Private Health Care’s Last Stand
Nelson Griswold
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A Democratic sweep on November 3 means government-run health care
Do you understand just what’s at stake in this year’s election?
Before I entered the benefits industry, I worked in public policy. I ran two policy think tanks, testified before legislative committees, and lobbied on behalf of our free-market principles.
As someone whose experience and expertise bridges the policy world and the benefits industry, to say I am extremely concerned about this election would be a gross understatement.
It’s not alarmism or hyperbole to state that the future of America’s private health care system – and the health insurance industry – will be determined by the upcoming election. If the Democrats sweep the Senate and the White House, expect them to ram through single-payer health care in the first year of the Biden Administration.
U.S. Senator Chris Coons (D-DE) already has tipped the Democrats’ hand. Sen. Coons, a friend and close ally of Democratic nominee Joe Biden, long has been a staunch defender of the legislative filibuster, a procedural device that allows a minority in the Senate to prevent a vote on a legislative bill and requires 60 votes to end. Obamacare passed in 2010 only because Senate Democrats had 60 votes and were able to shut down the Republican filibuster.
In a recent interview, however, Sen. Coons expressed his openness to abolishing the filibuster if the Democrats win the Senate and the Presidency.
He gave as his reason his refusal to “watch the Biden administration's initiatives blocked at every turn.”
Don’t believe that Coons floated this trial balloon without the knowledge and support of the Biden campaign and the party leadership.
With Biden in the White House, a Democratic Senate that ends the use of the filibuster would need only 50 votes – with Vice President Kamala Harris breaking the tie – to pass legislation establishing single-payer health care and ending our private health care system.
The near certainty of this scenario, should the Democrats sweep, is based on four well-established factors.
- The first is the critical role that the left-wing of the Democratic Party will play in a Biden victory. Biden’s careful cultivation of left-wing Senators Bernie Sanders (I-VT) and Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and his receptivity to much their radical agenda points to his campaign’s recognition that Biden needs the energy and enthusiastic support of Sanders’ and Warren’s supporters. If Biden wins, he will owe the party’s left-wing…and if the Democrats take the Senate, the left will expect a major legislative victory.
- The second factor is the almost fetishistic devotion of the left to the goal of single-payer health care. Sanders and other leftist leaders have elevated health care reform from a policy matter to a human rights issue, which places single-payer at the very top of the left’s wish list. When it’s payback time after a Biden White House victory, the Sanders, Warren and their followers will expect and demand passage of single-payer health care.
- The third factor is the nature of Joe Biden, whose political past shows him to be nothing more or less than a very practical politician, guided not by any underlying philosophy or ideology but by political expedience. His history in office marks Biden as a political chameleon, willing to change his colors as circumstances require.
Despite his refusal to embrace single-payer during the presidential campaign, once elected, indebted to the left, and facing their vociferous demands for single-payer, Biden is almost certain to accommodate the left and support abolishing private health care in favor of a single-payer system.
4. The final factor, the left’s ace-in-the-hole, is Kamala Harris. As the newly elected Vice President, Harris is certain to be looking ahead to the 2024 Presidential race. Given that Biden would be 82 after his first term, it is widely expected that he will serve only the one term, setting up his Vice President to be the 2024 front-runner. Harris will want to consolidate support early in anticipation of her own run for the roses.
She cultivates the left’s support by leaning on Biden to support the single-payer legislation. By lending an assist to the left by helping overcome any Biden resistance, Harris also gains the right to take credit for single-payer since it would have passed under the Biden-Harris administration.
Bottom Line: Passage of single-payer health care means the end of private health insurance and the jobs of those who work for the carriers and the brokerages.
What to do if single-payer passes is the topic for another article. But I can tell you what to do now. Vote…and encourage every family member and friend to vote and vote wisely.
This election is very possibly the last stand for our industry and our private health care system.
Senior Manager in Fin-Tech industry partnering with clients to improve revenue growth.
4 年Brett, I actually agree with you. This could be the first time.
Associate Professor, MHA Program at Queens University of Charlotte
4 年Single payer is not government run. Single-payer is not socialized medicine.
Officially Retired at The Company of Retirees
4 年So let's talk about what is the best solution for the future of our country rather than what is best for you and me today. We have the most expensive healthcare in the world and extremely mediocre results. If you don't think we ration care today, talk to the millions of people without coverage or with huge deductibles or crappy short term medical plans. Let's not just work to protect the status quo. Let's work to come up with a viable solution. Medicare Advantage plans are evolving into a nice mix of government supported but health carrier underwritten solution. Employers truly want to get out of the business of paying for health care coverage so seems like there is some available money there - right? Let's work a little harder and come up with some viable suggestions. Do we have to wait for the government to solve it?
Managing Director / Founder at Customer Benefits Analytics, LLC
4 年Such an alarmist view is unwarranted. I agree with Brett's comments that the private health insurance industry has done quite well since the ACA.
Employee Benefit Consulting, LLC
4 年The one thing that this article and every article I have read regarding single payer health has omitted is that with single payer the premiums will be paid for entirely by the tax payer without any employer contribution toward the cost. I know not everyone has medical insurance through their employer, but many do. Assuming the cost of health care remains the same or nearly the same, wouldn't that mean that the end user will see an increase in premium (tax deduction) of at approximately 50% for the cost of their own medical coverage? There are also some employers that currently contribute toward the cost of coverage for dependents as well. Will that now be paid completely by the employee/individual?