Health Care Reform's Moment May Be Now
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WASHINGTON DC (By James
Carney, Time) November 23,
2008 ― The last time a
democratic president tried
to fulfill a campaign
promise to overhaul the
nation's health-care system,
he stumbled into a buzz saw
of opposition so brutally
effective that it didn't
just kill the effort, it
rendered the issue
politically toxic for 15
years.
Now it's Barack Obama's
turn. With the economy
staggering, the Federal
Government spending billions
to help prop it up and the
nation still engaged in two
costly overseas wars, the
timing for health-care
reform seems dreadful. And
yet it could still happen.
Obama ranks health-care
reform third on his list of
top priorities — behind
addressing the financial
crisis and passing an energy
bill. Despite suffering from
a malignant brain tumor,
Senator Ted Kennedy has
returned to Capitol Hill
principally, he says,
because he wants to
orchestrate the passage of
health-care legislation.
"There's real momentum
behind getting something big
done," says one adviser to
the President-elect. "This
could be the best chance
we've ever had."
Three key developments over
the past 15 years have made
this moment possible. First,
the number of uninsured
Americans now tops 45
million. Meanwhile, all the
proposals under serious
consideration — starting
with Obama's — would allow
Americans to keep their
current insurance coverage
if they're happy with it.
The specter of the feds
ordering everyone into a
mandatory government-managed
plan is fading away. Most
important, the cost of
health insurance to both the
employers who provide it and
the employees who pay
premiums has continued to
soar. Because of that,
companies of all sizes —
from corporate behemoths to
corner stores — have
switched sides on the issue
of comprehensive reform.
Having fought to defeat
Clinton's plan in 1993, they
are now some of reform's
loudest advocates. "This is
the No. 1 priority for small
businesses," says Todd
Stottlemyer, president of
the National Federation of
Independent Business. "We
see it as a matter of
national economic security."
Even the weak economy may be
an impetus to reform. An
expected spike in
unemployment will increase
the rolls of the uninsured,
driving more of them into
emergency rooms and boosting
premiums on the insured.
Struggling companies may be
forced to cut or kill their
employee coverage just to
survive. And while the cost
of Obama's reform is high —
an estimated $75 billion a
year — a big price tag
hasn't kept Congress from
raiding the Treasury to fix
the economy's many other
ills.
One other advantage: Obama's
plan is not as sweeping as
Clinton's was. It does not
mandate universal coverage
except for children. It
subsidizes low-income
Americans who want to buy
insurance and creates an
exchange to give people
access to health care at
affordable prices — all
reasonable and pragmatic
steps. Still, a fight is
inevitable. Health care
represents 16% of the
nation's economy, with vast
and competing interests as
stakeholders. Which is why
the obstacles to systemic
reform remain enormous. Says
the adviser: "We know how
hard this will be."
