Kamala Harris on Monday unveiled a plan to achieve universal health care coverage by growing Medicare with the help of private insurers, an effort that splits the difference with her chief Democratic presidential rivals and equips the California senator with her own signature health care proposal ahead of this week’s debates.
“Medicare works,” Harris wrote in a Medium essay published Monday morning. “Now, let’s expand it to all Americans and give everyone access to comprehensive health care.”
Under "KamalaCare," which would be phased in over a decade, Harris has at last settled on a way to keep private health insurers in the fold after seesawing on the question since January — and she would do so by leaning on an existing and popular federal program.
Harris’ offering maintains her commitment to universal health care coverage — demanded by her party’s base — while lowering the temperature among the guardians of Obamacare who fear that overreaching would wipe out their hard-fought gains. Kathleen Sebelius, who served as secretary of Health and Human Services in the Obama administration and was consulted on Harris’ plan, blessed it as “a smart way to get to ‘Medicare for All’ where all individuals and employers can transition smoothly into a system that covers everyone.”
But Harris’ proposal skimps on myriad details, including the plan’s cost, and will likely still face skepticism from progressives — worried about propping up insurance companies and the slower pace of change — as well as from conservatives and deep-pocketed health care lobbyists staunchly opposed to any form of Medicare expansion.
Health care has consistently been a top issue — if not the leading concern — among voters nationally and in the key early voting states but has bitterly divided the Democratic primary.
Former Vice President Joe Biden, a top Obamacare defender, has called to preserve a role for private insurers while creating a government-run alternative, arguing millions of voters prefer to keep their private coverage. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont counters that all Americans should be enrolled in a single government-run plan, insisting that it’s the most efficient way to lower health care costs.
Throughout the campaign, Harris has publicly wavered on whether her health plan would eliminate private insurance, and the months of seeming reversals exposed her to bipartisan attacks and criticism that she risked looking inconsistent or, worse, coming off as pandering.
After raising her hand at June’s Democratic presidential debate, suggesting she favored abolishing private health insurance, Harris the next day said she had misinterpreted the question, which she took to mean giving up her own private plan to enroll in a government-run plan.
Seventy percent of Americans favor “Medicare for All” if given a choice between a government plan and private insurance, according to a recent NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll. But just 4 in 10 support a mandatory government plan for all.
Harris’ new plan breaks with her rivals who occupy the opposite poles of the debate by effectively proposing “Medicare Advantage for All” — permitting private insurers to continue selling plans, akin to the 2-decade-old offshoot of Medicare, in addition to letting Americans immediately buy into the traditional Medicare program and adding new benefits, like more mental health services. As a result, Americans would be able to choose between the public plan and certified private Medicare plans. Harris also said she would immediately enroll newborns and the uninsured, an effort to quickly get to universal coverage, if elected.
Harris warned of strict cost and quality standards on participating insurers, although she wasn’t specific about what those requirements would be.
“If they want to play by our rules, they can be in the system,” Harris wrote in the Medium post. “If not, they have to get out.”
About a third of current Medicare enrollees are covered through Medicare Advantage. The program for private insurers, launched under the Clinton administration and expanded under George W. Bush, has bipartisan appeal. Senior Trump administration officials have touted the benefits of Medicare Advantage even as they’ve mocked Sanders’ plan and Biden’s public option — sometimes in the same speech.
In an effort to reduce disruption, Harris would have her reforms phase in over a decade; for comparison, Sanders’ plan has a more ambitious four-year timetable. She also laidout proposals intended to boost rural health, lower maternal mortality and reduce the high cost of prescription drugs. Private insurers could continue to sell supplemental insurance for cosmetic surgery and other niche services.
In a statement, Sebelius called Harris’ proposal “innovative” and said it built on the progress of Obamacare while expanding on the promise of universal coverage through the Medicare system.
Andy Slavitt, a former Obama administration official who oversaw Medicare, Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act, added in an interview: “Sen. Harris’ plan is an effort to balance idealism and pragmatism. If she explains it right, there’s something here for Bernie supporters and Biden supporters and definitely people who voted for Trump.”
Click Here: geelong cats guernsey 2019
Harris’ plan has the support of senior officials in the Obama administration and includes principles supported by advocacy groups like Families USA, which helped lead the organizing effort to pass the ACA in 2009 and into 2010.
However, some progressives have called for the outright elimination of private insurance, saying companies have incentives to maximize their profits at the expense of patients. Private insurers have faced repeated allegations of defrauding Medicare Advantage of billions of dollars.
Harris’ 10-year timetable invites uncertainty, given that a term-limited Harris would be out of office and a future administration could reverse her plan.
The health care proposal will also meet resistance from lobbyists for hospitals, doctors, pharmaceutical companies and other major health care sectors, worried that her plan would cut their clients’ pay. Dozens of prominent health care advocacy groups have joined a coalition that so far has opposed all forms of Medicare expansion.
But it could stave off anticipated confrontations with the second Democratic presidential debate of the year approaching. Biden and aides in recent weeks telegraphed that they plan to draw a sharper contrast with Harris, in part over the question of how she would fund the multitrillion-dollar cost of universal coverage.
Harris, a Medicare for All supporter who came out for Sanders’ single-payer health care bill two years ago, has been distancing herself from his $3.2 trillion plan and how he might pay for it. Campaigning on her own signature tax cut for working families and the middle class, Harris recently stressed that her health care vision would not further hike taxes on those Americans, a position some dismissed as unrealistic.
In her Medium post, Harris partially addressed the longstanding funding questions. She praised Sanders’ financing suggestions for his Medicare for All proposal, saying he’d presented “good options,” particularly making the nation’s highest earners and corporations pay more through more progressive income, payroll and estate taxes.
But she took aim at her rival’s potential tax on households making more than $29,000 — saying it “hits the middle class too hard” — and instead called to exempt households making less than $100,000 as well as some middle-class families in high-cost areas.
Harris said she would tax stock trades at 0.2 percent, bond trades at 0.1 percent and derivative transactions at 0.002 percent to make up the difference.
“Think of it like this: that’s a $2 fee on a $1,000 trade by investors and big banks,” she wrote, to raise $2 trillion over 10 years.