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				"For years, Washington politicians have allowed the 
				pharmaceutical industry, giant insurance companies, and powerful 
				hospital systems to profit off of people when they are at their 
				sickest and most vulnerable," said Buttigieg, who is mayor of 
				South Bend, Indiana.
 "My 'Medicare for All Who Want It' plan will create a health 
				care system that puts power in the hands of each American."
 
 Democratic candidates vying for the chance to challenge 
				Republican President Donald Trump in the November 2020 election 
				say universal healthcare is a top priority. But they disagree on 
				the best way to achieve it.
 
 Buttigieg's proposal differs from the "Medicare for All" plan of 
				Senators Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, which would 
				provide coverage to everyone based on the federal Medicare 
				program for Americans 65 and older and practically eliminate 
				private insurance.
 
 "It doesn’t force Americans off private plans they may want to 
				keep, but offers them a meaningful public alternative," 
				Buttigieg's campaign said in a statement.
 
 The plan would spur private insurers to compete on price, the 
				statement said, and if they "are not able to offer something 
				dramatically better, this public plan will create a natural 
				glide-path to Medicare for All."
 
 The statement said the plan would also expand subsidies for 
				low-income people to pay health insurance premiums, cap premiums 
				at 8.5% of income for everyone, and empower the federal 
				government to challenge healthcare mergers that raise costs.
 
 The statement did not refer to former President Barack Obama's 
				landmark 2010 Affordable Care Act, popularly known as Obamacare, 
				but said a Buttigieg administration would "reverse the Trump 
				administration rules loosening restrictions on association 
				health plans and short-term limited duration plans, which 
				provide limited benefits and consumer protections."
 
 Former Vice President Joe Biden, who has criticized Medicare for 
				All plans as efforts to unravel Obamacare, is the front-runner 
				in the field of 20 Democratic candidate. Among the rest, only 
				Warren and Sanders have double-digit support in opinion polls.
 
 (Reporting by Tim Reid; Writing by Mohammad Zargham; Editing by 
				Sonya Hepinstall)
 
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