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"Socialized medicine would mean that the government would basically run all of health care. They would hire the doctors, they would run the hospitals. They would just run the whole thing. Great Britain has a system of socialized medicine. Nobody is talking about doing that, all right?" And Vice President Joe Biden told NBC's "Meet the Press" on Sunday the Obama administration only views its ownership role as a temporary necessity. "We get the hell, the heck out as quickly as we can. As the president says, we don't want any part of running any of these companies," Biden said. Obama is leaving it to Congress to take the lead in designing a health care plan. He has endorsed broad proposals, supported by many Democrats, to create a government-run health plan to compete with private insurers. Republicans claim such a system would lead to government rationing and denial of care and could drive the private companies out of business. Ross Baker, a political scientist at Rutgers University, said Republicans may be misreading how their evocations of "socialism" will resonate with the public. "I really don't think fear of socialism is gripping Americans by the throat," Baker said. "I think there's a feeling in some ways that the government was asleep at the switch for the past eight years. I think people see steps taken by Obama as a healthy compensation for that inactivity." Meanwhile, the administration is pushing back hard against GOP criticism over its activism in trying to combat the worst recession in decades. "The actions we take are those of necessity, not choice," Lawrence Summers, Obama's top economic adviser, told a forum in New York on Friday. Summers said Obama "did not run for president to manage banks, insurance companies, or car manufacturers ... We do not want to be owners."
[Associated
Press;
Tom Raum covers economics and politics for The Associated Press.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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