Posts Tagged ‘healthcare reform’

Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Daschle has his own health plan

December 16th, 2008 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Obama Healthcare, politics, Universal Healthcare Reform

By choosing former Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle to head his healthcare reform effort, President-elect Barack Obama got more than an old congressional hand with a policy book on his resume.

Obama has also picked up a hardheaded political strategy for his push to overhaul the nation’s healthcare system. Guided by lessons from President Clinton’s healthcare debacle 15 years ago, Daschle has put a premium on cooperation between the White House, Congress and major healthcare interest groups, many of whom agree that major action on healthcare is vital.

Daschle, who will lead both the Department of Health and Human Services and a new White House Office of Health Reform, favors moving decisively to seize political momentum and, if necessary, cut off opposition, something he said Clinton failed to do in 1993.

He thinks delays by the Clinton administration and soft support from the left in the early 1990s allowed Republicans and industry groups such as insurers to kill the Clinton plan with a well-organized political campaign that made voters afraid of reform.

Daschle is urging a far more aggressive push by those advocating systemic change.

“This means going on the offensive,” he wrote in “Critical,” his recent book about healthcare, in which he singled out drug makers and insurers as potential obstacles to a successful overhaul.

“We cannot assume that the public recognizes the distortions and fallacies peddled by the reform opponents; we have to educate people on the emptiness of the anti-reform rhetoric,” he said.

Daschle has even suggested using the Senate’s rules to prevent opponents from filibustering healthcare legislation, a move that one senior Republican staff member warned would make it “extremely difficult” to get any GOP support for major reform.

Daschle, who declined to be interviewed, has specific — and potentially controversial — ideas about how to reshape the healthcare system.

Among other things, he envisions a new federal agency, which he calls a Federal Health Board, with the authority to set guidelines for what treatments and procedures are most cost-effective.

Daschle argues that the board, which would have authority over federally funded healthcare programs such as Medicare, would insulate medical decisions from political meddling by Congress and could help design a system for achieving universal coverage.

He also has called for a mandate to require all Americans to get health insurance and for the creation of a public insurance program to cover people who don’t get private insurance.

But more importantly, Daschle has provided a virtual road map for the kind of campaign the Obama White House and its allies will probably pursue in their effort to avoid the pitfalls that doomed Clinton’s effort.

“Most of the compelling lessons from 1993 and 1994 are political lessons,” said John McDonough, a senior health advisor to Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) who helped develop Massachusetts’ groundbreaking overhaul and is drafting healthcare legislation that Kennedy plans to introduce next year.

Obama absorbed one of those lessons during the presidential campaign, carefully emphasizing that any reform effort would allow voters to keep their health coverage if they were satisfied with it.

Many in Washington, including Daschle, think Clinton made a crucial error by allowing his opponents to portray his plan as a threat to the healthcare Americans had.

The insurance industry famously exploited that perception with its “Harry and Louise” ads, featuring a couple fretting that the federal government would take away their ability to choose coverage.
Since election day, Daschle has been working hard to avoid another misstep he and others think helped sink Clinton.

In 1993, the White House wrote a massive healthcare bill after then-First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton led a months-long task force that was widely perceived as shutting out key players in the debate, including congressional leaders.

“Relying so heavily on the task force certainly contributed to the eventual defeat of the president’s plan,” Daschle wrote in his book, noting that the process “only bred resentment among the people who weren’t invited to participate, and produced a ‘compromise’ without the input of key stakeholders.”

Today, Daschle talks frequently with interest groups and senior lawmakers, who in turn have taken pains to reciprocate with supportive comments about the new administration’s early moves. “There clearly is an openness to listen,” American Medical Assn. President Nancy Nielsen said Friday. “Fifteen years ago, physicians felt excluded.”

On Capitol Hill, Kennedy and Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) have received the new administration’s explicit blessing to develop healthcare legislation.

And Baucus, who had a rocky relationship with Daschle when the two were in the Senate together, recently praised the South Dakota Democrat for recognizing the need for congressional involvement. For his part, Obama has signaled his intent to tackle healthcare reform soon after he takes office — another difference from 1993, when Clinton waited nearly a year before his healthcare legislation was introduced in Congress.

By then, the administration had expended significant political capital balancing the federal budget and trying to pass the controversial North American Free Trade Agreement, a move that alienated many Democrats and liberal interest groups.

On Thursday, Obama said he wanted swift action. “It’s hard to overstate the urgency of this work,” he said. Taking another page from Daschle’s political playbook, the president-elect carefully framed a healthcare overhaul as an economic necessity and a moral imperative.

“Day after day,” he said, “we witness the disgrace of parents unable to take a sick child to the doctor, seniors unable to afford their medicines, people who wind up in emergency rooms because they have nowhere else to turn.”

Original excerpt from Los Angeles Times

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Most Voters Say Leave My Health Insurance Alone

December 11th, 2008 by admin | No Comments | Filed in politics

Health care reform is near the top of the list for incoming President Barack Obama and congressional Democrats, but a majority of U.S. voters (58%) oppose any kind of government-controlled health plan if it means they have to change their own insurance coverage.

Twenty-five percent (25%) say they would support such a plan even if they had to change their own coverage, according to a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey. Sixteen percent (16%) are undecided.

In a survey in July, 68% of Americans rated health care in this country as fair or poor, but a near identical number (69%) gave good or excellent marks to their own health insurance coverage and were very reluctant to change it.

Republicans are more emphatic than Democrats in the new survey. Seventy-seven percent (77%) of GOP voters oppose a government plan if they have to change their own health insurance , while 12% favor such a plan and 11% are undecided. By comparison, just 43% of Democrats are against a plan that makes them change their own coverage, and 36% support it. But more than one-out-of-five Democrats (21%) are undecided.

Among unaffiliated voters, 59% are against a health plan that forces them to change their own coverage, while 25% are in favor of it, with 16% not sure.

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Fifty-nine percent (59%) of white voters don’t want a plan that makes them change their health insurance, but only 45% of African-Americans agree. Thirty-five percent (35%) of black voters support such a plan, along with 25% of whites.

Generally speaking, the older the voter, the higher the level of opposition to a plan that means they have to change their health insurance coverage. Married voters also are far more opposed to such a plan than unmarried voters.

Earlier this year, only 29% of American adults favored a national health insurance program overseen by the federal government.

Voters consistently trusted Democrats and Obama more on the issue of health care than Republicans and their presidential nominee John McCain during the campaign season. Obama’s performance as president-elect continues to draw record high numbers in the Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Approval Index.

In the latest survey, voters are more closely divided when asked about helping those who cannot get insurance even if it means an increase in their own incomes taxes. Forty-six percent (46%) oppose a government-controlled health plan for those who cannot get insurance if it means a personal tax increase, but 42% favor such a plan despite the additional cost to themselves. Twelve percent (12%) aren’t sure.

Fifty-one percent (51%) of male voters oppose a health plan that raises their taxes, compared to 42% of women. A plurality of female voters (47%) support such a plan versus 37% of men.

The partisan divide on this question is enormous. Sixty-two percent (62%) of Democratic voters support a government health plan for those who cannot get insurance if it means an increase in their income taxes, but only 20% of Republicans agree. Sixty-nine percent (69%) of GOP voters oppose that kind of plan, along with just 24% of Democrats. Unaffiliated voters by 11 points come down against a plan that raises their taxes.

The gap between black and white voters is also substantial. Seventy-four percent (74%) of African-Americans support a government plan for those without insurance even if their own taxes go up, compared to 39% of whites. Forty-nine percent (49%) of white voters oppose an insurance plan that raises their taxes, along with just 17% of blacks.

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This national telephone survey of 1,000 Likely Voters was conducted by Rasmussen Reports December 5-6, 2008. The margin of sampling error for the survey is /- 3 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence.

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