Progressives Say GM's Decision
to Cut Off Employee Health Insurance 'Yet Another Reason Why We Need Medicare
for All'
Wednesday, September 18, 2019
Under a single-payer system,
said one Medicare for All advocate, employers would no longer have "tons
of leverage because workers are desperate to keep their benefit."
General Motors' decision Tuesday
to stop paying healthcare premiums for nearly 50,000 of the company's striking
workers offered a powerful case for why Medicare for All is necessary to ensure
stable and quality insurance as a right for everyone in the United States.
That was the argument advanced
by single-payer supporters in the wake of GM's move, which union leaders and
others quickly denounced as a cruel intimidation tactic designed to break the
United Auto Workers strike.
Sara Nelson, president of the
American Association of Flight Attendants, said employer-provided
insurance allows corporations to use the threat of healthcare cuts "to
hold workers hostage."
"Medicare for All puts
power back in our hands," said Nelson.
Labor historian Toni Gilpin
echoed Nelson, calling employer-provided healthcare "a cudgel that will be
used against workers."
Michael Lighty, a founding
fellow at the Sanders Institute think tank and an activist with the Democratic
Socialists of America's Medicare for All campaign, told Common Dreams that
under a single-payer system, employers would no longer have "tons of
leverage because workers are desperate to keep their benefit."
"By taking healthcare off
the bargaining table, workers can demand and win real gains in wages and
pensions," said Lighty, "and rebuild the solidarity at the heart of
labor."
GM's decision came amid fierce
healthcare disagreements among 2020 Democratic presidential candidates. Those
disputes were on full
display Tuesday at an AFL-CIO forum in Philadelphia, where Sen. Bernie
Sanders (I-Vt.) and former Vice President Joe Biden touted their respective
healthcare proposals before a crowd of union workers.
Biden, who spoke before GM cut
off striking employees' benefits, said his public option plan would allow
workers to "keep your health insurance you've bargained for if you like
it."
Warren Gunnels, senior adviser
to Sanders, took aim at
Biden's assertion on Twitter.
"Try telling that to UAW
workers who just had their healthcare benefits taken away from them by
GM," said Gunnels. "Medicare for All is the only way to make sure
that no American loses their health insurance ever again and workers will
finally receive the higher wages and benefits they need and deserve."
Sanders, who spoke at the
AFL-CIO forum shortly after GM's move, said Medicare for All would eliminate
corporations' ability to cut off healthcare benefits by guaranteeing
comprehensive coverage to everyone in the U.S.
"Here you have the
situation where the UAW is now on strike, 49,000 workers. I'm sure that in that
49,000, there are family members who are seriously ill," said Sanders.
"Under Medicare for All, whether you're working, whether you're not working,
whether you go from one job to another job, it's right there with you."
Splinter's Paul Blest argued Wednesday
that GM's decision to stop paying for workers' healthcare premiums just a day
after UAW's strike began counters one of the main centrist talking points
against Medicare for All.
"Hasn't Joe Biden been
touting the fact that unions fought for their healthcare as a reason why
Medicare for All is bad?" said Blest. "In one fell swoop, General
Motors proved why that line of attack on Medicare for All and its proponents,
namely Sen. Bernie Sanders, is complete bullshit."
"Under a single-payer
system, in which your healthcare is dependent on the fact that you exist in the
United States rather than who you work for," wrote Blest, "there
would be no employer healthcare for GM—or any other company—to cut off. And
instead of worrying about healthcare, that's one less thing workers everywhere
would have to bargain over when entering contract negotiations with their
employers."
As Vox's Tara
Golshan noted,
GM's move is far from unusual for corporate America.
"Union contract
negotiations break down all the time," wrote Golshan. "And union
leaders are quick to point out that healthcare, which always plays a major role
in union contract negotiations, is a major sticking point. Companies use healthcare
as leverage to negotiate down wage increases and other benefits. That's why
some of the biggest unions in the country support Medicare for All—or at least
moving in that direction."
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