Home
Archive
Columnists
Video
Blogs
Discuss
About
Search
Donate
Advertise
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Register to Vote: Rock the Vote, powered by Working Assets Wireless
Advertisement
  • AlterNetYour turn

Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.


Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.

Health & Wellness

Your Health Care May Decide the 2008 Election

By Robert L. Borosage, Huffington Post. Posted July 25, 2008.


McCain's health plan will only work for the young, healthy and lucky. This could be the the issue that costs him the election.
Advertisement

Now we're in the presidential campaign's silly season. The primaries are over; the conventions are yet to come. Americans are tuning out politics and dialing in baseball, the Olympics, vacations and the price of gas.

Barack Obama is traveling abroad, demonstrating that he really is a responsible driver. And John McCain seems intent on running into every pothole in the road. This week, he published an op-ed in the New York Post slamming Obama for agreeing with the Iraqi prime minister that the troops should be brought home by 2010. Sure, McCain admitted, "Iraq's army will be equipped and trained by the middle of next year," but it will still need a lot of help. "The Iraqi air force, for one, still lags behind, and no modern army can operate without air cover." Particularly not against the fearsome al Qaeda air force. And McCain didn't even mention the need to build Iraq a blue-water navy. The $3 trillion that Nobel Laureate Joe Stiglitz estimates we've squandered on the war -- about a billion a day in direct and indirect costs -- isn't nearly enough.

Americans will begin to tune in to the election again around the conventions. And in the fall, they'll start to take a closer look at who the candidates are and what they believe. Issues matter less in this assessment than broad measures of the candidate's character and sense about whether he has a clue.

In this assessment, I suspect that one issue, seldom mentioned now, is going to matter a great deal by November. Iraq will be big, no doubt; the economy bigger. But health care may just be the pothole that cracks up McCain's Straight Talk express.

People worry a lot about affording health care. Workers accept lower wages with employers that offer health care. They hang onto lousy jobs to keep their health care. Most labor negotiations and disputes center largely on the costs of health care. On this issue, attention is paid over kitchen tables across the country.

So this fall, Americans will discover an inconvenient truth about John McCain: He wants you to lose your employer-based health care. He thinks you aren't sufficiently conscious about the cost of your health care, and you are using too much of it.

His plan is designed -- with sugar and sticks -- to push you to negotiate on your own with the friendly insurance companies. He'll give you a tax credit -- $2,500 for an individual; $5,000 for a family -- to help you pay the price. And he'll revoke the tax exemption for any health benefits your employer provides. Under his plan, those benefits will be taxed as income. McCain says this will reduce our health care expenditures. He might be right. His preferred option -- health saving accounts -- generally features low monthly payments and very high deductibles. People tend to insure themselves against catastrophe and take a chance on routine health care.

On average, this will work pretty well if you are young and healthy and lucky. But if you are sick, if you have suffered serious illnesses in the past, if you have what insurers call a "pre-existing condition," or if you are older and at higher risk, you're in trouble. For many, insurance won't be available at any price. That's why Elizabeth Edwards noted that neither she nor McCain would be eligible for such coverage since both have struggled with cancer. Many more will find adequate coverage unaffordable. Others will have to choose between paying to see a doctor or buying the weekly groceries. You'll be more "sensitive to price," but you might not think that a good thing.

McCain extols the benefits of private health insurance, but he's never had to negotiate with insurance companies. He's been on government-provided health care virtually his entire life. He was raised on military health care, as the son of an admiral. He then went to the Naval Academy and to the military. A year after leaving the military, he was headed to the Congress and enjoying the best government-supplied health care of all.

For the 9 of 10 voters who have some kind of health insurance at work, the contrast will be clear. Obama will give them a choice between the health care they have and being able to buy into a public plan, something like Medicare. McCain will tax their employer-based health care and give them a break to negotiate their own deal with the insurance companies. At the same time, he will liberate the insurance companies from the state-based regulations that have provided some protection for consumers.

Invest in the Iraqi air force. Tax employer-based health care. Liberate the insurance companies. Leave you on your own on health care. If this keeps up, voters may decide it is time to take the keys away from the Straight Talk Express.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: health care, mccain, health reform, health savings accounts

Robert Borosage is co-director of the Campaign for America's Future, and he has written on political, economic and national security issues for publications including the New York Times and the Nation.

Liked this story? Get top stories in your inbox each week from Health and Wellness! Sign up now »


Advertisement

 

Comments Turn comments off sitewide Give us feedback »
Comments closed.
The comments for this story have been closed. Thank you to everyone who participated.
View:
ba
Posted by: mnstra on Jul 28, 2008 6:10 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Your health care too. Yes most likey true as a further decline in our standard of living. Notice i said "our" standard, not "your standard of living"

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

WHEN YOU WORK THREE JOBS TRYING TO MAKE ENDS MEET THERE IS LITTLE TIME OR
Posted by: Raymond Emerson on Jul 28, 2008 10:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
energy left to inquire about anything. So the east coast political elite pretty much have free reign. Worse yet the drum beat of the right wing think tank talking points on the 6 o'clock news keeps the semi-engaged shooting themselves in the foot.

At times I completely despair of the possibility of change. Democracy is dead. The power elite deeply fear democracy. They know that that is the one thing that can unseat them.

One of the ways to measure the failure of democracy would be to compare actions and results with carefully crafted and reliable polls. Seventy per cent of the citizenry polled positive for federal intervention in health care in 1992. After an expensive public campaign, the 30% won. You obviously don't have a democracy when the majority is being ignored by the power elite.

We have 81% saying that we are headed wrong. Some number of that will think that a different republican can do it. The best opportunity to really get things right was to have elected Ralph Nader. He couldn't even get on the ballot in all states.

Dennis Kucinich had the best national health program. Obama keeps his fuzzy because he has no idea what he can get through congress. Hillary pledged to try to get us all on medicare if we so wished. Her's was the best plan.

The best plan would be to leave everything in place that is already there. Then nobody is mad. Then start a program of building hospitals modeled on the original Kaiser plan. Simply let all of the uninsured go there for no cost. It would take time. If the government were to buy, sensibly, any corporate or private hospitals that were available that might just speed the process. Note that many hospitals have been built with government insured loans. The loans could be taken over and paid out.

I think we are all ready for change. But, some of us live in terror that it will be screwed up. In this town a local medical group offered to guarantee $450,000 to a pediatrician but starts a beginning teacher at 25,000. We seem to be willing to fight and do almost anything about them before they are born but after they are born abandonment is much too good. The republicans just fight and fight over abortion because they are convinced it will take our minds off of the real issues.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Divided We Fail
Posted by: kennickell on Aug 6, 2008 8:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's time we ensure health and long-term financial security for all. That's why AARP is leading Divided We Fail, an initiative to give voice to millions of Americans who are tired of letting Washington gridlock stand in the way of affordable, quality health care and long-term financial security – the most pressing domestic issues facing our nation. Common sense solutions are needed, and everyone – individuals, businesses and government – has a role and a responsibility in ensuring health and financial security for all. Go to www.dividedwefail.org to learn more.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]