Beto O'Rourke's Health Care Plan Is an Attempt to Back Medicare for All Without the Problems of Single Payer
Medicare for America doesn't solve the problems of government-run health care. It just creates new ones.

If you want to understand the current state of the Democratic party's internal debate on health care, it's worth looking at how Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) responded to a question about the issue at a CNN Townhall earlier this week. Warren is a supporter of Medicare for All, the single-payer plan put forth by her rival for the Democratic presidential nomination, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), so you might have expected her to respond by pointing to her support for the plan.
But the question was about the problems that single-payer would cause for labor unions, and Warren, faced with a criticism from the left, didn't jump to a defense of the idea. Instead, she outlined a number of possibilities for expanding Medicare—letting more people buy in, or altering the age range so that it covers people younger than 65, and so on. She closed by saying she would get all the stakeholders together to discuss options.
Warren has a very specific, very detailed plan for everything, right down to which iPhone charging cables you should be able to buy. Her campaign so far has been structured as a series of policy briefings designed to demonstrate her command of policy details, as if she is running for White House legislative director rather than president.
But for once, she didn't have a plan—just options and possibilities. She appears to have discovered that being very specific about health care plans makes those plans much easier to criticize. For a presidential candidate, a potential and vague health care plan can be more valuable than a full-fledged proposal. Which is why her answer was effectively a punt: I don't have a plan—but elect me president and I'll figure one out.
Warren's uncertainty mirrors the larger debate that is going on in the Democratic party right now. On the one side are the die-hard single-payeristas, who believe that a full-fledged single-payer plan that outlaws today's private health insurance market is the only way to go. That includes people like Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), who recently introduced a single-payer plan that would get rid of private coverage in just two years—even faster than the four-year transition called for in the Sanders plan.
On the other side are people like Democratic Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, who believe that folks like Jayapal are crazy, which is another way of saying "people who can read the polls." (When one side of your party thinks Bernie Sanders isn't radical enough, it has the effect of making ordinary big-government liberals like Pelosi look like sensible moderates.) For the most part, this faction wants to tinker with Obamacare and avoid grand health policy schemes.
The challenge for the 2020 Democratic primary contenders, then, is to situate themselves somewhere in the middle—embracing Sanders-style Medicare for All in theory while avoiding its pitfalls in practice. Warren's carefully non-committal list of options was effectively a way of suggesting support for all the popular parts of Medicare for All without wedding herself to any of its less popular aspects.
That's roughly what former Texas Rep. Beto O'Rourke is doing with his embrace this week of Medicare for America, a health care plan that would substantially expand Medicare without immediately eliminating all private insurance. Under the plan, newborns, the uninsured, Medicaid enrollees, and people covered through Obamacare's exchanges would be automatically enrolled in a revised Medicare program. Employers could continue to offer private health coverage, but only if it met federal benefits requirements, which would include covering 80 percent of expenses on average, or employers could move workers into the government plan and pay into the system. Individuals who work for companies that offer coverage could also opt into Medicare on their own.
In theory, this solves the biggest (though far from the only) political problem with single-payer: mass elimination of private coverage. As O'Rourke told the Texas Tribune, "It responds to the fact that so many Americans have said, 'I like my employer-based insurance. I want to keep it. I like the network I'm in. I like the doctor that I see.' " This is the middle ground, as O'Rourke sees it.
In practice, there would still be disruption, albeit on a smaller scale: The individual market, which includes plans purchased on Obamacare's exchanges, would effectively cease to exist, forcing millions off their current coverage. Some employers who currently offer coverage would probably push workers onto Medicare immediately, and over time more might follow.
And while the plan would technically preserve some role for employer based private coverage, it would effectively put the federal government in charge of that insurance. Under Medicare for America, your choice would be to get coverage through the federal government, or get employer coverage that has been…approved by the federal government. Some choice.
O'Rourke's embrace of Medicare for America is also an attempt to avoid another big hurdle for single-payer: the massive increase in government spending it would require. Multiple estimates put the federal price tag for Sanders' plan at around $32 trillion over a decade, but there's no clearly defined plan for financing the increase in government spending.
Medicare for America, in contrast, pares back tax reductions passed by Republicans in 2017, taxes households earning more than $500,000 annually, boosts payroll taxes, and imposes new excise taxes on tobacco, alcohol, and sugar-heavy drinks. It also requires participants to pay premiums and out of pocket costs up to $3,500 for individuals or $5,000 for families. Given how much of the appeal of Sanders-style single payer is that it would eliminate premiums and out of pocket spending, and how negatively the public reacts to raising taxes to pay for government-run health care, these seem like potentially significant political problems that would have to be overcome.
Medicare for America doesn't solve the problems of Medicare for All so much as shift them around, creating new ones of its own. It tackles the expense of health care by foisting it on individuals and corporations through fees, premiums, and taxes. It leaves some private employer coverage in place, but turns it into a de facto public utility. It doesn't disrupt everyone's coverage, but its disruptive effects would still impact millions of people. It's just a different set of trade-offs.
What the current crop of Democratic presidential hopefuls all seem to want is a plan that is all benefits and no downsides—comprehensive coverage for everyone, with no costs imposed on anyone (except perhaps a very small cohort of very wealthy people, who, for the purposes of these campaigns, don't really matter). That plan doesn't exist, which may be why Warren, who is typically an effective tactician when it comes to balancing policy with politics, is offering only options and ideas, maybes and coulds and possiblies. She says she'll sit down with all the relevant stakeholders and come up with a plan that satisfies everyone, but she doesn't know what that plan is yet. That's probably because there isn't one.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Warren has a very specific, very detailed plan for everything, right down to which iPhone charging cables you should be able to buy. Her campaign so far has been structured as a series of policy briefings designed to demonstrate her command of policy details, as if she is running for White House legislative director rather than president.
If Robert is Bobby Newport, as someone said a couple days ago, Warren is clearly Leslie Knope, but without the sunny personality.
Google is now paying $17000 to $22000 per month for working online from home. I have joined this job 2 months ago and i have earned $20544 in my first month from this job. I can say my life is changed-completely for the better! Check it out whaat i do.....
click here ======?? http://www.Jobs89.com
Google is now paying $17000 to $22000 per month for working online from home. I have joined this job 2 months ago and i have earned $20544 in my first month from this job. I can say my life is changed-completely for the better! Check it out what i do
So I started....>>>>>>> http://www.Pay-Buzz.com
As O'Rourke told the Texas Tribune, "It responds to the fact that so many Americans have said, 'I like my employer-based insurance. I want to keep it. I like the network I'm in. I like the doctor that I see.' "
This is the scary part (or, maybe one of the scary parts). Someone will eventually come along with some single-payer concept where you can keep your network/doctor. When they do, that will be enough to enable it to actually pass into law. People will be happy that they avoided a mild nuisance and oblivious that they just destroyed any hope of maintaining a reasonable, semi-functional health care system.
Those progressives may have to go away if they try that.
"Someone will eventually come along with some single-payer concept where you can keep your network/doctor."
But we were told that the ACA would do that. Obama wouldn't have lied, would he?
""Someone will eventually come along with some single-payer concept where you can keep your network/doctor. ""
Doctors know the government is a big player in causing provider burnout. Government health care may push many to leave the field. Doesn't sound like a way to keep your doctor.
Bring them in from India. Problem solved.
Tele-medicine baby!
How about just leaving me alone, letting me pick my own fucking individual health insurance? How about letting me take my own health insurance deduction instead of leaving that to my employer? How about expanding the Cobra program if you feel the need to fuck around with health insurance anyway?
No? Don't trust me? How about me signing a goddam contract that I will not take any "free" government medical care at any ER or other facility where my own choice of health insurance isn't accepted? How about me pledging to forego free government health care if I chose unwisely?
Fucking idiots. Fucking nannies. Fucking slavers. I hate my fucking elite betters.
Clearly you also need government-managed (mandated) counseling.
Equilibrium was a documentary.
In theory, this solves the biggest (though far from the only) political problem with single-payer: mass elimination of private coverage.
England didn't eliminate private coverage with the NHS, why do we think any single-payer system employed here would do the same?
Because one of the plans put forth has the language to do exactly that. Liberals here are not just trying to move healthcare to government. They are trying to take down big business, and remove disparities caused by allowing the rich to have better and/or private care.
I've seen a show on Netflix called Botched Bodies. It's a British show about plastic surgery and such gone wrong. They kept saying that one of the problems is that the healthcare in England is not very regulated. Perhaps that's why they can spend a little over 3G a patient and we spend a little over 8G a patient.
Because that's the ultimate goal. Harris and that street-shitter representative from Seattle have already admitted it. Harris had to walk it back, but it's out there now.
there's no reason it would. Except that what England did was reform its medical DELIVERY system. What pols here seem to be proposing is reforming medical financing.
They're not actually serious because if they were the first step would be to actually try to understand the problem.
...which is actually neither delivery nor financing, but expenses.
I may not be Hihn's sock in real life, but that's a point I agree w him on.
Hihn never addressed expenses either. His go-to autistic copypasta was to pimp charity hospitals. That's delivery and financing.
Pi still = 3.1415926535897932384626433832.....
Claiming you're square the circle simply shows you to be the lefty dimbulb you are.
on Saturday I got a gorgeous Ariel Atom after earning $6292 this ? four weeks past, after lot of struggels Google, Yahoo, Facebook proffessionals have been revealed the way and cope with gape for increase home income in suffcient free time.You can make $9o an hour working from home easily??. VIST THIS SITE RIGHT HERE
>>=====>>>> http://www.Aprocoin.com
commies can stick their Medicare for All up the commie asses
It's going to be interesting how they solve the financing.
A rough calculation of medicare for all using the same funding model medicare currently uses would result in increasing the medicare tax to about 7.5% paid by the employer and the employee or total of around 15% of compensation plus quarterly premiums for all enrolled as well as a large increase of spending from the general revenue.
there's no "general revenue" left to spend. it'll be more debt.
Do you utilize a pay~pal account.. in case you do you can make an extra 650 /week to your account working at home for a few hours each day, check out this site
.??????O OPEN~JOB~START
Employers could continue to offer private health coverage, but only if it met federal benefits requirements...
Whew.... so if I decide to change my gender later, or if I become the first pregnant man, I'm covered. All my contraception will be free too, and fetus removal if I opt for that at any point.
Another politician ? another plan for medical delivery (erroneously labelled "healthcare"). There, however, is a scientifically-based, scientifically-directed alternative designed by a physician with documented knowledge, training, and experience in the Science of Human Behavior.
Consider a plan for delivery of medical care characterized by the following 12 benefits for every citizen:
01) Universal coverage for basic services;
02) Optional extended benefits;
03) Simplicity;
04) Optional single-payer;
05) Private Sector with competition;
06) Straightforwardness;
07) Affordability;
08) Freedom from special taxes;
09) Minimal regulations;
10) Minimal bureaucracy;
11) Freedom from fraud at taxpayers' expense; and
12) Acceptability by insurance companies.
One exists, as presented as far back as 1994 in Healthcare Reform D.O.A. (Unsolicited, nominated for two, national awards by the academic arm of the American insurance-industry.) and currently updated in the novel, Retribution Fever.
Our current system spends over $3 trillion a year, so the criticism about Bernie's proposal costing over $30 trillion over ten years is stupid. Concerns about price controls and treatment choices under Medicare for All are valid -but private insurance plans do their best to control prices and restrict treatments. Free market forces for health care have been severely muted for decades due to employer-provided health insurance and Medicare. We should recognize that our flawed, inefficient system has help finance world-leading medical breakthroughs for decades - but our system seems destined to blow up - it's too damn expensive.
I have a single medication that costs over $50k a year. There is no alternative or generic option for this medication. I pay into my company's health insurance at the tune of $500 a month for myself, my spouse, and my child. I also carry a $2,700 individual deductible ($5,400 family). Why does it feel like no one bothers to calculate the actual costs already being spent on US medical care by individuals? The focus is only on how much we're currently being taxed and how much that would change under single-payer, Medicare for All, or any other presented plan, without consideration that we're already spending a LOT more as individuals on medical care than just the Medicaid taxes we pay. Also, all the doctors I see already accept Medicaid, as do most medical professionals, so I don't see how a government plan would change most people's choice of doctor, seems it's more of a panic of people fearing things they don't yet know. I'm not running for political office, so I am not going to present a plan here, but leaving things as they are can't sustainably be an option. It's too damn expensive.
AMA for All - 1910
Hospitals for All - 1946
Medicare for All Elderly - 1965
Medicaid for All Poor - 1965
Obamacare for All - 2014
Today; A major health crisis exists due to sky-rocketing prices!
Stupid - Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fFoXyFmmGBQ
https://mises.org/wire/ how-government-regulations- made-healthcare-so-expensive
as Douglas responded I am stunned that a person able to earn $7781 in 4 weeks on the internet. did you look at this webpage
Thanks admin for giving such valuable information through your article . Your article is much more similar to https://www.hermesbagstmall.com/ word unscramble tool because it also provides a lot of knowledge of vocabulary new words with its meanings.