Bill Clinton says Obama should keep promise on insurance, but knows that won’t work, Washington Post writer says
in the first place,” Ezra Klein writes for The Washington Post.
“Veterans of the effort to pass Clinton’s health-care plan believed
that their core mistake was producing a plan that upended the insurance
arrangements of almost every American,” Klein reports. “In the aftermath of Clinton’s failure, health-care reformers swung
far to the other side. Rather than building a plan in which almost
everyone lost their insurance, they began trying to build plans in which
almost no one lost their insurance — and selling them under the promise
that literally no one would.”
But that promise “went too
far,” Klein writes, because “saying ‘everyone who likes their health insurance can keep it’ is
very different from saying ’95 percent of people who like their health
insurance can keep it’.” However, Clinton “knows that
it’s functionally impossible to reform the health-care market if you
upend nothing.” (Read more)