Democrats support expanding Medicare,
with some caveats that could matter to voters
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[March 13, 2019]
By Amanda Becker and Ginger Gibson
WASHINGTON/ST. GEORGE, S.C. (Reuters) -
After launching his 2020 presidential bid last week, John Hickenlooper
took a different stance on establishing a "Medicare-for-all" government
health insurance program than many of his Democratic competitors.
"I probably would oppose Medicare-for-all just because there are over
150 million people, Americans who have some form of private insurance
through their business, and the vast majority of them are happy with
that," the former Colorado governor said on MSNBC. He added he supported
reaching universal health insurance coverage by another route.
In contrast, five of the U.S. senators seeking the Democratic
presidential nomination - Kamala Harris, Cory Booker, Elizabeth Warren,
Kirsten Gillibrand and Bernie Sanders - back a Medicare-for-all bill
that would replace the current mix of private and government coverage
with a plan provided solely by the government.
The candidates' positions highlight a divide in the growing field on one
of the defining issues in the Democratic Party's primary battle. While
Democrats have long pushed for some type of universal healthcare, the
Medicare-for-all proposal has met resistance from more centrist party
members concerned about the hefty price tag and disrupting voters'
current coverage.
Medicare also will likely remain an issue for the general election in
November 2020, with Democrats already criticizing President Donald
Trump's proposal on Monday to slash $845 billion from the program's
budget over the next decade.
New Reuters/Ipsos polling suggests the details of any Medicare overhaul
will matter to voters. While a majority of Democrats generally favor
establishing a Medicare-for-all system, their support would drop if that
system also raised their taxes or did not deliver the same quality of
care, according to the survey, conducted from Feb. 27 to March 4.
(For a graphic on the poll: https://tmsnrt.rs/2Uxt1Eh)
Eighty-five percent of Democrats said they strongly or somewhat
supported a Medicare-for-all health insurance program, but just 27
percent thought it should completely eliminate private insurance.
Thirty-nine percent of Democrats said they would be somewhat less likely
or much less likely to support a Medicare-for-all program if their
income taxes increased, and 42 percent said their support would decrease
if the program raised the national budget deficit.
More than half of Democrats – 64 percent – said they would be less
likely to support a Medicare-for-all program if it covered less than
their current health insurance plan, and 52 percent said they would be
less likely to support it if they had to wait longer to receive
non-emergency care, according to the poll.
Thirty-nine percent of Republicans said they supported a
Medicare-for-all program to some degree, along with 65 percent of
independents.
CANDIDATES STAKE POSITIONS
Democratic candidates eager to show their progressive credentials have
quickly lined up in support of Medicare expansion but are thus far short
on specifics.
Harris declared herself a "big proponent of Medicare-for-all" as she
campaigned in South Carolina, an early primary state, over the weekend.
"Access to affordable healthcare should not be a privilege for those who
can pay it, it should be a right for everybody," she said at a town hall
in the rural town of Hemingway, offering a personal story about how her
mother’s death from cancer was easier to navigate thanks to Medicare.
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Former Gov. John Hickenlooper (D-CO) speaks at the United States
Conference of Mayors winter meeting in Washington, U.S., January 24,
2019. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas/File Photo
The California senator's campaign has said, however, that she would
also be open to more moderate, incremental proposals, after she
suggested eliminating private health insurance altogether at a CNN
town hall in January.
The Senate plan authored by Sanders and co-sponsored by Harris,
Gillibrand, Booker and Warren would finance the Medicare expansion
through a combination of taxes on employers, individuals, businesses
and the wealthy.
The liberal Urban Institute estimated that an earlier, nearly
identical Sanders plan would cost $32 trillion over a decade, with
the additional taxes raising about $15 trillion.
Washington state Governor Jay Inslee, a business-friendly Democrat,
said in an interview with Reuters that he supports attaining
universal healthcare "as quickly as possible" but has not made up
his mind about a Medicare-for-all proposal, or allowing people
younger than 65 to buy into the program.
Senator Amy Klobuchar supports universal healthcare and expanding
Medicare, but has not signed onto Sanders' proposal or committed to
any plans that would eliminate private insurance.
Voters at Harris' events in South Carolina offered mixed views on
the best approach.
Xavaier and Jennette Wescott of Charleston said they like their
private insurance but might be willing to switch coverage in order
to transition to a universal health insurance system.
"For those who need it, it should be instilled," said Xavaier
Wescott, 57, a retired firefighter. "Nowadays it's hard to get
insurance for those who can't afford, and it's hard to maintain a
healthy lifestyle if you don't."
Jennette Wescott suggested a Medicare phase-in for young people.
About 64 percent of Democrats and 48 percent of Republicans in the
Reuters/Ipsos poll said they would enroll in Medicare if the
eligibility age were lowered and they were given the opportunity.
Brittany Dickson, 28, of Summerville, South Carolina, said her
current high-deductible private plan would justify paying additional
taxes to finance a Medicare-for-all system. She has a $5,000
deductible before her private insurance kicks in.
"Still have to pay all this money before insurance covers anything,"
Dickson said. "I pay taxes for a lot of different stuff anyway. I
think it's for a good cause."
The Reuters/Ipsos online poll of 2,936 people was conducted Feb. 27
to March 4. It has a credibility interval, a measure of the poll's
precision, of 2 percentage points.
(Reporting by Amanda Becker in Washington and Ginger Gibson in South
Carolina; additional reporting by Chris Kahn in New York and Sharon
Bernstein in Seattle; editing by Colleen Jenkins and Dan Grebler)
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