 recs
Re: On a more serious note

What's the punishment if I don't pay for it?

by RLMcCauley 2008-04-02 06:11PM | 0 recs
Re: On a more serious note

"What's the punishment if I don't pay for it?"

No one has figured that out yet.

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 06:27PM | 0 recs
Re: On a more serious note

why would that be?

by alex100 2008-04-02 08:30PM | 0 recs
Re: On a more serious note

Viewing it as a punishment is fundamentally flawed.

If it were up to me, wages would just be garnished for everyone like they are currently for social security and medicare.  No one has a choice when it comes to paying into either of those systems.  

by Turnpike Kid 2008-04-02 09:14PM | 0 recs
Re: On a more serious note

Except, at least with regards to SS, those payments are returned. Insurance you may or may not ever need.

by RLMcCauley 2008-04-03 05:56AM | 0 recs
Re: On a more serious note

You may or may not need Health Care? (yes, I changed the term, because it is not "insurance", but Health Care)

everyone I know, at some point & time in their life NEEDS Health Care.  This isn't the same as I may or may not need an iPod.

by colebiancardi 2008-04-03 08:27AM | 0 recs
Re: On a more serious note

BTW - you failed to respond to my actual comment.

Your argument is the EXACT reason mandates are necessary.

It is quite ignorant to think that health insurance is not necessary for everyone.  If you really think that way, maybe you should just vote for John McCain.

by Turnpike Kid 2008-04-02 09:16PM | 0 recs
Re: On a more serious note

Sorry. I'm not a one issue voter.

by RLMcCauley 2008-04-03 05:57AM | 0 recs
Re: Some people certainly do.

"But of course SS you get back in the end. Health insurance you may never see a benefit from."

But the hospital and emergency room has got to be staffed, equipped, and ready for you whether you go there or not.

Almost 80% of health care costs are static, fixed costs: buildings, maintenance, salaries, equipment, supplies, training and retraining. That emergency room has to be kept up so that when you need it we will be there and up to speed to take care of you. In that regard we are all constantly "using" the health care system whether we ever spend a day in the hospital or not. We must all contribute toward that cost. We pay to have the fire department and police department on stand by, whether our house burns down or we get mugged or not. Same with health care.

You are getting the benefit of having a health care safety net

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 06:26PM | 0 recs
Re: Some people certainly do.

Fine. So stop blowing people up and spending our money on the machinery of war and pay for a national health care service from the existing tax base.

by RLMcCauley 2008-04-03 05:58AM | 0 recs
Re: Some people certainly do.

"Fine. So stop blowing people up and spending our money on the machinery of war and pay for a national health care service from the existing tax base."

You cannot base a call for health care on the absence of expenditures on national defense. We have to be able to maintain health care and be at war at the same time, because Americans have to be able to do both.

Even if we could just end the war in Iraq just like that there is no reason to think health care in this country would benefit, there needs to be a reform proposal, otherwise we continue to pour riches into a cruel system that completely doesn't work, a tremendous waste that only serves the corporate investor based medical industry.

Hillary's plan alone will do that.

by 07rescue 2008-04-03 09:15AM | 0 recs
Re: I would say forced heatlh insurance is a great

Social security was not originally mandated for all workers--out of practical necessity. It covered primary workers, but excluded farm hands, self employed workers, and a variety of other Americans. It took several decades for it to become universally mandated.

Obama's plan is very similar in the sense that it starts with immediately achievable goals and can be expanded as the kinks are worked out. And don't forget, Obama has consistently stated that a mandate is still on the table. He plans to get the system in place and then evaluate the effectiveness of and need for a mandate. To me it sounds like not putting the cart before the horse, and guaranteeing that he can get his plan through Congress.

by noop 2008-04-02 06:53PM | 0 recs
Re: I would say forced heatlh insurance is a great

"Obama's plan is very similar in the sense that it starts with immediately achievable goals and can be expanded as the kinks are worked out"

But his "immediate goals" of lowering costs cannot be achieved with the means he proposes. Those are the facts. Industry has already been trying everything feasible to lower costs and they only continue to skyrocket. There is absolutely no evidence whatsoever that any of the ideas Obama puts out will lower costs one iota.

There is already a tremendous body of research done on all these proposals, and many countries have already tried all these permutations and they do not work. That is why countries that are serious about containing health care costs and having universal coverage all have either single payer or a mandate and mixed system. They all end up going down the same road.

We have already tried the "managed care" route here, and that was a failure, because companies turned it into simply denial of needed care and put the profits in their pockets. We've tried all the tinkering at the edges, and are starting to recycle the ideas that didn't work the first time because people have forgotten or dies that tried them the first time. They don't work. Obama's plan will not work.

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 07:34PM | 0 recs
Re: I would say forced heatlh insurance is a great

in what sense will Obama's plan "not work"? I'm assuming you're speaking in terms of overall coverage?

Because if we're talking about cost, Hillary's all at once plan can also be a disaster seeing how insanely inefficient the U.S. health-care system is in terms of percentage of GDP right now (and considering the skyrocketing costs from year to year).

by alex100 2008-04-02 08:37PM | 0 recs
Re: I would say forced heatlh insurance is a great

Your argument accepts that a single payer system is the only form of truly universal healthcare. However, you are willing to compromise on a mandate because you also accept that a single payer system isn't politically viable at this time. This means that you've implicitly accepted the political expediency of a phased approach and see the mandate primarily as a longterm political leverage.

So far I figure we're on the same page. Where we seem to diverge is that you refuse to accept the political necessity of phasing in the mandate. Let's be very clear, the reason why Obama is keeping the mandate on the table is because there's a reasonable expectation that it will become necessary. However, it's a lot harder to sell a plan to Congress and the American people when it starts with a mandate. That comes across as uncompromising, and Hillary's last attempt showed how well that plays out.

My personal opinion is that you're not arguing this point on its merits, so much as you're arguing for your side. Now, I'm all for passionate support of your candidate, but lets put this into perspective. The difference between the two plans is not their end goal, but how they prioritize reaching that goal. Obama focuses on getting a viable plan through the system with the expectation that changes will be needed. I would honestly be shocked if his plan didn't eventually include a mandate--like social security did. Clinton's goal is to push a more--though not entirely--complete plan through at the front end. While I laud that in principle, I don't consider as politically viable.

Put simply, Obama's plan is more likely to pass but could take longer to perfect. Clinton's plan is less likely to pass but could be more complete sooner. I'm more comfortable with the first scenario; you're more comfortable with the second.

by noop 2008-04-02 09:27PM | 0 recs
Re: I would say forced heatlh insurance is a great

"I would say forced heatlh insurance is a great  

way to have people vote against you in the future."

But at the same time many people are clamoring for someone to help with this life and death problem. We have already tried everything that doesn't work, because we know that what does work is very hard to achieve - the mandate, leading to something more like single payer.

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 11:29PM | 0 recs
Re: I would say forced heatlh insurance is a great

Why not just skip right to single payer funded from the existing tax base and the money that already goes to the insurance companies?

The libertarian streak in this country is deep.

by RLMcCauley 2008-04-03 05:59AM | 0 recs
Liz and Joe... FYI

The whole nine yards refers to the total number of cubic yards a cement truck holds.

:)

by JimR 2008-04-02 04:25PM | 0 recs
Edwards and Clinton against Obama

Oh WAIT.  You forgot about the debate in So Carolina when Hillar mentioned another vote Obama didn't back up with his rhetoric.

The Bill to cap interest rates to a maximum 30 percent, to limit predatory lenders to gouge the least fortunate.  

Obama actually tried to say they didn't get to talk about it like he wanted.  Then said he would have liked it lower.  Edwards chimed in with, are you kidding, you're response to capping interest rates, claiming you wanted them lower, was to not put a cap on it at all? (paraphrasing).

http://www.senate.gov/legislative/LIS/ro ll_call_lists/roll_call_vote_cfm.cfm?con gress=109&session=1&vote=00020

by LindaSFNM 2008-04-02 04:31PM | 0 recs
Re: Edwards and Clinton against Obama

I was a big JRE supporter, but if you remember, JRE said that Hillary was the status quo and Hillary believes that lobbyist are the real americans.  JRE did not think that Hillary was change.  I don't think that JRE will be endorsing Hillary any time soon.  I believe that JRE will endorse Obama if he endorses at all.  Elizabeth says that she thiinks that Obama is charming.  I heard no animosity in her voice for either Hillary or Obama.

by Spanky 2008-04-02 04:39PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards

Obama's supporters don't sound very progressive -- which I suppose is why they're drawn to Obama, because he's not very progressive either.

maybe anti-government propaganda is the new progressive!  progressives and liberterians unite against our government!  forget about "by the people" and "for the people".  everybody pull up your own bootstraps and fend for yourselves.  and for God's sake don't force the uninsured to have health insurance -- they want no part of it.

by moevaughn 2008-04-02 04:36PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards

This is very funny, since most of the diaries smearing Obama could have been written by a repug.  I find that most Hillary supporters watch Fox News, and quote Lou Dobbs, and Rush Limbaugh.  To me that is not what most liberal or progressives watch on TV.  I never watch Fox because I think of Fox News as the devil channel.  I am a big Obama supporter that used to support JRE, and I am a yellow dog democrat.

by Spanky 2008-04-02 04:44PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards

" I find that most Hillary supporters watch Fox News, and quote Lou Dobbs, and Rush Limbaugh. "

No we don't. With media bias being what it is against Hillary ironically some of us have found better coverage of her on right wing sources that we never otherwise partake of, simply because they hate both candidates equally.

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 04:49PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards

I find that there is never a good excuse to watch Fox News.  Also, CNN seems to give Hillary great coverage, so why don't you watch CNN?

by Spanky 2008-04-02 05:02PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards

"Also, CNN seems to give Hillary great coverage, so why don't you watch CNN?'

CNN coverage is one of the most biased, it is enraging to watch.

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 05:16PM | 0 recs
Edwards to Endorse?

Edwards seems to be hinting at a Clinton endorsement lately.  I really think it will happen.  It will be big momentum for Clinton if it does happen.  After this statement from Elizabeth, I can't imagine him endorsing Obama now.  I think they may be saving his endorsement for the "perfect time".  God only knows when that could be.  Now seems like a good time to me!   I would guess that it happens close to the PA Primary.  I've noticed that they seem to drop big endorsements on Fridays.  Sounds crazy, but check it out!  Richardson, Murtha, on and on.  

by easyE 2008-04-02 04:43PM | 0 recs
Re: Edwards to Endorse?

If JRE endorses it will be Obama.  All his key donors are for Obama, and most of his aides went with Obama, and most of the super delegates who was for JRE went with Obama.  I predict that the Edward's will not endorse either in the end.  Also, JREs main donor in NC went with Obama.

by Spanky 2008-04-02 04:59PM | 0 recs
Re: Edwards to Endorse?

i'm not sure that Edwards wouldn't go to Clinton at this juncture.

few have been saying he's to endorse her (i mentioned it in a thread about a week ago) and Elizabeth coming out supporting Hillary's plan may just have driven that message home for me.

but you're right about all the other things you've written. I was an Edwards voter and for me, the more attractive candidate was Obama after he dropped out (war, approach to international diplomacy, stance on lobbyists, immigration...). Health-care was the one issue that I had originally supported Hillary on and it was an important enough issue that I would have been happy to see either one win.

she's burned away any goodwill I have for her at this point however. and the more I've thought about her health-care plan, the less impressed I am with it. It's better then having 40million uninsured though.

by alex100 2008-04-02 08:47PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards

Clinton essentially adopted Edwards' plan.

Of course Elizabeth would favor Clnton's plan.

Edwards came out with his plan in February 2007.  Clinton brought here plan out late that summer.

by TomP 2008-04-02 04:51PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

My only question is this: how do you enforce a mandate?  With car insurance, there are several reasonable methods to enforce a mandate: fines, license suspension, vehicle confiscation, etc.  Even then, lots of people still choose to drive without insurance.  

But how do you mandate health insurance?  This goes for Obama's plan too.  Will they tax struggling working class people who had to choose mortgage payments over health insurance?  Will they garnish wages?  

This is the question that must be answered, especially in the midst of economic crisis.  People can't pay their mortgages, can't pay their maxed out credit cards, can hardly afford gas to get to work.  I understand the theories driving the mandate, I just can't picture the implementation.

by anevarez 2008-04-02 05:06PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

"Will they tax struggling working class people who had to choose mortgage payments over health insurance?"

Hillary's plan caps the cost of insurance to a low percentage of family income, possibly as low as 5%, but depending on the input from Congress, up to 10%. So it should not be an onerous burden. Low income families are very well subsidized in Hillary's plan, it is much more generous and realistic for the average family than Obama's plan.

In Massachusetts, where the mandate is already being tried, depending on size families who make up to $65,000,00 are subsidized at least partially, and those under $45,000.00 are fully subsidized. There are still 60,000 people who had to be granted waivers because they could not find health insurance that was affordable in their area. In this regard the federal government would have more tools at it's disposal to lower costs, and to provide a public programs as a default option.

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 05:24PM | 0 recs
Yes

And let's not forget that Massachusetts plan came into law under Mitt Romney. It is by no means the model for universal coverage.  

by Turnpike Kid 2008-04-02 05:46PM | 0 recs
Re: Yes

"And let's not forget that Massachusetts plan came into law under Mitt Romney. It is by no means the model for universal coverage"

Romney didn't seem to have the well being of the poor always uppermost in his mind...  :)

Even so, in Massachusetts they have achieved the extraordinary rate of providing good health insurance to 92% of their low income folks at 100% subsidy (free). That is double the rate on enrollment of any other free medical insurance program elsewhere in the US.

So for the poor, the mandate actually functions as a de facto mandate on government to provide care. They are getting people signed up like never before.  

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 06:34PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

5% of a family's income is low???  up to 10%??  And I said "working people" not "low income families". The latter is a subset of the former.  It does not mean that the wealthier members of the former do not face serious financial problems.  A lot fo the foreclosures right now are happening to families with combined incomes of over $100,000.  A family of four in the San Francisco Bay Area earning $100k+ is  lower middles class.  Many of these families are already paying anywhere from 5-10% of their income towards student loans, 15-20% income taxes, and another 25% towards rent, and these families are lucky if they can set aside anything in order to save up for a home (that is if they haven't already committed 50% towards a mortgage in which case add another 5-10% and it all falls apart).

Also, there is still no indication in your post of how the mandate will be enforced.  I understand that the argument is that it will be affordable (though I'd hardly call 5% affordable), but what happens if people, for whatever reason, choose not to get insurance.  What happens then?  For that matter, how will the Fed know?  Will proof of insurance be required for tax filings?  What happens to those who don't have to file?  

Take my wife for example: if we were really struggling (borderline faux-bankruptcy, the 21st century version, or foreclosure perhaps) and the cost of insurance was so much more than any tax breaks including her would provide, I might choose to leave her off, as she doesn't have any reportable income.

by anevarez 2008-04-02 06:04PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

"5% of a family's income is low???  up to 10%??"

For health insurance it is reasonable. Health insurance needs to be a priority in people's lives. Nothing else in life matters if you get sick or injured. Then you need care, in order to be able to participate in life. This is a matter of priorities. It has to budgeted in.

Right now people don't even register how much they are "spending" on health insurance if they have employer based health insurance, because the employer is paying a large portion of it. That is all money you won't see in your paycheck.

As a society we have to be realistic about what we can afford. If you get cancer, you need to have very expensive treatments for it, and your life may depend on it. Paying for insurance is the only way to be prepared (to some extent) for that catastrophic event.

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 06:42PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

Right now a lot of people can't even afford the fractional costs of employer subsidized premiums.  A significant portion of the uninsured have access to insurance they just choose not to purchase, and in many instances it is because they cannot afford it.

That employers pay for it right now is irrelevant.  The cost of this system will not be laid on their shoulders, it will be laid on ours.  And do you think that the money employers save on health insurance will wind up in our paychecks?

"It has to budgeted in." ?

How can you honestly expect people who live check to check to simply budget in 5-10% for health insurance?  If they could simply "budget in" 5-10% isn't it reasonable to assume that they might have been saving some so that they don't have to live so precariously?

by anevarez 2008-04-02 07:02PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

" And do you think that the money employers save on health insurance will wind up in our paychecks?"

If you are talking about Hillary's plan, nothing will change with employer based health insurance if you like what you have got, there is no transfer of money from employer to employee, it will remain as it is.

For people who want to buy their own insurance it will be difficult, that is why Hillary's plan includes  a Medicare like public program, a lower cost alternative.

The employer based system is really broken, and costs are skyrocketing beyond the capacity of people to pay for it. I don't expect people to be able to pay for it. They will then have to organize into a movement to get real health care reform that will serve them.

Those are the harsh facts of the situation. People will need to rise up and fight for what they need, or things will continue to get worse. Hillary's plan offers a less painful transition.

My group has been promoting a single payer plan that would cover everyone and rein in costs for almost 20 years, and many people fought for it before we did, but so far the majority of Americans do not want to have "government health insurance". It is a huge psychological stumbling block. If that doesn't change many more people will die unnecessarily.

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 11:46PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

I am all for a single payer plan.  What I have a problem with are these plans.  They suck.  You can't force people to start budgeting in these kinds expenses.  No amount of theoretical explanation can pacify my strong belief that these plans will fail, and actually set us back.

IMO it would be better for single payer advocates to continue to focus on the local and state level while the Fed continues providing support in increments by broadening Medicaid, expanding SCHIP, creating a a patients bill of rights with teeth that includes language on preconditions, etc.  These steps, along with the incremental pinch employees will feel through their employer based plans, and a strong long term transformational PR campaign promoting single payer health care would put us where we need to be perhaps 5 years down the road for a truly Universal plan.

by anevarez 2008-04-03 04:00AM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

Replying to Avenarez:

"How can you honestly expect people who live check to check to simply budget in 5-10% for health insurance?  If they could simply "budget in" 5-10% isn't it reasonable to assume that they might have been saving some so that they don't have to live so precariously?"

Considering they won't have to pay for Medicare, Medicaid and will pay less for Workman's comp because the health care part will go for it, they may actually end up paying LESS than they do now.

Personally, I would be happy to pay 10% of my income on health insurance that covered dental, mental illness, and all doctor office visits. I would pay LESS than I do now when I pay cash for all that. Those that are paying cash for health care will probably really do MUCH better if it is universal and capped at 10% of income.

by splashy 2008-04-09 02:25PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

I understand the theories driving the mandate, I just can't picture the implementation.


Yes to me it sounds like a real political can of worms.  I suppose that the Feds would just announce to people that from this date on they are hereby ordered to pay any bills they would be getting from Company X, and if they did not a judgment would be entered against them that included fines and penalties and fines and could be enforced by execution on property or garnishment. 

Some people would just ignore the official federal notice together with the bills that started to come (or might never see them) and by the time the claim was referred to a collection agency and got to court they might owe for several years of insurance which they did not believe they had had and on which they had never submitted a claim.  

A big judgment would be issued including fines, interest and attorney's fees and people would be hiding assets and trying to work off the books to escape garnishment.  It could be a real mess.  It seems to me it would be better to just increase taxes in various ways and have the Feds negotiate coverage contracts. 

It is sort of a copout to insist on pushing people into private plans, but the part where you use federal law to enforce debts to those companies rather than collect taxes makes the thing start to look like a political loser.

 

by Fred in Vermont 2008-04-02 06:37PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

"It is sort of a copout to insist on pushing people into private plans, but the part where you use federal law to enforce debts to those companies rather than collect taxes makes the thing start to look like a political loser."

People do insist they want continued access to their private insurance, so there has to be a way to keep them in the mix.

People would chose their insurance just as they do today with several added options, including the option to join the same benefits plans that members of Congress are given.

The mandate works all over the world, where citizens accept it as a part of their civic responsibility to have health insurance. It's part of being an adult, and a responsible community member. There is a sense of working together with your community so that everyone can be taken care of when they need it. It is the right and fair thing for every able bodied citizen to do.

It is part of progressive values to have everyone do their part and make the community work, and having health insurance is part of that.

Keep in mind that with the insurance companies regulated hey would have to issue insurance policies to everyone who wants it, they cannot charge more for age, sex, predisposing conditions, rates will be set according to geographic area and regional pricing. So they would be closer to being a public trust than they are now. That might feel better, if you thought they were going to be fair

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 06:53PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

The mandate works all over the world, where citizens accept it as a part of their civic responsibility to have health insurance


There may be places where it could work but I think that many Americans would find it a bitter pill to swallow, particularly when administered by Big Nurse Hillary.  Don't get me wrong, I don't see Hillary that way and I am are for civic responsibility but I just don't think "civic responsibility"  would be enough to sell this plan to a large enough percentage of Americans to make it politically and administratively practical.


Keep in mind that with the insurance companies regulated hey would have to issue insurance policies to everyone who wants it, they cannot charge more for age, sex, predisposing conditions, rates will be set according to geographic area and regional pricing.


But the problem I see with that is that there is no real mechanism to control the actual costs of health care or to keep the rates from spiraling upward for those without subsidies and vastly increasing the cost of the program for those who get subsidies.

In the end I think it would be necessary to go to a single payer plan that would permit real cost controls which is why I support such a plan even though I think it would fail in the end.  Since I think the costs would jump out of sight quickly with either plan, I don't see the point in pushing the mandates which might slow down cost increases a little bit but which would be so much political baggage that you might never be able to pass it and start down the road to the failure that might open the door for single payer.

by Fred in Vermont 2008-04-02 07:43PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

I'd agree with Elizabeth that Hillary's healthcare plan is superior to Obama's.  Obama's plan is leaps and bounds better than what we have now but honestly it isn't really a universal plan, which this country needs badly.  

With that said I just don't see Hillary's plan becoming law.  It would be "HillaryCare 2.0" or "socialized medicine" and not only would virtually no Republican vote for it, but conservative Democrats would be intimidated right out of voting for it as well.  

Obama's plan on the other hand I have hope for.  It will also obviously be demonized as socialized medicine, but the fact that it isn't Hillary Care and that there's no mandate are going to make it easier to keep our more conservative members on board.  I could really see this type of plan getting over 50 votes in the Senate and the Republicans would have an extremely hard time fillibustering such a plan because of the support it would likely have from the public.  Such tactics could even force them to lose their job in 2010.  

Basically, Obama's plan would put us on the path to universal health care.  Maybe Hillary could get her plan through and if she could i'd agree it's better, but I'm highly skeptical she would be capable of doing such.  By far the most powerful tool the President of the United States is the bully pulpit.  If the President is effective in making the sale to the public, opposition to the plan will likely fail in the end.  For many reasons, I see Obama's plan as being an easier sell not only because it's presented by him and not Hillary, but because there's no "mandate" which is somewhat of bad word in some parts of this country.

by blueryan 2008-04-02 05:17PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

"Obama's plan on the other hand I have hope for.  It will also obviously be demonized as socialized medicine"

Obama's plan gives up on the idea of universal health care right from the start. It is a loser plan because it is unworkable. he cannot require health insurance companies to cover everyone regardless of pre existing conditions without a mandate, because that would be like allowing everyone to wait until their house was burning down to buy homeowner's insurance. Everyone would wait until they had catastrophic needs. Obviously that is economically unsustainable. Without everyone in the system the price of health insurance will remain unaffordable. Everyone must pay into the system so the resources are there to pay for what we each need.

Right now there are so many people without health insurance that the average family pays $900.00 extra every year for health insurance because the industry must offset the cost of providing care to the uninsured by raising prices on the insured.

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 05:32PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

[Obama's plan] cannot require health insurance companies to cover everyone regardless of pre existing conditions without a mandate, because that would be like allowing everyone to wait until their house was burning down to buy homeowner's insurance.


What you are saying is that the company would have to charge higher rates if the government forced them to accept all comers with out exclusion and without promising them that the government would push everyone into the risk pool.  By pushing young and healthy people into the plan you would make the insurance companies fatter and willing, for a while at least, to charge lower rates than if they didn't have the income from the mandated people.

But the problem is do you really don't put a lid on costs, mandate or not. Consider the comment Health Policy Placebos by David Himmelstein in the April 14 issue of The Nation.


 The Democratic contenders proffer a superficially plausible reform model that has a long record of failure. Their proposals trace back to Nixon's 1971 employer mandate scheme, concocted to woo moderate Republicans away from Ted Kennedy's single-payer plan. Like mandate reforms subsequently passed (and failed) in Massachusetts (1988), Oregon (1989) and Washington (1993), Clinton's and Obama's plans would couple subsidies for the poor with a requirement that large employers foot part of the bill for employee coverage. These earlier reforms also required the self-employed to buy coverage, an individual mandate that Clinton (like the 2006 Massachusetts reform) would expand to virtually all; Obama limits his mandate to children. In both versions, a federal agency would serve as insurance broker, selling a new public plan and a menu of private ones--reprising the format of Medicare's ongoing privatization, implemented through competition rigged to favor private plans [see Trudy Lieberman, "The Medicare Privatization Scam," July 16/23, 2007].


But as Himmelstein sees it all of these plans are doomed to fail because they have no way to control costs.


The earlier state reforms foundered on the shoals of cost. As health spending soared, employers rebelled and legislators rescinded the mandates and subsidies. Massachusetts looks set to replay this experience; only 7 percent of those required to buy unsubsidized coverage have yet to sign up, while the state wrestles with massive cost overruns for subsidies.


In addition to being burdened by the profits, overhead, and duplication of claim services, of multiple private companies, a plan to introduce universal coverage via existing insurance companies provides no way to control the actual costs of health care.


Clinton's and Obama's plans also lack credible means to redirect the hundreds of billions now wasted on overtreatment. Hospitals, doctors and equipment firms profit from investments in expensive high-tech care, encouraging the overuse of interventions that help some patients but harm others--for example, spine surgery, cardiac stents and CAT scans (which often deliver radiation equivalent to 500 chest X-rays). Insurers limit their outlays through intrusive case-by-case reviews or by raising co-payments. But they have little interest in systemwide cost control, so their efforts have mainly shifted costs to patients or other payers--the economic equivalent of squeezing a balloon.


In the end this problem would eat up more and more tax dollars until there was a revolt.


Without savings, the tax increases Obama and Clinton propose would be eaten up by subsidies for the uninsured, leaving nothing for the majority of Americans already covered but often unable to afford care. . . . 

Private insurers caused the healthcare crisis. Yet both Democratic contenders advocate reforms that would fortify private plans, making government their debt collector. Their proposals, while palatable to the health industry--which supplies the Democrats with huge donations as well as key officials (DNC credentials committee co-chair James Roosevelt moonlights as an insurance company CEO)--cannot cure our healthcare crisis.


It seems to me to be a big distraction fighting over one small detail in this situation.  We have to do something rather than nothing.  The real question is who will provide the leadership to take the next step when these sorts of plans start to fail.  I think Obama is a bit more likely to have the political power, and independence from the insurance industry to take the next step when this fails, but that is along way down the road at this point.

 

by Fred in Vermont 2008-04-02 07:13PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

Fred, David Himmelstein is one of the founders of PNHP, the group I am with. The single payer plan is superior in every way, I am intimately familiar with all the arguments for it, I give talks about it to try to sell people on it.

David is an awesome person, an ex hippie who still sports a ponytail, but he does not understand politics at all. He can offer no way that works politically to get to single payer. Unfortunately it has not made any headway with gaining public support in 20 years. With the incompetence of the Bush administration the public view of single payer has dropped even further, because people look at how Iraq has gone, Katrina, our dissolving infrastructure, underfunded safety net, etc, and they do not want government taking over health care with a single payer system. You don't have to convince me that single payer would be better, you have to convince the public.The problem is public perception. The public doesn't want it, even when all the benefits are explained.

There needs to be an interim plan to transition people over to it. The only way to do that is to build the political will for it. The only thing that will mobilize people to abandon the devil they know to reach for something better is a much greater crisis. When people are mandated to have health insurance, and it is unaffordable, they will get up off their behinds and finally do something about it.

The brilliance of Hillary's plan is that it does offer the "Medicare for All" public option, so if enough people choose it over private insurance it could evolve into a single payer program. It's not a certainty, but it could work. There is no other path to get to single payer. People won't go from  zero to a million in their trust of government to administer heath care. That trust must be earned gradually, by proven competence in the field.

Ultimately none of the current plans being discussed will work long term, to control costs there will have to be rationing of health care, here is no other way. That is the political reality no one wants to speak about.

Hillary has said she would support and sign a single payer plan if we could get it past Congress. Obama's conservative health care advisor, Jim Cooper, does not believe in universal health care, they believe in free market competition as the answer. Good luck with that. Obama was talking about it at Cooper Union here in NYC last week.

by 07rescue 2008-04-03 12:33AM | 0 recs
Why not sugar coat placebo?

You don't have to convince me that single payer would be better, you have to convince the public. . . .  There needs to be an interim plan to transition people over to it.


Exactly that is what we are talking about.  I am just saying that it does not make sense to trash our next candidate's transitional plan.  If they are both just placebos designed to get people use to taking their medicine the decision about how thick a sugar coating to put on the pill is a political judgment call difficult to second guess.


The only thing that will mobilize people to abandon the devil they know to reach for something better is a much greater crisis.


That seems to be the case, but it needs to be done in a way that will cause the people to blame the insurance companies rather than the gov'mint.


When people are mandated to have health insurance, and it is unaffordable, they will get up off their behinds and finally do something about it.


Or will they rebel against the mandate or worse still force congress to kill the whole program?

I am just an ageing ex-hippy myself and I don't claim to understand politics that well either, but I am able envision the Harry and Louise ads this time around and think that Obama's decision to limit mandates to families with children may well be correct. 


The brilliance of Hillary's plan is that it does offer the "Medicare for All" public option, so if enough people choose it over private insurance it could evolve into a single payer program.


But Obama offers the same thing.  The thing that could drive the evolution of this into single payer has nothing to do with the mandate. 


People won't go from  zero to a million in their trust of government to administer heath care.


I agree.  That is why -- as contradictory and likely to fail in the long run as this these very similar transitional plans are -- we need to start down the road.  But I see the mandate as being a political and administrative can of worms that will just open up a whole new area for building mistrust in government. 

If the idea is to prove government works why commit to set up some sort of Office of Mandate Enforcement that will have to individually try to track down people and collect money to give to insurance companies?  Do you really think that will turn into a government success story?


Ultimately none of the current plans being discussed will work long term, to control costs there will have to be rationing of health care, here is no other way. That is the political reality no one wants to speak about.


We see that the same way.  That is why I don't buy the that the mandate is necessary in order to make the money work.  It will not really do that but it will make the plan a bitter bitter pill.  Since it is a placebo in the long run, why not let Obama put a sugar coating on it.?


they believe in free market competition as the answer. Good luck with that. Obama was talking about it at Cooper Union here in NYC last week.


I would love to read a transcript that.  Are you really saying that the Jim Cooper controls Obama's mind and would block going farther with his plan?  I have hear this said elsewhere, but it is just not that convincing.  I would rather look at how much funding each candidate gets from health insurance lobbyists. 

by Fred in Vermont 2008-04-03 04:31AM | 0 recs
Re: Why not sugar coat placebo?

"I am just saying that it does not make sense to trash our next candidate's transitional plan. "

I have explained thoroughly already that Obama's plan will never lead to single payer, he believes in free market solutions to the problem. The mandate is essential to reaching single payer or any system even slightly like it. You don't have any basis in the history of health care reform to say otherwise.

Obama will take our country even further down the road in the wrong direction, that of privatisizing the government programs we already have, so there is no source of evidence remaining that government programs work at all. That process has been taking place already under both Bush and Democratic state administrations, and will be furthered by Obama should we have the grave misfortune of his capturing the presidency.

The loss of confidence in Medicare alone has been alarming, from it's privatization. Further privatization of the public programs we still have will eliminate any case for further government programs. Obama is not an economic progressive, all his economic advisors are conservative, with a history of opposing progressive economic proposals.

Obama's plan is unworkable, shallow, contradictory, and will betray the poor, who under the mandate plan would receive subsidized health insurance (as almost 100% have in Massachusetts). Those are the facts, and I will disseminate them as widely as possible.

I am a progressive and believe those solutions are our only path to equality and moral health care reform in this country. That is where Hillary's plan will take us. Obama is going irretrievably in the wrong direction.

by 07rescue 2008-04-03 08:58AM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

"they will get up off their behinds and finally do something about it"

And that something will be to kick out the Democrats who are forcing their hands.

You made a very remarkable observation btw regarding the level of confidence we should hold in our Federal government.  We should all ask ourselves if we really do trust the Federal government, which more and more is becoming the Executive branch, to reliably oversee health care.  I'm all for a large Federal government that provides social safety nets and New Deal type economic and infrastructure development plans.  But do we really want to give Jeb Bush the power to control our health care?  It's a scary thought, and when you consider this country's history it is very much within the realm of possibility.  Hell, it could be someone even worse than Bush Co.  Never underestimate the collective stupidity of 50.1% of American voters.

More and more I'm getting the feeling that we may be barking up the wrong tree.  It might be a lot more effective to continue to push single payer at the local and state levels, where politicians are more accountable to their constituents.

by anevarez 2008-04-03 04:38AM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

" Hell, it could be someone even worse than Bush Co.  Never underestimate the collective stupidity of 50.1% of American voters."

That is the argument against single payer.

Why trust the government to do anything? After all, we as Americans cannot possibly do the same thing Europeans and others around the world have successfully done for many years, and provided an egalitarian and universal health care system to all citizens. That is the basic Republican argument.

I believe in progressive solutions to our problems, relying on collective responsibility in addition to personal responsibility.

State level single payer cannot work because any lone state that tried it would be flooded with the seriously ill coming for the fee health care. It would likely be economically devastating within a year for any state to try.

Also, states do not have the tools of the economies of scale that would make single payer work. It is only practical at the federal level. It also may be illegal, as it violates ERISA, another major legislative stumbling block to be overcome.

by 07rescue 2008-04-03 09:08AM | 0 recs
Massachusetts experience

Eventually health care will have to be mandated but there is a lot of work to do before that.

First, like in Europe we need to subsidise medical education so doctor's don't graduate with huge college debts.  In Europe the pharmaceutical companies are not allowed to advertise prescription drugs on television. In Europe the government negotiates drug prices.

Here in Massachusetts we are offered mandatory policies that are not affordable because the preliminary groundwork was not done to control health care costs. People are ignoring the mandates and simply paying the fine.

I make quite a good income but found after doing my Massachusetts taxes that I was except from mandated insurance because even at my rate of income, the policies were not deemed affordable.

Another major factor is that not even a portion of the cost of holistic health care is covered which happens to be the type of health care I use.

The whole thing stinks in my opinion. First, bring down the cost, then talk mandatory purchase of policies.  

by cjfb 2008-04-02 05:37PM | 0 recs
I don't get the quitter attitude in many of the

commenters here.  It is a bad reflection on HRC to have tried this in the past?? Say what?

Anyone who has done anything hard knows that first attempts are often failures.  If they weren't - it wouldn't be such a hard task!  What about Shackleton?  The first explorers of Everest?  Are the commenters people who have never done anything risky? I wonder....

Fact is that Kennedy (major Obama supporter) is about to see his career end without accomplishing national healthcare and sad to say I think he is threatened by the likelihood that HRC CAN do this as president.  She will fight and fight against the odds and that is what we need.

I like Kennedy, worked for him in the day but time for him to hand the torch to HRC and step gracefully aside.

by Molee 2008-04-02 07:11PM | 0 recs
Re: Elizabeth Edwards Makes The Case For Clinton's

"The whole thing stinks in my opinion. First, bring down the cost, then talk mandatory purchase of policies.  "

There s no way to bring down costs without getting everyone in the system. It's that simple. So you end up with no change without the mandate.

Costs are escalating so intensely that the cost of medical education is only a tiny portion, and there is no way the drug companies will accept regulation without there being a huge number of customers organized into a group to force those regulations on them. People do not care enough to withstand the tremendous pressure the drug companies will bring by demonizing any effort to regulate them. There will be Astroturf groups of seniors doing the drug companies work for them to stand up for the drug companies' charging whatever they want. That is why we need to have everyone in the risk pool together.

Electronic medical records may offer some greater efficiency, but we will only see that after many years of high investment in the technology, and there is cost to maintaining them. They will improve care, however.

It is a very difficult problem, with few alternatives. But this has been done before, all over the world. We can get it done here.

The one thing I can assure you of is that there will be no lower costs without everyone in the system. We will have to find a way to make it work, or continue to allow many of us to die without access to health care. Is that the preference in America?

by 07rescue 2008-04-02 07:19PM | 0 recs
Single payer through Clinton's plan?

I was reading HRC's plan and thought that we could all buy into the "government plan" and then we would have single payer and cut out all the insurance companies...

Analyses of Clinton vs. Obama's plans have been done and it is estimated that Clintons' plan would cost $2700 and Obama's $4200 for each new person buying in. So, which do you think is more affordable?

07rescue you are quite eloquent and knowledgeable.
So, can you get your board at pnhp to evaluate the candidates' plans?

NPA did an analysis and someone injected a bogus criteria that was not in the IOM criteria so that it would favor Obama. Thus giving them the same grade. And it did not give extra weight for universal coverage or covering more people...

by adolmd 2008-04-03 11:34PM | 0 recs

Diaries

Advertise Blogads


----------- myDD - skin -----------