Health Care Reform Back on the Congressional Table?

Here’s a nice stocking stuffer: a proposal for health care reform, courtesy of Senator Ron Wyden (D-Orgeon)…

Senator wants universal health care plan

Several business and labor leaders on Wednesday hailed a proposal to provide health care coverage to all Americans through a pool of private insurance plans.

A dozen years after Congress rejected a Clinton administration plan for universal health care, Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden offered a plan he said would provide affordable, private health care coverage for all Americans, except those covered through Medicare or the military.

“Employer-based coverage is melting away like a Popsicle on the sidewalk in August,” Wyden said.

Wyden, a Democrat and a member of the Senate Finance health care subcommittee, said his plan would “guarantee health coverage for every American that is at least as good as members of Congress receive and can never be taken away.”

The plan, dubbed the “Healthy Americans Act,” would provide universal coverage for no more money than the country spends on health insurance today, Wyden said.

Wyden, a veteran of the 1990s health care battle, drew support from groups that have frequently opposed each other, including Andy Stern, international president of the Service Employees International Union, and Safeway Inc. CEO Steve Burd.

Stern called employer-based health coverage a relic of an industrial economy that is long gone, and said U.S. companies “cannot compete in a global economy when we put the price of health care on the cost of our products, and our competitor nations do not.”

Stern said the health care system had failed to create jobs while adding to trade deficits and holding wages stagnant. For the nation’s 46 million uninsured, “it is a failed moral policy as well,” Stern said. [full text]

2 thoughts on “Health Care Reform Back on the Congressional Table?

  1. Hey, David – thanks for the post!

    I’m helping Senator Wyden with the netroots organizing effort — so here’s a plug: Everybody, c’mon down to Stand Tall for America and join the campaign. (The site is pretty barebones, but we’re moving fast…)

    How many Americans will it take to make universal, portable, affordable health care a reality?

  2. We’re small and we have lots of hospitals. Rhode Island can be the first state that has access to health care for everyone. But we have to stay on the governor, he’s only interested in cuts.

Comments are closed.