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- <text id=93TT0835>
- <link 93TO0116>
- <title>
- Sep. 20, 1993: Behind Closed Doors
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Sep. 20, 1993 Clinton's Health Plan
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 60
- Behind Closed Doors
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The inside story of how Bill and Hillary Clinton fashioned the
- health-care plan. Their own aides often battled over the Clintons'
- approach
- </p>
- <p>By MICHAEL DUFFY and DICK THOMPSON/WASHINGTON
- </p>
- <p> The moment Bruce Reed knew for sure that the health-care system
- was out of whack came in December 1991 when three men in dark
- suits paid him a visit. Reed, a little-known analyst working
- in a dimly lit Washington campaign office for dark-horse candidate
- Bill Clinton, listened politely as the three veteran lobbyists
- from a major pharmaceutical company pleaded with him to delete
- price controls from the health-care proposal that Clinton was
- soon to unveil. "If you guys can afford to send three high-priced
- lobbyists to buttonhole somebody like me," Reed told his visitors,
- "then you are charging too much for drugs."
- </p>
- <p> Reed, a Princeton grad and Rhodes scholar from Idaho, was struggling
- to remake the ungainly and politically unworkable idea for health-care
- reform favored by most Democrats. Called "pay or play," the
- plan would have required employers to extend basic insurance
- to all their employees or contribute to a public trust that
- would provide the entitlement instead. Huddling with a brainy
- Rhode Island business consultant named Ira Magaziner, Reed spent
- several weeks souping up "pay or play" into a more ambitious-sounding
- plan that would use savings from cost controls and more efficient
- management to insure 37 million uninsured Americans.
- </p>
- <p> In early January, Reed took the finished draft to Manchester,
- New Hampshire, where Clinton and his wife were campaigning.
- The three spent a Saturday night in the Clintons' cramped hotel
- room going over the plan. Dining on takeout Greek food, Clinton
- sat on a bed poring over Reed's draft while Hillary paced the
- room suggesting changes. The session lasted several hours until
- the three were satisfied. The Clintons went to a late movie;
- Reed went to look for a printer. Two days later, Clinton released
- his "National Health Insurance Reform to Cut Costs and Cover
- Everybody." He claimed he could provide universal coverage without
- new taxes and without turning the medical industry inside out.
- It was pie in the sky, but that hardly mattered: Nebraska Senator
- Bob Kerrey had a plan and had been telling audiences that Clinton
- did not. The Arkansas Governor declared his plan to be "uniquely
- American" and promised to enact it in the first year of his
- administration. The tactic worked: campaign pollster Stan Greenberg
- noted later that once Clinton put his plan out, the issue went
- away.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's pledge was the first of many promises he and his health
- team would have to adjust to reality. Over the next 18 months,
- Clinton's reform plan grew from a necessary campaign plank into
- a centerpiece of his presidency, and the President's attitude
- was marked by a whatever-it-takes practicality. For one thing,
- his aides reworked the timing of the scheme. Clinton now concedes
- he will need another year to enact his plan and three more to
- put it fully into place. After insisting that raising taxes
- wasn't necessary, Clinton's aides made an increase part of the
- strategy, then scaled the proposed taxes back to just a levy
- on cigarettes. Clinton fashioned the plan to curry the support
- of large insurance companies, hospitals, unions and a fearful
- middle class. Remarkably, however, his early vision of paying
- for reform mostly by controlling costs and reducing paperwork
- remains the proposal's central feature. This is the inside story
- of Clinton's revolutionary plan, a wonky, made-from-scratch
- idea that endured despite the efforts of nearly everyone, including
- its own creators, to second-guess it to death.
- </p>
- <p> THE DEVIL IN THE NUMBERS
- </p>
- <p> After weeks of writing and rewriting, Bill Clinton was ready
- in June 1992 to publish Putting People First, a slim volume
- on his entire foreign and domestic program. After a brutal primary
- season, Clinton was running third in the polls, behind both
- George Bush and Ross Perot, and the Democrat's aides hoped the
- book would help jump-start his campaign. But on June 22, as
- the plates of Clinton's book were literally going on the presses,
- Little Rock, Arkansas, headquarters called for a halt. One line
- in a single chart just didn't make sense. The problem was with
- the health-care numbers.
- </p>
- <p> "They were not only uncertain," recalls a Cabinet officer, "they
- were big. The numbers bedeviled the process all the way through."
- Everyone knew that the numbers belonged to Ira Magaziner, the
- longtime Clinton friend whose consulting work for hospitals
- during the 1980s earned him a place as the candidate's most
- trusted health-care adviser. A tall, balding man with a weakness
- for jargon, Magaziner seemed to live in a world with its own
- brand of mathematics. He contended that Clinton could cover
- 37 million uninsured Americans by putting controls on costs
- and eliminating waste. Nearly every Democratic health-care expert,
- however, concluded that efficiencies alone would never be enough:
- Clinton would have to raise taxes as well.
- </p>
- <p> Magaziner was not popular among health-care pros in Washington;
- he dismissed them--often to their faces--as too isolated
- to be part of the solution. Inside the campaign too there were
- private worries about Magaziner's math. After he had finished
- his work on the book, the grumbling turned public. As a result,
- Clinton launched one more conference call with his top health-care
- advisers on June 22. From the Governor's mansion in Little Rock,
- he reached Magaziner at a miniature-golf course near his home
- in Providence, Rhode Island, where he was relaxing with his
- children. He located Bruce Reed at Georgetown University Hospital,
- where his own health-care bill was rising while his wife was
- undergoing tests for a stomach ailment. He found Joshua Wiener,
- a Brookings Institution fellow, clipping hedges at his home
- in Washington. Wiener grabbed some of his kids' purple-dinosaur
- scratch paper and, at his kitchen table, retabulated the costs
- and savings one more time. He figured Clinton needed $50 billion
- for a bare-bones benefit package, and he doubted Magaziner's
- savings could generate that.
- </p>
- <p> During the testy 45-minute call, the debate boiled down to Magaziner
- vs. Wiener. Clinton probed both men over and over, even as he
- kept one eye on a golf tournament on television. Magaziner's
- numbers were appealing, but Wiener wouldn't budge. At that point,
- Clinton came alive not in anger but in frustration. "Goddammit,"
- he said, "now I know why no President has ever fixed this problem."
- Reed, who had been listening quietly, finally suggested a third
- way. Everything on a chart listing budget changes, Reed noted,
- had to fall under a column labeled SAVINGS or a column marked
- INVESTMENTS. If Magaziner and Wiener couldn't decide whether
- health-care reform saved money or cost money, why not just leave
- it out of the budget chart entirely? Recalls Reed: "Everyone
- jumped at the idea." The problem had been finessed for the moment.
- The presses rolled.
- </p>
- <p> THE SMORGASBORD APPROACH
- </p>
- <p> Three months later, Clinton was ahead in the polls but losing
- traction on health care. Top advisers noticed that he sounded
- confused on the stump, skipping back and forth between reform
- plans without clarifying which one he was for. Health-care groups
- with various agendas bombarded Clinton's Little Rock campaign
- headquarters with faxes charging him with backing away from
- the issue. In fact, the campaign was in a deliberate straddle.
- Clinton's aides, led by James Carville and pollster Greenberg,
- told him health care was important but cautioned him that the
- less specific he was, the better. After all, distilling his
- plan into 30-second commercials was nearly impossible. The Clinton
- priorities were aptly summed up by the sign Carville had erected
- in the war room. One line--IT'S THE ECONOMY, STUPID--became
- such a cliche that it overshadowed the other lines: CHANGE VERSUS
- MORE OF THE SAME. DON'T FORGET HEALTH CARE.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton realized in the wake of Perot's surge that he couldn't
- stick with an expensive, government-run system such as "pay
- or play." This also meant that the great liberal hope, a single-payer
- system in which the government would become everyone's insurer,
- was a nonstarter. Clinton needed a new approach. In August his
- health advisers began moving toward the notion of providing
- universal coverage but relying on market forces to hold down
- costs. Known as "managed competition," the system would create
- regional alliances that would buy coverage in large, economical
- packages from rival groups of doctors, hospitals and other health-care
- providers.
- </p>
- <p> On the morning of Sept. 22, Clinton was hurriedly briefed on
- the plan in a crowded Holiday Inn suite in East Lansing, Michigan.
- Ronald Pollack, the executive director of Families U.S.A., a
- foundation that develops programs for the elderly, told Clinton
- that managed care was a secret weapon he could spring on Bush.
- Clinton could strike a populist chord by helping business lower
- costs, by providing Americans with cradle-to-grave coverage
- and by standing up to such special interests as doctors, drug
- companies and insurance firms. Best of all, the plan required
- no new taxes. Clinton loved it. As he heard the details, he
- punched the air with his fist time and again.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton was so excited that he asked if he could release cost
- estimates based on the managed-care idea to the public. Magaziner
- was all for it. Others opposed the move, however, saying the
- numbers would stir debate, even if the new approach was sound.
- Pollack told Clinton that his group would soon release a "bipartisan"
- report detailing managed competition's effect on the budget.
- Why not, Pollack said, let his group put numbers out? Clinton
- agreed. That way the numbers would be available but could not
- be directly linked to Clinton's plan. Two days later, after
- a 48-hour marathon of speech writing, Clinton spelled out his
- new, improved plan to an audience at the Merck pharmaceutical
- company in New Jersey. Clinton's blueprint for reform was now
- in place.
- </p>
- <p> A FOUR-ALARM FIRE
- </p>
- <p> One week after Clinton took the oath of office, Magaziner circulated
- a secret 26-page memo to the First Lady, Cabinet officers and
- a few close political advisers of the President. Drawing on
- the Merck speech, Magaziner asserted flatly that managed competition--with caps on payments--was the model for Clinton's reform.
- Ruling out more radical approaches, Magaziner's memo said further
- that the chief goal of the coming months was to work out the
- most controversial aspect of the plan: how to finance the new
- system.
- </p>
- <p> Magaziner and the Clintons cooked up the task force during the
- transition as a way to buy time to work out the details, build
- consensus among the experts and lobbyists, keep skeptics at
- bay, generate more ideas, and test the financial assumptions
- on the government's supercomputers. But most of all, Magaziner
- needed to conduct what one task-force member called "Ira's own
- heuristic process. This is the way Ira decides things," the
- official said. "He gets as many people in a room and talks for
- as long as everyone can stand." Of course, to a lesser extreme,
- it was also the way Clinton decided things. "Managed competition
- was a thesis that needed to be proven," admits Mark Gearan,
- White House communications director. "That's what the task force
- set out to do."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton imposed a daunting 100-day deadline for Magaziner: he
- asked for a report by early May. In his Feb. 17 speech to Congress
- about his economic program, Clinton went further, ad-libbing
- a line that repeated his impossible campaign promise to enact
- the measure in 1993. And then he turned his attention to the
- budget.
- </p>
- <p> Organizing the task force and its 450 members quickly devolved
- into frenzy. On leave from other agencies, 200 federal officials
- trekked daily to the Old Executive Office Building, only to
- discover they had to wait in long lines at the Secret Service
- checkpoints. The service's computers routinely deleted the names
- of people who just went out for lunch. A code of secrecy meant
- that no directory was widely available to assist task-force
- members in contacting one another. Sessions were delayed or
- completely canceled for lack of space in meeting rooms. Robert
- Valdez, a UCLA public-health professor who eventually served
- as co-chairman of the benefits working group, arrived in Washington
- late one night only to be told he was presenting an overview
- at the first meeting the next morning. "Presenting?" asked Valdez.
- "Presenting what?" Recalls Harvard internist Arnold Epstein:
- "The whole thing was like a four-alarm fire."
- </p>
- <p> Magaziner called his biggest conferences "tollgates," a management-theory
- term applied to meetings in which progress reports are delivered
- and course corrections made. Linda Bergthold, a private consultant
- from San Francisco, remembers them as "a cross between Ph.D.
- orals and the Spanish Inquisition." Members crammed a meeting
- room on the fourth floor of the Old E.O.B. until the room grew
- so crowded that they sat on the floor and windowsills and peeked
- in the door. A lack of coatracks forced members to dump wraps
- on the floor. At each session, task-force leaders would present
- their progress on, for example, the emerging benefits package.
- Magaziner would listen, ask questions and nudge members in the
- direction he wanted. Magaziner kept the Clintons abreast of
- progress, and the President sometimes invited individual members
- over for briefings in the Roosevelt Room of the White House.
- Tollgates would go on for 10 or 12 hours, sometimes 16, break
- for three or four, and then resume, often late at night. The
- process reached an absurd point when a tollgate continued past
- 2 o'clock on a Sunday morning.
- </p>
- <p> Magaziner's eccentricity drove his colleagues to distraction.
- Little was committed to paper because nothing was decided with
- any finality. "Everything just keeps accumulating in Ira's head,"
- said a task-force member. At one point, members pushed Magaziner
- to lay out the plan--as it then stood--in a two-page memo,
- but he resisted the idea, warning colleagues that too many details
- were leaking. In what some took as divine intervention, a flu
- epidemic swept through the task force in late spring, temporarily
- sidelining dozens of participants. Even Magaziner, who was bearing
- up better than most, caught walking pneumonia. Late one night,
- while toiling over financing provisions so arcane that even
- he found them confusing, Magaziner quipped, "Next time, I'm
- voting for Perot."
- </p>
- <p> Yet it was "policy-wonk heaven," said Bergthold, who noted that
- years of health-care ideas were being dusted off and hotly debated.
- And the details came together. Benefits moved fast: at a Saturday-morning
- session in the Roosevelt Room, a jogging suit-clad Clinton ordered
- Magaziner to come up with a standard benefits package as good
- as or better than that of the typical worker, which meant the
- plan had to emphasize preventive care, including physicals and
- baby checkups, and some controversial procedures like abortion.
- But it would exclude cosmetic surgery, eyeglasses and borderline
- therapies, such as weight reduction. The mix was critical: too
- skimpy a package would anger the middle class; too rich a proposal
- would spark charges of a giveaway.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, Magaziner was making enemies on Capitol Hill, where
- he was regarded as a political klutz who did more to damage
- the Clinton case than to help it. At one meeting with Republicans
- on legislative strategy, Magaziner dismissed such talk as "minutiae."
- The First Lady was dispatched to the Hill to soothe bruised
- egos and keep liberals on board. Working closely with West Virginia
- Democratic Senator Jay Rockefeller, Mrs. Clinton would often
- consult with a dozen lawmakers in person and via telephone.
- She probed for weak spots in support and likely criticism, but
- gave nothing away. Leaders of both parties came to sense that
- if Hillary Clinton had the authority to negotiate, she was reluctant
- to use it. Her mission instead, they concluded, was to proselytize,
- spread goodwill and encourage the partisans of competing approaches
- to stay loose. Their hunch was right: though she traveled widely
- to keep her husband's promise of reform alive while he was distracted
- with the budget, she kept her distance from the day-to-day decision
- making. After her father had a stroke in March, she withdrew
- from the task force for a month.
- </p>
- <p> By early June, Magaziner's plan was largely complete, except
- for wrangling about the financing. But Clinton's agenda was
- threatened by his declining fortunes: the first 100 days were
- a near disaster. His popularity had dropped in the wake of continuing
- self-inflicted mistakes; his party had handed him several big
- defeats and was approving his budget plan in part to keep his
- presidency from faltering completely. Longtime aides watched
- in tight-lipped frustration as Clinton brought in Reagan White
- House veteran David Gergen to beef up his personal staff. With
- Congress resistant to more taxes, some in Clinton's Cabinet
- quietly put out the word that health care should be postponed--perhaps indefinitely.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton wouldn't go that far. Aides let it be known that the
- issue would wait until July, well, maybe September. That gave
- Magaziner three more months to crunch numbers. It gave skeptics
- from Lloyd Bentsen's Treasury Department and Laura Tyson's Council
- of Economic Advisers time to gather ammunition to scale back
- the proposal. Clinton wavered, but not for long; he still wanted
- to introduce it in the fall.
- </p>
- <p> WHEELING AND DEALING
- </p>
- <p> The last two months of planning were a giant exercise in practical
- politics. Most of the likely allies were on board. Big Labor
- and senior citizens were natural supporters: both had been granted
- huge concessions early in the spring. Nurses and hospitals,
- also beneficiaries of reform, could be courted and perhaps won.
- Some of the big insurers were playing along; others were coy;
- small firms were downright hostile. Small business was opposed,
- probably forever. But Magaziner wanted to sign up the politically
- powerful American Medical Association or, short of that, keep
- it neutral.
- </p>
- <p> In July, A.M.A. executive vice president Jim Todd spent a Sunday
- afternoon in Magaziner's office eating Chinese takeout food
- and raising questions about the plan. "Reserve judgment," Magaziner
- said. Many advisers close to Magaziner thought his courtship
- of the A.M.A. was futile or even dangerous. He had already agreed
- to suppress one type of liability reform opposed by the doctors,
- and Clinton's advisers feared that more concessions were inevitable.
- They were right: by midsummer, price controls were gone, abandoned
- in favor of caps on insurance premiums. "We could kneel on broken
- glass and give the A.M.A. everything it wanted," said one task-force
- member, "and still they will oppose it. They are going to push
- us as far as possible, and then they are just going to screw
- us."
- </p>
- <p> Two weeks ago, Todd was back with more demands, including malpractice
- relief: a $250,000 cap on jury awards for pain and suffering.
- Magaziner resisted. "What about a $500,000 cap?" asked Magaziner.
- Todd hesitated, but later threw a Hail Mary: "Could we appear
- in the Rose Garden behind the President when he announces?"
- </p>
- <p> Magaziner's bartering worked. Late last week, the A.M.A. had
- yet to criticize the plan. It was the sort of tinkering that
- explained why the White House insisted into the weekend that
- everything was subject to change, particularly in return for
- support from Congress and interest groups.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's final health-care meetings took place in five two-hour
- sessions two weeks ago. Some aides were surprised at the lineup:
- attending were Clinton, his wife, Vice President Al Gore, his
- wife Tipper, most of the Cabinet, their top aides and leading
- White House advisers. The first day didn't go well: Clinton's
- conclusions leaked almost in their entirety to the press. For
- the next four days Clinton sat quietly, listening to his aides
- argue, taking notes and deciding later behind closed doors.
- He backed away from a plan to tax alcohol and opted instead
- to tax only cigarettes. He considered three forms of premium
- caps and decided on the one that would be the easiest to explain.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton listened to his top advisers debate the wisdom of cutting
- $238 billion out of Medicare and Medicaid over the next five
- years, and heard warnings that House liberals led by Henry Waxman
- of California would oppose the plan if a slash that deep was
- made. But Clinton reassured them, "We need to lead with what
- we think is the best approach. If Congress changes it, fine,
- but we will have looked at all the options and we will know
- why we chose what we choose."
- </p>
- <p> That is the Clintons' attitude as they prepare to launch the
- sales job this week. "We do not believe we have all the answers,"
- said Hillary Clinton in a speech last Friday. "If there are
- any better, more efficient, less costly, quality-driven ways
- of doing any of this...we are open to that." The Clinton
- plan has been open to change and compromise from the beginning;
- what seems to give the President special satisfaction is the
- durability of the basic ideas that underlie his proposal. Standing
- in the Oval Office only two weekends ago, Clinton thumbed a
- copy of his soon-to-be-released plan and remarked to an aide,
- "You know, this is awfully close to what we put out in New Hampshire."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-