Clinton Calls For Universal Health Care
Plan Requires Every American To Have Insurance, With Assistance To Help Defray Cost
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Play CBS Video Video Clinton On Health Care
"CBS News RAW": Hillary Clinton addresses the lack of U.S. health care in a speech made to the Laborer's International Union of North America.
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Video Hillary Defends Health Plan
Harry Smith speaks with Hillary Clinton about her controversial call for universal health care that would require insurance coverage for all Americans at a cost of $110 billion per year.
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Photo Essay Hillary Rodham Clinton The Democratic Senator from New York and former first lady sets her sights on the White House.
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In-Depth 2008 Presidential Hopefuls Profiles and the latest news on the Democrats and Republicans running for the White House.
"This is not government-run," Clinton said of her plan to extend coverage to an estimated 47 million Americans who now go without.
All Americans would be required to purchase health insurance, reports CBS News chief White House correspondent Jim Axelrod.
Businesses would have to offer insurance to employees or pay into a pool for the uninsured, and no insurance company could refuse anyone coverage because of pre-existing conditions, adds Axelrod.
Clinton would also offer a tax subsidy to small businesses to help them afford the cost of providing coverage to their workers.
She put the government's cost at $110 billion a year.
"Perhaps more than anybody else I know just how hard this fight will be," said the New York senator.
Dismissing the inevitable Republican criticism, Clinton admonished the crowd. "I know my Republican opponents will try to equate health care for all Americans with government-run health care. Don't let them fool us again. This is not government-run."
A front-running contender for her party's nomination, Clinton drew criticism this time from fellow Democrats as well as Republicans.
"To ensure all Americans have affordable health care will take more than leadership that simply knows how to fight," said rival Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn.
Addressing a crowd at a medical center in the early voting state of Iowa, Clinton laid out her proposal, with the centerpiece a so-called "individual mandate," requiring everyone to have health insurance - just as most states require drivers to purchase auto insurance. Rival John Edwards has also offered a plan that includes an individual mandate, while the proposal outlined by Barack Obama does not.
"I believe everyone - every man, woman and child - should have quality, affordable health care in America," said Clinton, vowing to accomplish the goal in her first term.
For individuals and families who are not covered by employers or whose employer-based coverage is inadequate, Clinton would offer expanded versions of two existing government programs: Medicare and the health insurance plan currently offered to federal employees.
Consumers could choose between either government-run program, but aides stress that no new federal bureaucracy would be created under the Clinton plan.
Clinton proposed several specific measures to pay for her plan, including an end to some of the Bush-era tax cuts for people making more than $250,000 per year. Edwards has vowed to completely repeal the tax cuts for high earners to pay for the cost of his plan, estimated at $90 billion-$120 billion per year, while Obama would pay for his plan in part by letting the tax cuts expire in 2010.
Her speech came nearly 14 years after her first attempt at a universal healthcare plan that was highly criticized by Republicans as a socialized medical plan that eventually fell apart and left a stain on the former First Lady's record, reports CBS News reporter Fernando Suarez. Despite her failed attempt in 1993 Clinton assured the crowd of about 150 doctors, nurses and patients that she grew from her experience.
Aides say she has jettisoned the complexity and uncertainty of the last effort in favor of a plan that stresses simplicity, cost control and consumer choice.
In response, Obama said Clinton's plan is similar to one he proposed in the spring, "though my universal health care plan would go further in reducing the punishing cost of health care than any other proposal that's been offered in this campaign."
He took another swipe at the Clinton administration's closed-door sessions on health care in the 1990s, saying "the real key to passing any health care reform is the ability to bring people together in an open, transparent process that builds a broad consensus for change."
Other Democratic rivals were swift in their criticism.
Delaware Sen. Joe Biden said, "If universal health care plans could have gotten us health care, we would have gotten it a long time ago." Added John Edwards: "If you're going to negotiate universal health care with the same powerful interests that defeated it before, your proposal isn't a plan, it's a starting point."
Edwards said on his first day in office he will submit legislation that would pull health insurance for the president, members of Congress and all political appointees unless they pass universal health care within six months.
Republican Mitt Romney, in New York City for a fundraising stop, criticized Clinton's proposal, saying, "'Hillary care' continues to be bad medicine ... in her plan, we have Washington-managed health care. Fundamentally, she takes her inspiration from European bureaucracies."
The plan that Romney helped institute while governor of Massachusetts requires the same individual insurance mandate as Clinton's and uses state subsidies to help reduce the cost of private coverage. Since then, Romney has said he would leave it up to the states to decide whether they supported such a mandate.
Said Republican Rudy Giuliani's campaign: "Senator Clinton's latest health scheme includes more government mandates, expensive federal subsidies and more big bureaucracy - in short, prescription for an increase in wait times, a decrease in patient care and tax hikes to pay for it all."
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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See all 942 CommentsI just said that this type of argument was the one used to justify slavery : poor people are there so rich people can stay rich.
Don''''t extrapolate from what I said.
Posted by abbe91
This is absurd. I own a business. Poor people do not buy my products. Therefore, your statement doesn''t make much sense. Most businesses depend on people who can afford their products. A Lexus dealer does not look for poor people. They look for people who can afford their cars. The more money people have, the more businesses prosper.
I just said that this type of argument was the one used to justify slavery : poor people are there so rich people can stay rich.
Don''''t extrapolate from what I said.
Posted by abbe91
This is absurd. I own a business. Poor people do not buy my products. Therefore, your statement doesn''t make much sense. Most businesses depend on people who can afford their products. A Lexus dealer does not look for poor people. They look for people who can afford their cars. The more money people have, the more businesses prosper.
I''''''''ve read senator Clinton''''''''s plan and it works."
Posted by scartercmu
How does anyone know Hillary''''s plan works? It hasn''t been tried yet.
Posted by scartercmu
How does anyone know Hillary''s plan works? It has been tried yet.
Posted by standlee5
The governor of my state has announced plans for tax increases. States have enjoyed huge property tax increases over the last five years as housing prices skyrocketed. Where did the money go? This is just the beginning as Democrats tax and spend. Hopefully you won''t be caught off-guard.
Posted by standlee5 at 05:13 PM : Sep 18, 2007
Hillary wants to pay for it by taking back the tax cuts that Bush put into place for people making more than $250,000 a year.
posted by mudrose at 02:16 PM : Sep 18, 2007
Pukefessors? Effectie? Dumb Americans? And you think Europeans are what? Poor, dumb beggars in the street? What a creepy little elitist.
I would say that just after reading the gobbely *** mess that you just wrote, you really need some kind of special mental health care. I couldn''t make heads or tails out of what you wrote. You''re all over the place with this and that, like a mad man. I hope you have insurance that covers your mental health needs.
Robbing from the rich and giving it to the poor will ruin the entire world econmy! If people allow a witch that takes money from China a communist country through straw donors is going to dictate to me that I have to have health care. TIME for a national revolution boot out every commy lib out politics, lets take down this criminal witch! It''s going be ugly in 08, her negitives after the Scam health announcement is rising! if any candidate tells me what I have to do! Watch out the AMERICAN people will revolt against all commy lib canmdidates they have so far the the ultra kook left time for a change in the Demoncrap party! Didn''t Mondail the most liberal candidate loose 49 states in 1984, in 08 Hillary looses 50 states! Why would anyone trust the most corrupt person on the planet, this will bring every red blooded American to vote against this Hillary and this BS SCAM!
The insurance companies can currently deny any person or claim they want. That''''s what this addresses.
It''''s like forcing the Chinese to improve product safety, only in this case the government is forcing the insurance companies to stop endangering public safety by denying coverage and the payment of claims.
Posted by realpatriot1 at 11:16 AM : Sep 18, 2007"
Thanks. I think it''s worth repeating and repeating it again. I don''t see how people can stand coverage denial. Exactly my point. And justifying it by the fact that it will help people who can easily pay to pay a bit less is outrageous.
Also, it''s not just that people with pre-existing conditions would have to pay a larger premium (some probably could, and I wouldn''t object so much), but sometimes there is no way they will find a company
to cover them. No way.
Posted by jimmyc1955 at 10:59 AM : Sep 18, 2007"
Well, you were pretty wrong with your argument on the price of gasoline in England. Strange you didn''t comment back on my answer.
I just said that this type of argument was the one used to justify slavery : poor people are there so rich people can stay rich.
Don''t extrapolate from what I said.
Posted by incog-nito
She''s just beginning. The whole point of this program is to eventually incorporate everyone into a social welfare system of universal socialized healthcare just like the Europeans et al have. Government will be the only beneficiary of this program and it will be run with such ineptitude because nothing that massive can be run in a streamlined fashion. The woman was cracked way back when she first proposed this universal healthcare *** and she''s even more demented now. What''s even worse is the fact that there are clowns out there who think capitalism is raping America and feel the time is right to swing up right into socialism. The pukefessors have been effectie. Just what the progressives wanted. Dumb Americans. Can pull the wool over their eyes and make ''em love it.
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