Drew Altman, Kaiser
Family Foundation December 3, 2018
Now that they've won the House and the 2020 presidential
campaign is about to start, Democrats will have to decide how much Medicare for
All should dominate their health care agenda.
The big picture: The idea has
strong appeal for many Democrats, as does the more limited approach of letting
50-64 year olds buy into Medicare. But both ideas also require spending
political capital that could be devoted to other health issues. They also run
the risk of dividing moderate and progressive Democrats, and could give
Republicans the chance to get off the ropes on health care in 2020.
Between the lines: Medicare for
All is popular, with 59% of the public supporting the idea, according to our polling at the
Kaiser Family Foundation. The words matter, and "Medicare for
All" generates more positive responses (62%) than "national health
plan" (57%) or “single payer” (48%).
- Support
falls and opposition grows when the public is presented with
the tradeoffs that come with any single payer plan, such
as higher taxes or increased government control.
- But
people are more likely to support it when they hear the arguments in favor
of single-payer, such as ensuring that all Americans have health insurance
or reducing administrative costs.
- It's
even more popular when offered as an option that would allow people to
keep their current coverage if they prefer it (75% support that version).
- And 77% support allowing
50-64 year olds to buy in to Medicare.
What's next: Progressive
candidates can rally support among their party's base by endorsing Medicare for
All, while not rejecting more incremental buy-in options. Several likely
presidential candidates have already endorsed Medicare for All.
- But
more moderate and conservative Democrats will not like the cost or
expanded role for government any of these options bring, and would prefer
to see the agenda focus on other issues such as drug prices.
- Republicans will argue
that expanding Medicare will raise taxes and further strain the finances
of the Medicare program, or force seniors into a new system, hoping to win
back some of the ground they lost with
seniors in the midterms.
The bottom line: With no chance
of enacting legislation into law in a divided government, the challenge for
House leadership and the presidential candidates is to sustain the energy
progressive Democrats have around Medicare for All, without dividing their
party and surrendering their political advantage on health care.
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