Our guest blogger is James Kvaal, Domestic Policy Advisor at the Center for American Progress Action Fund.
The debate continues: Joseph Rago of the Wall Street Journal argues that Sen. McCain “ought to welcome” Elizabeth Edwards’ criticisms of his health care plan. As Edwards says, McCain lets insurers discriminate against people with costly diseases – ironically including McCain himself.
But Rago says that’s okay for three reasons. First, Sen. McCain would create a government backstop for expensive cases. Sounds good, but the devil is in the details – and McCain aides are still “scrambling to come up with ways to satisfy those who want more coverage without violating what they call McCain’s conservative principles.” I’m sure it’s hard to create a new government backstop for millions while also “shrinking government’s role in health care.”
Second, Rago says the McCain plan lets people carry their coverage from job to job. But you can’t keep coverage you never get, and the individual market is fundamentally broken for millions of people.
Finally, Rago says the McCain plan would lower costs. But by leaving millions uninsured, the McCain plan drives up costs by raising administrative costs and undermining preventive care and other efforts to keep costs down.
McCain wants more people to buy health coverage on their own, and his plan might work for families who are healthy and upper-income. But shouldn’t health reform start with people who need help most?
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Same old , same old! The current system is driving the wealth from the middle class to the business class. Other nations with universal health care may have higher taxes however, once all other factors are taken into place, American actually pay more then people in higher taxed nations. Health insurance, retirement savings, kids education savings, student loans, 401k….it’s know wonder people can’t make ends meet. The public must get more for there tax dollars. Other empires have fallen only after the governments spend more on the military then it’s only people. We are at that stage. By Hook or by Crook, universal health care is coming. It’s the only way to compete business wise, it’s the only way to bring together the classes, it’s the only way to redistribute wealth from corporations back to the citizens. The rest of the industrialized world is passing us by without looking back, wondering when will we catch on?
April 5th, 2008 at 11:07 pm