Hillary Gets Progressive on Universal Health Care

by: Elliott Petty

Mon Sep 17, 2007 at 02:44


For those living without medical insurance, it's been a long 13-year since Hillary Rodham Clinton campaigned for universal health care.  During the remainder of her husband's tumultuous tenure in office, she never fashioned another plan nor has she done so as a U.S. Senator.  But now the # 1 contender for President of the United States has a new universal health plan.
Elliott Petty :: Hillary Gets Progressive on Universal Health Care
As a community/ political organizer devoted to progressive politics, I am admittedly dubious to the candidacy of Sen. Clinton.  Largely because of her failure to get back in the batter's box and take another swing at breaking the health insurance industry's exploitation of our nation's health system.

When folks ask me what is the difference between a "liberal" and a "progressive," which everyone seems to be calling themselves these days, I explain that I see the classic liberal as one who generally supports a progressive issue like universal health coverage because it is popular but has no devotion or commitment to the issue. 

If they lose on the issue, they move to another, taking popular stances as they come.

A progressive, in my view champions' universal health, much like State Senator Sheila Kuehl, who has refused to turn away from a lost, including Schwarzenegger's veto,  She came back, pushed harder and moved SB 840 once again this year with increased grassroots support and high favorability in statewide polls.

Compared to State Senator Kuehl, the former first lady seems like a panderer when she calls herself a progressive time and time again.  Certainly she's quite liberal on the issues, but a "progressive" probably not.

Nevertheless, through her campaign for leader of the free world she's finally stepped back to the plate with a new plan, though we have limited specifics thus far, it appears to be much like SB 840, which many of us have campaigned for here in California.

It requires an individual mandate, which means every single one of us must have health insurance whether it is provided by our employer or we purchase it ourselves.  Yes, that includes tax credits for low-income families and an employer mandate granting businesses a choice to offer a plan or pay into a pool to reimburse the government. 

Wow, that sounds an awful lot like SB 840.

Merriam-Webster's Dictionary defines "progressive" as an adjective, "making use of or interested in new ideas, findings, or opportunities."

Hillary must be watching California, making use of viable new ideas on a health system that desperately needs an overhaul.  That's a quite progressive break from the tinkering on the industry that has prevailed over the last several decades.


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Health Care Plan (0.00 / 0)
Based on her speeches I expect that her plan that she will unveil tomorrow will be very good. If it isn't a good plan then I would drop support for her and switch to Edwards.

I you want health care, work hard. If you want universal health care, vote for liberals.

Hillarycare does not equal California's SB 840 (4.00 / 4)
This diarist has mixed up California and Massachusetts.  I live in California and have watched the debate here closely.

Hillarycare sounds like corporate welfare for the insurance companies just like it is in Massachusetts.  The news out of Massachusetts, where it is illegal to not buy medical insurance from a private company, is that lots of people are forced to buy policies that are expensive and with high deductibles.  The reason is that insurance companies skim off 20-30% of all insurance dollars. No wonder medical insurance is such a mess in this country.

On the other hand California's SB 840 would set up a single payer system where the government pays all the bills directly.  That is how Medicare works and their overhead cost is just 3%.  The insurance companies are cut out of the loop.

Hillary has taken more money from the insurance industry than any other Presidential candidate, Democrat or Republican.  Of course she is watching California, but she will not bite the hand that feeds her.  If she were serious about a progressive solution to our medical insurance mess, she would support John Conyers' Medicare For All, HR676.  That what Dennis Kucinich is doing.  He is the only Presidential candidate willing to stare down the insurance industry.


If any candidate doesn't say single payer (4.00 / 3)
or support HR 676,
then they support for-profit private insurer health care,
which, incidentally, got us into this mess.

Health insurance mandates are reprehensible, imo.


exactly. what we don't need right now is more money (4.00 / 4)
in the hands of the insurance companies. only people who've never really struggled could think that mandatory expenses like this are a "good" idea. they're crap. and how exactly does this solve the increasing unreality that is medical pricing? those costs are spirallying out of control, and just like in the case of the oil markets, there's no real reason for that except greed. programs like this have the added negative in that over time people will come to really hate them, and the right will have yet another wedge against real health care for all, in the guise of "see, hillary's socialized medicine is a failure. we told you."

what is so hard about universal single payer, that so many progressives don't understand why it is the only option that makes any sense? really, it's a simple matter of not falling for the winger trap that "anything run by the gov't fails, and everything run by private, unregulated industry is better." that's been disproven so many times now i've lost count. bottom line: for profit health care is wrong, inhumane, uncivilized, and most importantly to addled brains: more expensive.


It isn't progressive (0.00 / 0)
to propose subsidizing for-profit insurance companies, and that's exactly what she's doing.  There is a huge chasm between universal health care and forcing individuals to buy insurance - and how much of it will be junk policies? - from the people who are in the business of maximizing their profits by obstructing access to care.

Re: Hillary gets progressive... (4.00 / 1)
I don't know what getting "progressive" on health care means, since progressives are partly responsible for creating the dismal for-profit heath care affliction we have today.

Getting truly serious about reforming our health care system means supporting HR 676, or something similar, which calls for a single-payer, not-for-profit, national health care for every citizen.

Insurance companies drive up the cost of care and provide nothing in return. They must not be part of any real reform. Anything else means more of the same: Access to care determined by corporate profit rather than individual need.


UHC = Liberal (0.00 / 0)
To borrow the terms of the original diary, Universal Health Care is Liberal, Single Payer Healthcare is Progressive.

Trumpeting UHC is doubly insulting because it is trying to pander to casual progressives who may not understand the distinction, that UHC is adding to the coffers of the the corporate insurance behemoth as stated above, and that the opportunity for real reform is by eliminating the middle man. To add insult to injury, Hillary of all people KNOWS this, and I've heard her attack the ins industry to make a good applause line, but is proposing corporate welfare.

For Clinton to take this approach with her signature issue is as clear an indicator there could be that she will be another corporate democrat. If she won't take a stand on HC reform of all issues, when would she?


Graying the issue (0.00 / 0)
Universal Health Care is not necessarily good either. If it means giving more money to for-profit carriers it is not good.  If it means that decisions regarding what care someone will or will not receive is in the hands of someone at a for-profit carrier who is tasked with saving the company money that is no good either.

What WOULD be good is a single-payer system managed by medicare. For all the shit people give medicare (they get defrauded a lot) it is an effective, highly-efficient organization.

The hardest part any administration is going to have is how to transition from this crappy system we have now to a single-payer system without severely disrupting the economy. Love them or hate them, the current industry employs a LOT of people and dumping several million people off of employment rolls would hurt.

I am skeptical of Hillary's play knowing how much money she receives from the health care/pharma industries, but we will have to wait and see.


Please, can we stop saying "Single payer"? (4.00 / 1)
It's way too wonky.

What's wrong with Medicare for All?

I am in earnest -- I will not equivocate -- I will not excuse -- I will not retreat a single inch -- AND I WILL BE HEARD.  


Good point, lambert. (0.00 / 0)
When my less-informed neighbor has to ask, "what is single payer?" (like he did with "net neutrality"), the battle is lost. Medicare is a successful brand with broad acceptance, and it is wise to build upon it rather than redefine it. Medicare for All!

[ Parent ]
Right now both phrases (0.00 / 0)
are the most commonly used.

Some react to 'medicare for all' negatively as well.
Use whichever phrase gets your point across.
There's so much misinformation that explanations may be necessary.
'Specially if your neighbor is soliciting one.

Here's a great, quirky little flash movie about single payer.


[ Parent ]
still subsidizing the private for-profit insurance industry (4.00 / 1)
fyi: Here is a quickie analysis of Hillary's plan from Don McCanne's at Physicians for a National Health Program:

http://pnhp.org

Hillary Clinton's proposal "preserves existing health insurance," and includes the responsibility of individuals "to get and keep insurance" through the current private insurance market, or through a "Health Choices Menu" of private FEHBP-type plans, or through a Medicare-type public program.

Thus her proposal is an individual mandate to purchase private insurance that is no longer affordable for average-income individuals, or to purchase a public plan that will be even more expensive because of adverse selection.

To make the plans affordable for individuals, she would use a combination of refundable tax credits and a cap on premiums at a percentage of income. Assuming that the plans would provide adequate benefits and adequate protection against financial hardship, the increased spending through the tax system would be exponentially more than the estimates in her plan. And most of the proposed savings to pay for these increases are largely nebulous, and some of those measures would actually increase costs.

Further, the administrative complexities of refundable tax credits and means-tested premium caps would still leave many without coverage. Coverage will never be universal unless it is truly automatic for everyone.

If we are going to use the tax system to pay for health care anyway then why should we waste funds on the profoundly inefficient system of segregated private health plans? A universal risk pool that is equitably funded through the tax system is the most efficient and least expensive method of ensuring comprehensive coverage for everyone.

Many will try to contrast the differences in the Clinton, Obama and Edwards proposals, but they are all basically the same. In spite of their rhetoric, they have each made the protection and enhancement of the private insurance plans a higher priority than patients."
I would only disagree with Don insofar as saying that Obama's plan is significantly even less than this, and Edwards a bit less bad. A pleasant surprise that Hillary's is offering something this "bold" and not a surprise that it is more subsidy and support for the private for profit insurers that have given so much to her campaign.

Once again, time to point out that Medicare overhead of 3-4% versus the private for profits overhead of 15-20% is $350 billion not going to health care, but going to an unneeded middleman. Plus further savings by not having the paperwork involved in determining and rejecting eligibility if everyone is eligible, and all the many other reasons single payer is the way to go to provide Universality & Comprhensive coverage & Cost-control.


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