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From CNN - not sure what latest state of play is and whether public
insurance option is now not feasible...

 

Full article at
http://edition.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/08/17/health.care/index.html

 

The White House sought to reassure jittery supporters Monday that
President Obama is not abandoning the fight for a public health
insurance option. The assurance came amid a media firestorm ignited over
the weekend by administration officials seeming to indicate a
willingness to drop such an option in order to secure congressional
approval of a health care reform bill.

"The president has always said that what is essential is that health
insurance reform must lower costs, ensure that there are affordable
options for all Americans, and it must increase choice and competition
in the health insurance market," White House aide Linda Douglass said in
a written statement.

"He believes the public option is the best way to achieve those goals."

The administration seemed to step back from its insistence on such an
option over the weekend, when Obama said it is "not the entirety of
health care reform."

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said the president could be
"satisfied" without it. And Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen
Sebelius told CNN's "State of the Union" that a public insurance plan is
"not the essential element.

The move seemed to be a concession to critics, particularly Republican
lawmakers who have assailed the idea of the government playing that kind
of role. Yet it also stirred up frustration from those on the left who
believe such an option is critical.

 

Former Democratic Party Chairman Howard Dean, a doctor and one-time
presidential candidate, told NBC's "Today Show" on Monday that he
believes a public option "is the entirety of health care
<http://topics.edition.cnn.com/topics/health_care_policy>  reform; it's
not the entirety of insurance reform."

A petition on his Web site StandWithDrDean.com reads, "A public option
is the only way to guarantee health care for all Americans and its
inclusion is non-negotiable."

Making the issue negotiable might be a necessity for any legislation to
pass through the Senate
<http://topics.edition.cnn.com/topics/u_s_senate> . Democratic Sen. Kent
Conrad of North Dakota, one of six Senate Finance Committee members who
have been trying to hammer out the first bipartisan compromise bill,
said Sunday a public option simply won't make it through Congress. 

 

 

 

 

David McDaid

Senior Research Fellow, LSE Health and Social Care and European
Observatory on Health Systems and Policies,

London School of Economics and Political Science

Houghton Street

London

WC2A 2AE

e-mail: [log in to unmask]

 


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