October 14, 2009 8:36 AM

Kerry to Wage Kennedy's Health Care Fight

(CBS/AP)  Sen. John Kerry said Wednesday he would take up one of Sen. Edward Kennedy's key political fights, pledging to the thousands who attended his town hall meeting to push for the health care overhaul championed by his longtime Democratic colleague.

More than 2,000 people turned up for Kerry's first public meeting since Kennedy's Aug. 25 death from brain cancer at age 77. A line of supporters and opponents of health care reforms snaked out of the Somerville high school and down two blocks.

Kerry quickly invoked Kennedy's memory and promised to push for the best health care reform package possible.

"That means taking on these battles in the way that Teddy would and I pledge to you that I will," he said.

CBSNews.com Special Report: Health Care

Kennedy had repeatedly called the expansion of health care to uninsured Americans the signature issue of his 47-year tenure in the U.S. Senate. Supporters have said his absence in Washington over much of the past year has made the job of hammering out compromise legislation more difficult.

CBSNews.com's complete coverage of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's life and death

Kerry, also a strong supporter of overhauling the health care system, has vowed to push through the measure in Kennedy's name. He said he would follow Kennedy's example of fighting hard for his principles and seeking political compromises that serve national interest.

"It's very important for us to fight the fight, push as hard as we can for the things that we believe in, stand up for our principles, and if we can't find the votes based on that battle, then we have to find a way to get done the best we can do for the American people," Kerry said.

Read: Obama Weighs Major Speech on Health Care

U.S. Rep. Michael Capuano, a Democrat who represents Somerville and also supports overhauling the nation's health care system, joined Kerry at the town hall.

Capuano is one of several potential candidates for Kennedy's seat. A special election to replace Kennedy is scheduled for Jan. 19, although state lawmakers are considering a bill that would allow Gov. Deval Patrick to appoint someone to the seat on an interim basis during the campaign.

Read: MLB's Curt Schilling for Kennedy's Senate Seat?

"Every person in Massachusetts wants to do everything we can to make sure every single American has a decent, affordable health care plan," Capuano told an estimated 400 people gathered in the school auditorium for the meeting and an additional 2,000 in overflow rooms.

The meeting was largely free of the rancor and raucous moments that have defined many other town hall meetings this summer. The crowd appeared largely in favor of health care changes, giving Kerry loud cheers whenever he discussed the issue. Those booing appeared to be in the minority.

Kerry at times found himself on the defensive against those in the crowd who said he should push harder for a single-payer system, or at the very least refuse to back a plan that doesn't include a strong public health insurance option.

CBS News correspondent Nancy Cordes reports: Obama to lobby Congress for health care reform:




Kerry said there wasn't enough support in the Senate for a single payer plan under which the government would pay health care bills.

"We do not have 60 votes," he said. "We don't have that critical mass right now to get that done."

Kerry also conceded that passing a plan that includes a public health insurance option will be tough. "We are going to have a very difficult time on the public option debate," he said.

Sylvia Walker, 58, was one of those pressing Kerry for a single-payer or public health insurance option. Walker said she is currently unemployed and spends nearly a quarter of her income on insurance and said a government run program could be more efficient than private insurance.

"Their profit margins are astronomical," she said. "They are taking so much money that could be going to health care."

Anger at the overhaul plan has erupted at recent town hall meetings hosted by members of Congress across the country, including one two weeks ago hosted by Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass. The congressman chided one critic who held up an image of President Barack Obama with a Hitler-style mustache.

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 35 Comments
by Questionews September 3, 2009 10:48 AM EDT
It's going to take alot more than Lurch to carry the torch. He's going to need Gomez, Morticia, Uncle Fester & Cousin It if this is going to pass.
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by mav547166 September 3, 2009 10:32 AM EDT
I guess the dems have really written health care off now that they are letting kerry run it. The governement cannot even run health care for servicemembers and veterans. I want the same plan that Congress has for its members.
Reply to this comment
by Zann-Zel September 3, 2009 10:37 AM EDT
I want the same plan that Congress has for its members.

That's exactly what they've been trying to do! Get behind it!
by Zann-Zel September 3, 2009 10:29 AM EDT
All I have to say is THANK YOU John Kerry!

Someone has GOT to get our healthcare decisions out of the hands of insurance executives who don't care one bit about our health! All they care about is their money!!

And the scary thing is some people out there defending this? Why would you defend someone who's robbing you blind while letting you die?
Reply to this comment
by goeswest September 3, 2009 10:27 AM EDT
I recently returned from spending a month in Germany and there health care system is 10,000 times better than in the US for everyone there is covered by health insurance.I do not for the life of me understand the American mindset that would coldly and without remorse leave 46 million of their fellow citizens without health insurance.Every other industrized western nation with the the exception of the US has health care for all and yet since President Harry Truman first proposed health insurance for all in 1948,your nation still has not yet got off the dime and enacted health care reform.

Absolutely disgusting
Reply to this comment
by Zann-Zel September 3, 2009 10:34 AM EDT
You are so right! I've been to Germany too and seen first hand how their healthcare system works! It works great, they've had it for years and guess what they still aren't a communist country, they still haven't lost their freedom! Imagine that!
by jimmyc1955 September 3, 2009 10:21 AM EDT
If you want real reform how about tort reform? Why don't we take the lottery atmospher out of the medical profession? Las Vegas and West Virginia have almost no Obstetrics because the lawyers sue them over anything.

How about we force Lawyers to front all the costs and if they loose pay the costs of the defendant and his lawyers who they dragged into court? Maybe if those lawyers who take 70% of a settlement and then charge their clients for almost all the rest were to have some serious skin in the game the "got nothing to loose" mindset of ambulance chasers would settle down.

Look at the spam you get with law firms trolling for class action clients against pharmaceutical companies, asbestos claims . . . you name it. That drains vast amounts of money from health care industries, drive up costs due to overuse of high tech diagnostics to provide CYA proof. My wife works for orthopedics and they regularly schedule MRIs and cat scans just to put in the file in case they get sued.
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by jimmyc1955 September 3, 2009 10:09 AM EDT
Lets see - John Kerry lost to the most unpopular president since Jimmy Carter - by a landslide. Because he couldn't run a campaign, didn't want to work hard enough to get elected, and spent way too much time at those elitist white privileged resorts like Vale and Martha Vineyard to spend time on the campaign trail. He was known in the senate for trying to end debates by 5 so he could go out for dinner and drinks without delay.

Now with Kennedy gone he wants to pull on the Kennedy mantel on go jousting windmills. If this guy were any more transparent and self serving he would be Nancy Pelosi - but I don't think there are enough face lifts left to get him to look like her.
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by sonofhaig September 3, 2009 9:45 AM EDT
More retarded Liberals here than at a special olympics event.
Yes, that's right..... I said it.

You libs can all pat each others back all you want. This has nothing to do other than the fascist Ojackass changing the country into a Marxist utopia.

Democrats have over reached for the last time. They may win this battle, but ultimately they will lose the war.
Reply to this comment
by ianlou September 3, 2009 11:15 AM EDT
I love the sound of screaming conservatives in the morning...

It sounds like............

Victory.
by pickaguitar1 September 3, 2009 9:33 AM EDT
YES WE CAN!
Reply to this comment
by GuyfromUSA September 3, 2009 9:31 AM EDT
Keery is still an idiot
Reply to this comment
by doc_holliday76 September 3, 2009 9:22 AM EDT
by ianlou
To these people, improving healthcare is secondary to ruining the health of your administration and the Democratic Party.
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These moronic teabaggers and town hall disrupters have absolutely no concern to reform our health care debacle, and only want to regain the power they lost in 2006/2008 through anarchy.
Reply to this comment
by ianlou September 3, 2009 11:03 AM EDT
3GB2
Are you going to get around to actually posting some original thoughts?
Or are you going to limit your posts to short simplistic jabs at those who have the ability to express an idea.
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