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"It takes too much work to figure out what 'scaled back' means," said Judy Feder, a former colleague of Thorpe's at human services, now a health policy professor at Georgetown University in Washington. "You can't do insurance reforms alone without expanding coverage, and the expansion costs money. I don't see the politics coming together for scaling back." The Obama plan focuses on those who have the most trouble getting and keeping health insurance, small businesses and people who buy their own coverage. They would be able to buy private coverage in a new kind of regulated marketplace, with government subsidies for many. Insurers would be forbidden from turning down people with medical problems. Most Americans would be required to carry health insurance. "We are using the private insurance market and private incentives, as opposed to command-and-control," said Nichols. "As a policy matter, we are in the middle." Thorpe's proposal for scaling down Obama's plan would keep the new insurance marketplace and the ban on excluding people with health problems. It would chop the cost from $1 trillion to $500 billion over 10 years, covering about one-third fewer people than Obama. The president has sent mixed signals. Early after the Massachusetts defeat, Obama raised the possibility of paring back his proposal. Then he insisted he still wants a comprehensive approach. Just last Thursday, he publicly raised the prospect that Congress might not act at all. On Sunday, the president invited GOP and Democratic leaders to discuss possible compromises in a televised gathering later this month. The Democrats' reversal "is like a big body blow," said Jennings. "You either stammer and fall down, or you stammer and regain your balance. What Americans respect are those people who can take a punch and come back."
[Associated
Press;
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