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By George E. Curry Health care reform, especially with the rising number of Americans losing their jobs and health benefits, is one of the more pressing public policy issues of the day. Yet, to borrow a phrase from Attorney General Eric Holder, too many Democrats and Republicans are cowards when it comes to taking on the powerful insurance and health care lobby. Some have weak knees because they are in the pocket of industries that have the most to lose if the U.S. adopted universal health care. In those cases, large and regular campaign donations have bought their complicity. In some other instances, members of Congress have argued that a national health plan would amount to socialism. That's just plain ignorant. And a third group was waiting for an excuse—any excuse—to back away from health reform. That group got that excuse recently with estimates that universal health care is likely to be more costly than the Obama administration had projected. The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office said two competing plans
would cost either $1 trillion or $1.5 trillion over the next decade. Though
that figure was expected, the drawback is that under one of those scenarios,
only 16 million of the uninsured would be covered, about a third of the pool
that would need assistance. Sen. Charles E. Grassley of Iowa, ranking Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, expressed similar sentiment on CNN's “State of the Union.” “So we're in the position of dialing down some of our expectations to get the costs down so that it's affordable and, most importantly, so that it's paid for,” he said. “Because we can't go to the point where we are now of not paying for something when we have trillions of dollars of debt.” Even some liberal Democrats are proving that they, too, are cowards on this issue. For example, Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California called the question of cost “a very major and difficult subject.” Speaking on CNN, she said, “I think there's a lot of concern in the Democratic caucus.” The concern should not be over the financial cost of action, but the
human cost of inaction. And yes, we have a health care system that derives healthy—often
exorbitant—profits as a result of people being sick. “What we know is that cost currently is crushing families and businesses,” Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said on Good Morning America. “Unless we do something, we won't be able to afford the health care we have, the health care we need.” And most Americans agree. According to a New York Times/CBS News poll, 72 percent of Americans
favor a national health insurance program. One of the most disappointing things about Democrats as a group is that they are such political cowards. Love them or hate them, Republicans have a clear political vision. It is a perverted view but at least it's a point of view. Democrats, on the other hand, are all over the place. And they grow even more scattered when they try to compromise with a group of Republicans hell-bent on opposing President Obama, regardless of the issue. For once, Democrats need to summon the courage to stand tall on this
issue. It would be a good move politically and, more important, it would be
good for the country. This would be a true Contract with America.
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