By BETH FOUHY
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton is unveiling a
sweeping health care proposal Monday that would require everyone to
carry health insurance and offer federal subsidies to help reduce the
cost of coverage.
Fulfilling a pledge to bring health care to all, Clinton's "American
Health Choices Plan" has a price tag of about $110 billion per year. It
represents her first major effort to achieve universal health coverage
since 1994, when the plan she authored during her husband's first term
collapsed.
"It is long past time that Americans and the richest of all countries
realize that health care is a right and not a privilege," Clinton said
at a labor forum in Chicago. "And that goes especially for people who
work hard every single day."
The former first lady says she has learned from the 1990s experience,
which almost derailed Bill Clinton's presidency and helped put
Republicans in control of Congress for years to come. Aides say she has
jettisoned the complexity and uncertainty of the last effort in favor
of a plan that stresses simplicity, cost control and consumer choice.
The centerpiece of Clinton's plan is the so-called "individual
mandate," requiring everyone to have health insurance — just as most
states require drivers to purchase auto insurance. Rival John Edwards
has also offered a plan that includes an individual mandate, while the
proposal outlined by Barack Obama does not.
linton, the Democratic front-runner, has already laid out proposals to
improve health care quality and reduce costs. She was to release her
universal health care plan in Iowa, the first voting state.
With 47 million Americans currently uninsured, the Democratic
presidential contenders have been united in advocating universal
coverage. They have parted ways on certain specifics, including the
individual mandate, which has detractors from both ends of the
political spectrum.
Republican skeptics say it would be too invasive and would restrict
personal freedom and choice. Liberal Democrats have expressed concern
that such a mandate would be too financially burdensome for
lower-income individuals and families — a concern shared by Obama, who
has said individuals cannot be forced to purchase insurance until the
cost of coverage is substantially reduced.
Aides said Clinton believes that an individual mandate is the only way
to achieve health care for all. A key component of her plan would be a
federal tax subsidy to help individuals pay for coverage.
Clinton's plan builds on the existing employer-based system of
coverage. People who receive insurance through the workplace could
continue to do so; businesses, in turn, would be required to offer
insurance to employees, or contribute to a government-run pool that
would help pay for those not covered. Clinton would also offer a tax
subsidy to small businesses to help them afford the cost of providing
coverage to their workers.
For individuals and families who are not covered by employers or whose
employer-based coverage is inadequate, Clinton would offer expanded
versions of two existing government programs: Medicare, and the health
insurance plan currently offered to federal employees. Consumers could
choose between either government-run program, but aides stress that no
new federal bureaucracy would be created under the Clinton plan.
Aides said Clinton will propose several specific measures to pay for
her plan, including an end to some of the Bush-era tax cuts for people
making more than $250,000 per year. Edwards has vowed to completely
repeal the tax cuts for high earners to pay for the cost of his plan,
estimated at $90 billion-$120 billion per year, while Obama would pay
for his plan in part by letting the tax cuts expire in 2010.
In response, Obama said Clinton's plan is similar to one he proposed in
the spring, "though my universal health care plan would go further in
reducing the punishing cost of health care than any other proposal
that's been offered in this campaign."
He took another swipe at the Clinton administration's closed-door
sessions on health care in the 1990s, saying "the real key to passing
any health care reform is the ability to bring people together in an
open, transparent process that builds a broad consensus for change."
Republican Mitt Romney, in New York City for a fundraising stop,
criticized Clinton's proposal, saying, "'Hillary care' continues to be
bad medicine ... in her plan, we have Washington-managed health care.
Fundamentally, she takes her inspiration from European bureaucracies."
The plan that Romney helped institute while governor of Massachusetts
requires the same individual insurance mandate as Clinton's and uses
state subsidies to help reduce the cost of private coverage. Since
then, Romney has said he would leave it up to the states to decide
whether they supported such a mandate.
Clinton is also expected to stress several cost-saving measures to help
pay for universal coverage. She's already recommended several such
proposals, such as computerized medical record-keeping and a reduction
in federal overpayments to hospitals and health maintenance
organizations. She would also promote wellness and disease prevention
as a way to reduce costs.
Clinton is sure to court danger from the health insurance industry by
proposing several industry reforms. Among other things, she would
require insurance companies to provide coverage to all consumers
regardless of pre-existing conditions.
The insurance industry helped kill Clinton's earlier attempt at health
care reform through a multibillion-dollar media and lobbying campaign
that included television ads featuring a middle-class couple named
Harry and Louise fretting over having to get their insurance through a
new "billion-dollar bureaucracy."
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Clinton to offer health care plan
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