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Thursday, 14 September 2017
Bernie Sanders unveils universal healthcare bill: 'We will win this struggle'
Medicare for All plan would cover 323m Americans under single system
Bill unlikely to pass in Congress but support growing among Democrats
Bernie Sanders introduces his Medicare for All bill in Washington on
Wednesday. ‘There is growing support among the American people and we
will win this struggle.’
Photograph: Yuri Gripas/Reuters
Battle lines have been drawn as Bernie Sanders launches his latest attempt to establish a healthcare system that covers all 323 million Americans.
Standing in opposition to Sanders’ plan are what he calls the “most
powerful and greedy forces in American society”: the pharmaceutical
industry, insurance companies, Wall Street and the Republican party.
“The opposition to this will be extraordinary,” Sanders said in an
interview in his Capitol Hill office, prior to the launch of his
universal healthcare bill, known as “Medicare for All”.
“They will spend an enormous amount of money fighting us. They will
lie about what is in the program. They will frighten the American
people,” he said.
Sanders has no illusions about the bill’s fate in a
Republican-controlled Congress, where it has little chance of passing.
But he says the time has arrived to have a debate he believes is
fundamental: is healthcare a right or a privilege in America?
Sanders will formally unveil the bill at a press conference on
Wednesday, with the backing of nearly a third of the Democratic caucus
in the Senate – a record level of support for a bill he introduced just
four years ago with only one signature, his own.
The Sanders plan would radically reform the American healthcare
system, transitioning it over the course of four years to a federally
administered insurance program. The new system would be underwritten by
an increase in taxes.
Sanders’ “single-payer” bill would provide comprehensive coverage for
everything from the cost of hospital services, prescription drugs,
mental health, maternity and newborn care and dental health.
The
proposal would gradually expand Medicare – the federal health insurance
program for people who are 65 or older and some younger Americans with
disabilities and other illnesses – until it covers everyone.
During the first year of the program, the eligibility age for the
Medicare program would drop to 55, and all Americans under 18 would be
added to the program. The eligibility age would gradually decrease until
the fourth year, when everyone would receive a “universal Medicare
card”.
Sanders said of the plan: “You’re going to the same private doctor
that you went to. You’re going to go to the same hospital that you went
to. The only difference is instead of having a Blue Cross Blue Shield
[insurance] card – and having to argue with your insurance company –
you’re going to have a Medicare for All card. That’s it.”
Since Sanders launched his presidential campaign in May 2015, public
support for universal healthcare has climbed. Where 46% of the public
supported such a system in 2008 and 2009, a recent Kaiser poll found 53% now support the idea.
But that same survey found that when respondents were told that a
universal healthcare plan might give the government “too much control,”
or that it might increases taxes, opposition spiked from 43% to 62% and
60% respectively – perhaps a sign of the major political and policy
fights that lie ahead.
And yet the bill is gaining steam among the Democratic party. Among
the 15 senators co-sponsoring the bill are Elizabeth Warren, Kamala
Harris, Kirsten Gillibrand, Cory Booker and Al Franken – all of whom are
rumored to be considering a run for president in 2020.
In the House of Representatives,
a majority of Democrats have signed on to a similar measure introduced
by John Conyers of Michigan, a bill he has brought forward in every
Congress since 2003 without nearly as much support.
Still, Democratic leaders have declined to endorse the single-payer
measure. House minority leader Nancy Pelosi has said her focus is
protecting Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act (ACA) from Republican
attempts to tear it down. And Chuck Schumer, the Senate minority leader,
has said Sanders’ plan is one of several pieces of legislations under
consideration in his caucus.
Bernie Sanders celebrates the 50th anniversary of Medicare and Medicaid two years ago. Photograph: Jacquelyn Martin/AP
Republicans,
bruised after a failed campaign to repeal the Affordable Care Act, are
eager to use Sanders’ progressive plan to attack Democrats. Of the 10
Senate Democrats up for re-election in states Trump won, only one, Tammy
Baldwin of Wisconsin, has signed on to the bill so far.
Senator John Barrasso, a Republican from Wyoming and an orthopedic
surgeon, said on Tuesday the Sanders bill “is becoming the litmus test
for the liberal left” and decried the program as too costly. He pointed
to Sanders’ home state, where legislators tried and failed to
establish a single-payer system after experts estimated that running
the program would require doubling taxes for residents of Vermont.
“While Bernie Sanders’ slogan may be very popular, it’s really the
nuts and bolts and the details that matters the most,” Barrasso said.
“And that’s what’s it going to cost the American people in terms of
money, in terms of time and in terms of their freedom of choice when it
comes to healthcare.”
Some advocates of a “single-payer” system have expressed concern that Democrats
could fall into the same trap Republicans did with their campaign to
“repeal and replace” Obamacare. Sanders’ Medicare for All bill, like the
Republicans’ repeal and replace effort, is a popular idea but leaves
open crucial policy decisions and ideological disagreements.
Senator Claire McCaskill, a moderate Democrat up for re-election in
Missouri, said a single-payer bill was “premature” but welcomed the
debate. She said she would prefer to allow people between 55 to 65 to
buy into the Medicare program.
Meanwhile,
Democrats too have raised concerns that changing gears too quickly –
shifting from defending Obamacare to overhauling it with a disruptive
new plan – could put the healthcare law in jeopardy as Republicans
continue to push for a repeal.
“The risk is getting distracted by a longer-term healthcare policy
discussion when these guys are still rabid to gut the ACA,” said Senator
Chris Murphy, a Democrat from Connecticut, who has not signed on to the
bill.
But for advocates of the plan, such as Senator Richard Blumenthal, a
Democrat from Connecticut and one of the bill’s 15 sponsors, universal
healthcare is “an idea whose time has come”.
“There should be no question about what our goal is: provide access
to everyone,” Blumenthal told reporters on Tuesday. “There is nothing
about the politics of the moment of the ACA that precludes supporting
Medicare for All as the ultimate goal.”
Sanders said he was open to other approaches that push the country
toward universal healthcare but said he believed that Medicare for All,
modeled after the Canadian healthcare system, was the most logical path.
He acknowledged the hefty price tag. But he argued that the US spends
more per capita on healthcare than countries that guarantee healthcare
as a right, such as Canada, France and Germany. And despite spending
more, 28 million Americans remain uninsured, infant mortality rates are higher and life expectancy is shorter.
Making universal healthcare, an idea once relegated to the fringe of
the party and cast as a progressive fantasy, a legislative reality will
require massive grassroots mobilization and an education campaign,
Sanders said. In addition to the 15 Democratic co-sponsors, Sanders will
unveil the bill with the backing of at least two dozen left-leaning
organizations that will help mobilize support in capitals and
statehouses across the country.
“I don’t want anyone to think that this is a struggle that’s going to
be won tomorrow. And I don’t want anyone to think that [Senate Majority
leader] Mitch McConnell is coming onboard this legislation. He is not.
Nor is [House Speaker] Paul Ryan,” Sanders said.
“But there is growing support among the American people and we will win this struggle.”
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