http://www.commondreams.org/views/2015/12/22/medicare-all-clinton-reminds-us-shes-part-problem
If the Hillary Clinton
campaign had its way, supporters of Bernie Sanders – whose backing she
will obviously want in November should she win the Democratic nomination –
would feel that, while Clinton might not be all that they want in a president,
she would at least go part of the way there. But if you followed the
third debate deep enough into the night, you witnessed, in what stands as the
most disingenuous moment of the Democratic race thus far, Clinton not simply
disagreeing with Sanders on his Medicare For All, single payer health insurance
plan, but knowingly distorting it. This was not Hillary Clinton offering a more
moderate version of a solution, this was Hillary Clinton acting as part of the
problem.
Clinton argued that the
Sanders plan “really does transfer every bit of our health care system
including private health care, to the states to have the states run. And I
think we've got to be really thoughtful about how we're going to afford what we
proposed.” Between that and Sanders’s public university free tuition
plan, she said “we’re looking at 18 to $20 trillion.” And indeed, the
single-payer bill Sanders introduced in 2013 called for a 2.2 percent tax on
individual incomes up to $200,000 and couples up to $250,000 (and higher rates
for higher brackets), a group she pledges would see no tax increases under a
Clinton administration. But the reason that a recent Kaiser Family
Foundation poll found 52 percent of Democrats strongly backing a Medicare For
All plan, and another 29 percent somewhat favoring it, is that they understand
that there is a payback for that tax increase. And so does Hillary
Clinton.
In ignoring the fact that a
single payer plan would, as Sanders quickly pointed out, do “away with the cost
of private insurance,” meaning that “the middle class will be paying
substantially less for health care,” not only was Clinton wrong on the claim
that the Sanders plan would cost the middle class more, but she knew it.
As Sanders said of her, “I know you know a lot about health care.”
Hillary Clinton, let’s remember, was the point person for Bill Clinton’s
unsuccessful 1993 health insurance reform, to the point where it was sometimes
called “Hillarycare.” People have applied a lot of negative labels to
Hillary Clinton over the years, but “stupid” is not one you hear very often.
This was not an actor like Ronald Reagan, delivering lines he may or may
not have understood. This was not George W. Bush, struggling over words
and concepts. It was a telling, cynical moment.
In a 2004
interview, Senator Elizabeth Warren (then a professor) told Bill Moyers
that when explaining a banking industry-backed bankruptcy bill to First Lady
Clinton in the late 1990s she found that “I never had a smarter student.”
Warren went on to tell how Clinton flipped from opponent to proponent of
the bill, however, once she saw herself as representing Wall Street in the
Senate.
The health care story is
similar. Back then, the for-profit health insurance industry went all out
to obfuscate the facts of the Clinton bill, most memorably with a series of TV
ads featuring a pair of actors named Harry and Louise. Yet by the time
Senator Clinton was running for reelection in 2006, yesterday’s enemies had
become today’s campaign contributors. The New York Times reported her the
second highest recipient of health care industry campaign contributions,
trailing only Republican Senator Rick Santorum. Washington health care
lawyer and lobbyist Frederick H. Graefe told the paper that “People in many
industries, including health care, are contributing to Senator Clinton today
because they fully expect she will be the Democratic presidential nominee in
2008.” Therefore he felt that “If the usual rules apply,” early donors
would “get a seat at the table when health care and other issues are discussed.”
Sanders, of course, famously
does not take such contributions – and there we have the root of the
difference. So, much as Clinton might hope Sanders backers won’t fret too
much about her supposed inevitability as the nominee because she’ll at least
give us Bernie-Lite, it ain’t necessarily so. As Sanders charged in an
earlier debate, there’s always a price to be paid for becoming a darling of the
corporate world. And it’s generally the people Clinton claims she’ll
shield from tax increases who wind up actually paying it.
Those overwhelming numbers of
Democrats who support a Medicare For All approach obviously include many
Clinton supporters. One hopes they will not sit quietly by as their
candidate carries corporate America’s dishonest baggage.
No comments:
Post a Comment