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Will Obama Take on the Health Care Fight?

By Marie Cocco, Washington Post Writers Group. Posted August 12, 2008.


Obama did not campaign during the primaries on a plan that would achieve universal coverage.
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WASHINGTON -- Before the energy-price crisis, before the mortgage crisis, before the credit crisis and the banking crisis, there was the crisis in health insurance that is in reality a crisis in care.

This crisis has deepened in recent years as the number of uninsured has climbed and out-of-pocket costs for those still with insurance have soared. It has become common knowledge that a serious illness -- even among those with insurance -- can plunge families into bankruptcy. Though "problems paying for gas" topped the financial challenges people listed in the most recent Kaiser Family Foundation health tracking poll, "problems paying for health care and health insurance" ranked third -- just behind job concerns but well ahead of paying for food, dealing with credit card debt and paying the mortgage.

So it is downright shocking that there was a tussle over what the 2008 Democratic platform would say about the party's generations-long, bedrock commitment to health care for all Americans. In short, presumptive nominee Barack Obama did not draft a statement keeping that pledge. He presented instead his plan as one that would provide "access to" affordable and comprehensive health care. A coalition of liberal activists and Hillary Clinton supporters managed to negotiate a change so that the platform says the party is "united behind a commitment that every American man, woman and child be guaranteed to have affordable, comprehensive health care." Inclusion of the word "guaranteed" was the crucial point.

On the surface, this may look like a victory for Clinton supporters or even for the far larger group -- that is, millions of Democrats -- who have long believed that the promise of guaranteed, universal health care is a fundamental principle of their party. I am less certain, and it's not because I know that politicians can discard party platforms faster than they rid themselves of scandal-tainted donors.

It is because Obama did not campaign during the primaries on a plan that would achieve universal coverage, and indeed, excoriated Clinton for her proposal to mandate that everyone have it. In fact, even some of those involved in achieving the small health-care victory take little solace from it. "I'm not sure that Obama will actually pursue the same kind of idea that we had inserted in the platform," says Donna Smith, who lobbied the platform panel as a member of Progressive Democrats of America. "I think we will have to pursue our congressional representatives to bring legislation forward."

Smith is not a Clinton delegate, or even a convention delegate. She and her husband Larry were featured in the Michael Moore film Sicko because they were forced into bankruptcy and lost their home trying to pay the out-of-pocket costs stemming from her treatment for uterine cancer and his for heart disease. "Our purpose was not to attack the party," says Smith, who says she wants Obama to be elected and describes herself and her husband as "good and loyal Democrats." But certain lines have to be drawn.

"To say you're going to provide affordable coverage to people is not the same as giving them health care," she says. "Just because you have insurance coverage does not guarantee you access to the care that you and your doctor decide you need. And people with insurance understand that."

Most Democrats do, too.

In 1992, the party's platform said everyone should have "universal" access to health care "not as a privilege, but as a right." In 1996, a party chastened after the collapse of President Bill Clinton's health care initiative nonetheless committed itself to "ensuring that Americans have access to affordable, high-quality health care." In 2000, the platform noted that "for 50 years, the Democratic Party has been engaged in a battle to provide the kind of health care a great nation owes its people." In 2004, the platform said this: "We believe that health care is a right and not a privilege."

Securing that right is as important now as it was four, or even 50, years ago. When gas prices recede, when the housing market stabilizes and fears of imminent job losses ebb, there will still be an unconscionable gap between the glory of American medical science and the ability of millions of people to get the most basic care.

Obama avoided an intra-party brawl over the health platform. The unanswerable question is whether he will be as determined, as president, to take on the much larger -- and excruciatingly harder -- health-care fight.

© 2008, Washington Post Writers Group

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Marie Cocco is a prize-winning syndicated columnist on political and cultural topics for The Washington Post Writers Group. She is a frequent commentator on national TV and radio shows.

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View:
NO- OBAMA SHOULD BUT WON'T
Posted by: drricklippin on Aug 12, 2008 6:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
President Obama will have much on his plate-too mch

Based on his performance in the primaries, his weak published health care reform plan, and, yes, because he is trying to quit smoking, I do NOT believe he will be as activist as he should be on health care reform

I sincerely hope that my prediction is wrong!

Because US vox-populi is as ripe as a sweet Georgia peach in the summer on this issue!

Dr. Rick Lippin
Southampton,pa
ralippin@aol.com

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Barack Obama is Politics as Usual ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Aug 13, 2008 12:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama has run to what the Corporate Media calls the "middle ", where, actually, nobody is ...

People want Medicare for All, people want a tax system that taxes the very rich and the corporations their fair share, people want to get out of Iraq and Afghanistan, people want a real energy policy, people want accountability for the telecoms and the ripoffs and crimes of the last eight years.

Obama has turned his back on change and accountability and embraced an electorate that doesn't exist, those that want more of the same.

Obama is proving that his talent is being a "people pleaser".He is not taking on the interests that everyone knows will have to be defeated to move this country forward.He is not demanding that those that bilked and lied to this country be investigated and prosecuted. In short Obama has proven himself as unworthy of our trust.

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Obama and Health Care
Posted by: khabikhushi on Aug 14, 2008 3:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama won't lead the way to a sane, just health care system with single payer, universal care but we can lead and he will have to follow. Let's focus on getting him elected while never losing sight of our responsibility to work just as hard after the election to hold him and Congress accountable to us, not the corporations and certainly not the insurance companies.

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» RE: Obama and Health Care Posted by: SinglePayerActivist
newdeal
Posted by: politicalagnostic on Aug 14, 2008 11:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When the discussion for single payer systems like Canada's comes up and is rejected by MacBush and the neocons as "socialised medicine", it should be pointed out that John McCain has been on socialised health care his entire life.

From the day he was born to the present, he has not had to use anything but the Govt. system.

Since he was born into a military family, he has known nothing of the private healthcare industry.

How can he possibly be expected to fix that which he knows nothing about.

If socialised medicine is catagorized as a govt. handout, then maybe he should think twice about throwing stones in his glass house.

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Suzanne
Posted by: karin42 on Aug 18, 2008 2:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think we have to support Obama and help get him elected now. There is time to argue with his approach to health care later. He has said all along he will focus on lowering the cost of health care for everyone and make sure it is available for everybody who wants it. He willmake it mandatory for children. He is basing his approach after what we have here in Massachusetts which is a good start. Obama will bring everybody together, doctors and healthcare providers, the insurance industry, big pharm, etc and say this is what we need to do and he'll put them together in a room and tell them to work it out. I don't think we would see and changes for the better for twenty years if we tried to overthrow the current system and force a single payer plan in this country. It was created in Canada and Europe at a time when social democracies were suported by everyone..Here too many people will feel threatened and see it as socialism and fight like hell against it. His plan might be far from perfect but it is a beginning. It's pragmatic and realistic and we might actually get something done..There are already Harry and Louise ads on the tube and sometimes it makes sense to start with what we have. I like what we have in Massachusetts but it will take some years to work the kinks out of it. It is based on the system that already exists and I pay $100 a month less than I did before. Time to stop destroying our chances to win in November by being overly idealistic and judgmental of Obama.
Unless we want McCain to win we'd better start supporting him and stop making him in our own image. Anybody who has read his books or listened to him speak should know by now that he never claimed to be a liberal or to agree with only progressive ideals. He will always try to find a middle ground and govern the whole country. That isn't caving that's who he is. There's something to be said for compromise and working with others who disagree...It's the only way anything will ever get done.

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MCBUSH WILL SUPPORT CUTTING THE LEGS FROM UNDER THE STATUS QUO. OBAMA
Posted by: Raymond Emerson on Aug 18, 2008 2:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
won't commit himself. That is probably because he believes he can't get reform through congress. Bill Clinton couldn't. Harry Truman couldn't. Lyndon barely got medicare. Big money flowed in against Hillary for a reason.

Nothing short of a democratic landslide will move things. Part of the democrats you put in will chicken out, Part will be DINOs, and part will just sell out. Notice that there was no mention of bipartisanship for 6 years. Then all of a sudden it became a big deal. The republicans will attempt to leverage any power they have against us.

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Of course not! That's up to us
Posted by: eridani on Aug 18, 2008 3:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
FDR ran on a balanced budget platform, of all things. He nevertheless accomplished a lot of progressive agenda items. Eleanor was always bugging him about doing more, being more inclusive of women and minorities. He always replied "If you want me to do that, just tell your friends to get themselves organized and MAKE me do it."

An important lesson for all health care activists now.

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