CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 2018 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 2018 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“DON’T BET ON SINGLE-PAYER ARRIVING SOON”
There is loud talk in the Legislature and anywhere
California Democrats meet in large numbers about passing a single-payer health
care plan something like the one that didn’t make it to a state Assembly vote last
summer.
But don’t bet on such a plan passing anytime soon. For one
thing, Democrats now lack the two-thirds supermajorities in both legislative
houses that they enjoyed most of last year, the edge that allowed them to pass
a gasoline tax increase Republicans will try to defeat at the polls this fall.
Those big margins won’t return until mid-year at the
earliest, as Democrats lost three Los Angeles-area Assembly seats and one in
the state Senate to the Legislature’s sexual harassment scandal and some health
problems near the end of 2017. Even if Democrats hold on to all those seats, a
likely prospect, they would have precious little time before the November
election to place an inherently controversial single-payer, Medicare-for-all
plan on the ballot.
That plan was so questionable when presented last year that
Democratic Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon, usually a reliable liberal, shelved
it for the year last June. His objection: There was no clear financing for the idea,
with many ultra-liberal Democrats figuring they’d just pass something and
figure out later how to pay for it.
There’s also the dicey matter of negotiating with federal
officials – mostly conservative Republicans these days – over how to switch the
payroll withholding that now funds Medicare over to the state if California adopts
single payer.
And there’s the reality that California will have to find
new money somewhere if it expects to keep Medi-Cal benefits at present levels
in the face of federal cuts included in the Republican tax bill passed in the
waning days of last year.
Medi-Cal advocates including Health Access California warn
that the state may see “the mother of all Medicaid battles.” Medi-Cal is the
state’s version of the federal Medicaid program, funding health care for about
one-third of the state’s residents, a figure that demonstrates California’s
extreme economic inequalities. Liberal Democrats now want to expand Medi-Cal
even farther, saying they plan to cover undocumented immigrants along with
low-income U.S. citizens.
Without two-thirds majorities, it will be difficult to act
on any of this agenda because Democrats can have no realistic expectation of
help from any Republican who hopes to be reelected. That’s because all these
ideas are part of what Republicans call the Democrats’ “tax-and-spend”
politics.
Long-simmering disputes over rising prescription drug costs
also figure to occupy plenty of time in Sacramento this year, just like last
year.
But single-payer is the largest target for California
Democrats, who understand that passing it would take this state outside the constant
battles in Congress over repeal or dismemberment of ex-President Barack Obama’s
Affordable Care Act.
One big problem would be convincing the millions of
California seniors now on Medicare that a state-run program can provide as
widespread and comprehensive coverage as Medicare, widely perceived as one of
the best-run federal programs. Of course, if Republicans in Congress move to
cut or eviscerate Medicare, as some have threatened or promised, then a
completely independent but unproven state-run plan might look much better to
over-65 citizens.
It’s not that single-payer is a new idea in California.
Twice during the first decade of this century, former Democratic state Sen.
Sheila Kuehl, now a Los Angeles County supervisor, shepherded such plans
through the Legislature, only to see them vetoed by then-Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger. Her idea – also embodied in most current proposals – was to use
existing health insurance premiums as the main funding source, one reason
California would need to get access to Medicare fees now taken regularly out of
most seniors’ Social Security checks, in addition to what comes out of workers’
paychecks.
As was Schwarzenegger, current Gov. Jerry Brown is
skeptical about whether adequate funding is available for any of this.
All of which creates an extremely complex health care
situation in Sacramento, and nothing complex gets done quickly there. So people
anticipating a single-payer ballot proposition on a California ballot probably
should not hold their breath. Chances are it won’t come before 2020 at the
earliest.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
No comments:
Post a Comment