Hillary Clinton revives dream to bring healthcare to all
by Tom Baldwin
Hillary Clinton announced a new plan for universal healthcare in
America , 13 years to the month since the collapse of a previous effort
almost wrecked her husband's presidency.
She claimed to have learnt from her mistakes in the 1990s when the
then First Lady was handed an unprecedented frontline role in Bill
Clinton's White House as head of the Administration's health taskforce.
The resulting 1,342-page proposal crashed in Congress, where it was
seen as a symbol of "big Government". Within two months of it being
declared dead, the Republicans won control over both the Senate and, for
the first time in 40 years, the House of Representatives.
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But Mrs Clinton, who leads the race for the 2008 Democratic
presidential nomination, is seeking to turn this epic failure into a
strength with a campaign in which she has repeatedly emphasised her
experience in government.
Speaking on Monday in Iowa, she said: "I believe everyone - every
man, woman and child - should have quality, affordable healthcare in
America. I intend to be the President that accom-plishes that goal for
our country."
Although the US spends more on healthcare than other Western
countries, 47 million Americans - one sixth of the population - are not
covered by private insurance schemes or government-funded schemes.
Mrs Clinton's plan, which would cost about $110 billion (œ55 billion)
a year, is similar to those proposed by Democratic rivals John Edwards
and Barack Obama which build on existing private health schemes.
She would insist that everyone is covered, in the same way that
"drivers in most states are required to have car insurance".
Businesses would be told to offer insurance to their workers or
contribute to a pool that would help to pay for those without it.
There would be tax breaks for small employers unable to meet the cost
and a choice of expanded government programmes available for those still
left without coverage.
Insurance companies would be barred from "cherry-picking" healthy
people, refusing to cover the sick, and from charging more to people
with preexisting conditions.
The assault against her first efforts at legislation in the 1990s was
led by the insurance industry, which poured millions of dollars into a
famous TV advertising campaign featuring a middle-class couple called
Harry and Louise.
"This plan forces us to buy our insurance through new mandatory
government health alliances," complained Louise. "Run by tens of
thousands of bureaucrats," said Harry. "Having choices we don't like is
no choice at all," replied Louise.
"They choose, we lose," they said.Mrs Clinton emphasised that she was
not advocating "government-run healthcare". Nor would the better-off -
who currently enjoy the best healthcare in the world - be forced to
change. "If you like the plan you have, you can keep it," she said.
But Mitt Romney, a Republican presidential candidate, said: "Hillary
care continues to be bad medicine." He suggested that the proposal was
reminiscent of socialist proposals alien to America, saying: "She takes
her inspiration from European bureaucracies."
Democratic opponents, including Mr Obama, have also been taking
swipes at her past failure, saying: "The real key to passing any
healthcare reform is the ability to bring people together in an open,
transparent process that builds a broad consensus for change."
Timesonline, UK
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