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- <text id=94TT1189>
- <title>
- Sep. 05, 1994: Politics:Checking Out
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 05, 1994 Ready to Talk Now?:Castro
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- POLITICS, Page 40
- Checking Out
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> With all hope vanished for universal health care, Bill Clinton
- will settle for less. But how much less?
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by James Carney, Michael Duffy and Dick Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> When F. Scott Fitzgerald pronounced his famous definition of
- a first-rate intelligence--the ability to hold two opposing
- ideas at the same time and still function--he offered an example
- the Clinton Administration seems to have taken to heart. "One
- should be able to see that things are hopeless," Fitzgerald
- wrote, "and yet be determined to make them otherwise." That
- could be a job qualification for White House aides. In a summer
- when health-care reform has run into one deadly obstacle after
- another, the Administration never abandoned its line that all
- things were still possible.
- </p>
- <p> Until now. At the very moment when the President and his advisers
- are gratefully celebrating their crucial, complex victory on
- the crime bill, they have settled into a painful admission.
- Comprehensive health-care reform--meaning the ambitious kind
- that would produce something like universal coverage--is dead
- for this year, perhaps for the rest of Clinton's term.
- </p>
- <p> That's the hard lesson the President was confronted with last
- week. After almost a year of wrangling, when all is said and
- done about health care, less will be done than said. Even the
- prospects for a modest plan based on the proposals of the 20
- or so Senators who call themselves the Mainstream Coalition
- are decidedly iffy, so much so that Clinton is signaling he
- may settle for an even more modest outcome--a piecemeal collection
- of insurance changes. And if major changes don't get through
- this Congress, don't expect reform to find a warmer welcome
- in the next one, where Republican numbers--and the general
- air of partisan belligerence--can be counted on to rise.
- </p>
- <p> Earlier in the week, when he went public with criticism of the
- mainstream proposal, Clinton appeared to have given up hope
- of any sizable achievement. "It will be better not to do anything
- at all," he said in a speech, "than to adopt a program that
- would actually increase costs of health care and reduce coverage."
- One day later came the miracle of the crime bill. With that
- victory fully in mind, and with his own reform plan going nowhere,
- Senate majority leader George Mitchell seemed to move away from
- the bill he introduced a few weeks ago and embarked on an attempt
- to negotiate a compromise based on the mainstream proposal.
- </p>
- <p> When minority leader Robert Dole made conciliatory noises, a
- last-minute save seemed at least doable, if not probable. "I
- believe we can still reach agreement on this kind of reform
- package that can help millions of people," Dole said, noting
- that things were now moving in the direction of his own plan.
- That one is even more scaled down, offering mostly subsidies
- and insurance reforms. By showing his peaceable side, Dole will
- offend the tooth-and-claw wing of the G.O.P., who say they have
- more to gain this November by denying Democrats any hint of
- a victory on health care. But as a congressional leader and
- presidential hopeful, Dole has to worry about leaving voters
- with the impression that obstructionism is a Republican Party
- principle. Though he had opposed cigarette taxes as a financing
- mechanism, Dole indicated that now he would accept one.
- </p>
- <p> The President endorsed Mitchell's new posture. Asked by reporters,
- he declined three times to repeat his threat to veto any bill
- that does not provide universal coverage. White House aides
- think they can offset the image of Clinton the flip-flopper
- by playing up the image of Clinton the man who at least made
- the first important steps in the direction of change. Even so,
- the President is wary of the mainstream plan. While it offers
- a promise of keeping health-care inflation in check, which was
- one of his goals, it aims to reach just 93% of all Americans
- by 2004--still short of his definition of universal coverage.
- That might not rattle the middle-class voters who are largely
- covered, but another of its shortcomings could be a political
- danger. The plan would cut Medicare deeply, without helping
- elderly Americans pay for prescription drugs or long-term care.
- As now conceived, it could make Clinton a target of their not
- inconsiderable fury.
- </p>
- <p> The mainstream plan also contains what may be a serious policy
- weakness. It calls for community rating, which has the effect
- of narrowing the gap between the low premiums paid by the young
- and the high premiums paid by the elderly. But it doesn't mandate
- universal coverage, which would prevent the young and healthy
- from dropping out of insurance pools entirely rather than pay
- higher premiums. That in turn would lead to even higher premium
- costs for anyone who stayed in the pools--and to another political
- problem for Clinton, who would be blamed by this constituency
- on Election Day.
- </p>
- <p> Republican mainstreamers have their own suspicions about a compromise.
- "We didn't see this plan as one more step on a continuing march
- to the left," says Republican John Danforth of Missouri. "If
- they ((liberal Democrats)) are going to get the support of the
- mainstream coalition," adds Rhode Island's John Chafee, "they
- just can't make sizable changes in it." That could mean that
- the mainstreamers won't budge on their insistence on specific
- provisions that would limit federal health-care spending and
- on some cost-control requirements, perhaps via a cap on tax
- deductibility for employer contributions to their workers' health
- plans. Both labor and business are opposed to a limit on deductibility.
- </p>
- <p> If Mitchell and the mainstreamers fail to cut a deal, the Administration's
- fallback is to swallow hard and accept a package of piecemeal
- insurance reforms. Those would probably include requirements
- that workers could take their insurance with them when they
- change jobs and provisions that would forbid insurers to deny
- coverage for people with previously existing conditions. The
- First Lady in particular is reluctant to put the White House
- behind halfway measures that could relieve pressure for more
- comprehensive change later on. And the President is concerned
- that such a bill could have the effect of raising premiums or
- boosting the health-care costs of senior citizens, for which
- he would take the heat. But Leon Panetta, the White House chief
- of staff, now says the President would be willing to "look"
- at a minimalist bill.
- </p>
- <p> For Clinton that would be a scary sight, given the big hopes
- the Administration once had. But in a TIME/CNN poll taken Aug.
- 17-18, less than half of those surveyed said it was important
- for Congress to reform the health-care system this year. Only
- 28% said they were confident that Washington would produce a
- worthwhile plan. So nothing--or almost nothing--may be a
- political advantage to whoever does it. As the man most identified
- with the call to action, Clinton has been brooding privately
- about how Americans seem to have lost their enthusiasm for wide-ranging
- health-care reform. As much as they want change, he tells listeners,
- they fear government's ability to make it. "As we say at home,"
- he observes, "a lot of people think government would mess up
- a one-car parade."
- </p>
- <p> To some extent, Americans have become more nervous about health-care
- reform because the general idea has coalesced into the prickly
- specifics. But the Clintons also drove the process in ways that
- frustrated their own intentions. The closed-door sessions of
- the First Lady's reform task force were a public relations disaster,
- and the plan that emerged thumped onto the table with the sound
- of a massive government program.
- </p>
- <p> When they trudge back after Labor Day to the House of Pain,
- or Congress, as the place is still known officially, Democrats
- are going to try to turn health care into another narrow victory.
- They have a President who seems to be good at that--getting
- them victories, but in ways that make it inevitable they will
- be narrow.
- </p>
- <p>TAKING THE PULSE OF REFORM
- </p>
- <p> WHAT'S DEAD
- </p>
- <p> Universal Coverage: President Clinton cannot fulfill his pledge
- to guarantee coverage for all Americans
- </p>
- <p> Employer Mandates: The President wanted companies to pay 80%
- of the cost of worker health coverage; the Mitchell bill said
- 50%. Both ideas failed
- </p>
- <p> Mandatory Alliances: A requirement that most companies and individuals
- obtain their coverage through large new regional buying groups
- went down against widespread opposition
- </p>
- <p> Insurance Tax: The Mitchell bill would tax generous insurance
- plans. But the Congressional Budget Office said the tax would
- be impossible to administer.
- </p>
- <p> WHAT'S ALIVE
- </p>
- <p> Guaranteed Eligibility: Congress may require insurance companies
- to offer coverage to everyone who can pay for it, regardless
- of pre-existing medical conditions.
- </p>
- <p> Portability: Congress may insist that once people are insured,
- they cannot lose coverage if they leave their job.
- </p>
- <p> Voluntary Alliances: Congress may encourage state to set up
- a system of buying pools to help small businesses bargain for
- better insurance rates.
- </p>
- <p> Subsides: The goverment may subsidize health insurance for some
- low-income Americans, in particular children and pregnant women.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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