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U.S. and World Politics

The Fight for Medicare for All

Democrats, including Bernie Sanders, won’t fight for Medicare for All

By Glen Ford

Democrats will tell you that the Republicans are the reason the U.S. is the only industrial country in the world that does not have universal, government-provided healthcare. But, that’s not true. Despite their legislative majorities, the Republicans are not strong enough on their own to defeat a concerted campaign for a Medicare for All program, which is supported by overwhelming majorities of the public, including a very large percentage of Republicans. The U.S. does not have a single payer healthcare system because corporate Democratic leadership, most shamefully under Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, have confused the public about what is, and what is not, “universal” healthcare. They have offered counterfeit, private industry-based schemes—“Hillary-care” in 1993, Obamacare in 2009—and fraudulently called them universal healthcare, when in fact these were bait-and-switch schemes designed to prevent the successful passage of a genuine single payer health program.

The numbers tell the tale. When Bill Clinton first ran for president in 1992, two-thirds of the public—66 percent—told pollsters they supported a “national health insurance plan financed by tax money.” The Clintons instead responded with a secretly-hatched, “managed competition” plan that relied on private insurers and took more than 1,300 pages to explain. “Hillary-care” died ignominiously in Congress.

By late 2006, an amazing 69 percent of Americans were telling pollsters they agreed with the statement that “it is the responsibility of the federal government to make sure that all Americans have healthcare coverage.” Barack Obama was getting ready to make his run for the White House. He claimed to want something he called “universal healthcare.” Most people assumed he meant a single payer, Medicare for All-type program, but instead, Obama dusted off an old Republican private insurance-based plan devised by the far-right Heritage Foundation and later adopted by Republican Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney.

Not only was Obamacare unpopular on its own merits, but because Obama had used the trick terminology “universal healthcare” to describe his program, the public became confused and demoralized about the whole subject of government healthcare. By 2016, only 44 percent of the people had a positive reaction to the term “single payer health coverage.” However, nearly two-thirds of those polled—64 percent—liked the idea of Medicare for All, which is a form of single payer. Medicare for the elderly is probably the nation’s most popular social safety net program, and younger folks would like to be part of it, too, including lots of low-income Republicans. Even Donald Trump used to be for it.

Medicare for All is an idea whose time has come—again! And, with Obamacare being dismantled and a healthcare emergency looming, one would think the Democrats would seize the time to push for a truly universal healthcare plan with such broad support. But, corporate Democratic leadership—just like Bill Clinton and Barack Obama—do not really want single payer healthcare, because their fat cat contributors oppose it. Therefore, they will urge the people to waste their energy on trying to salvage some aspects of Obamacare.

Bernie Sanders will help them do it, because he’s still sheep-dogging for corporate Democrats.

Black Agenda Report, January 31, 2017

http://www.blackagendareport.com/democrats_won%27t_fight_for_medicare-for-all