By Victoria Knight November
26, 2019
“The fact is that right
now the vast majority of Democrats do not support Medicare for All.” Former
Vice President Joe Biden during the November Democratic presidential primary
debate.
This
fact check was produced in partnership with PolitiFact.
When
the subject of “Medicare for All” came up during the Democratic debate last
week, former Vice President Joe Biden claimed that the majority of his party
does not favor it.
“The
fact is that right now the vast majority of Democrats do not support Medicare
for All,” he said, adding, “It couldn’t pass the United States Senate right now
with Democrats. It couldn’t pass the House.”
This
seemed to be a very strong statement, and we weren’t sure that voters’
positions on this issue were as clear-cut as Biden made them out to be, so we
asked his campaign where he got the information.
Public
Opinion
The
Biden campaign initially directed us to news coverage of a January 2019 Kaiser Family
Foundation tracking poll, which noted that the majority of Americans
generally oppose Medicare for All if they hear arguments that frame the
program as requiring Americans to pay more taxes or leading to delays in
testing and treatment. (Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent
program of the foundation.)
On the
flip side, though, when — in the same poll — Medicare for All was described as
guaranteeing health insurance as a right for all Americans, or that it would
eliminate health insurance premiums and reduce out-of-pocket costs, the
majority favored the national health plan.
That
poll, now nearly a year old, found that when simply asked, 56% said they did
favor having “a national health plan, sometimes called Medicare-for-all, where
all Americans would get their insurance from a single government plan.”
Those
percentages, though, reflected the views of all Americans, not just
Democrats. The same poll broke down respondents’ answers by political party and
showed that 81% of Democrats favored creating a national health plan.
The KFF
Health Tracking Poll, done monthly, indicates Democrats’ support for Medicare
for All has weakened, but not entirely. Its most recent version, published in November, revealed large
majorities of Democrats support a public option (88%) and Medicare for All
(77%), while a January poll showed 85% of Democrats backed a Medicare buy-in.
“The
majority of Democrats do support Medicare for All, but Medicare for All is not
as popular as public option or a Medicare buy-in,” said Ashley Kirzinger, who
is the associate director for public opinion and survey research at KFF.
Other
polls show similar results: support for Medicare for All among Democrats but
stronger support for the incremental approaches Biden backs.
A
September NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll,
for instance, found 67% of Democrats said they supported adopting Medicare for
All. The public option fared better, with 75% of Democrats supporting the
proposal.
“The
data … does show majority support among Democratic voters (whether that reaches
a “vast majority” depends
upon your interpretation), but higher support for a public option,”Jeff
Horwitt, senior vice president with Hart Research Associates wrote in an email.
Hart Research Associates conducted the NBC/WSJ poll.
The
Biden campaign also directed us to a September KFF Health Tracking Poll that
showed that 55% of Democrats prefer a candidate who would build on the existing
Affordable Care Act, while 40% of Democrats prefer a candidate who would
replace the ACA with Medicare for All.
And one
more from the Biden campaign — a CNN article citing a
July CNN and SSRS poll that found almost
half (48%) of all respondents who lean Democratic said the national program
should not replace private insurance, while 31% said that it should.
That
same CNN/SSRS poll, though, had 85% of respondents who are Democrats or
Democratic-leaning independents responding “yes” when asked if the government
should provide a national health insurance program for all Americans, even if
it would require higher taxes.
The
numbers from these various polls seem to communicate a range of opinions among
Democrats about Medicare for All.
Robert
Blendon of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health said he thinks Biden’s
statement rings true based on a poll he helped conduct,
in partnership with the Commonwealth Fund and The New York Times.
Rather
than asking survey respondents if they favored Medicare for All, the survey
asked them to choose among Medicare for All, improving the existing ACA or
replacing the ACA with state health plans.
Sources:
Email
exchange with Joe Biden for President campaign staff, Nov. 25, 2019
KFF, “Health Tracking Poll — January 2019: The Public on Next Steps for the
ACA and Proposals to Expand Coverage,” Jan. 23, 2019
KFF, “Health Tracking Poll — November 2019: Health Care in the 2020 Election,
Medicare-for-all, and the State of the ACA,” Nov. 20, 2019
Telephone
interview with Ashley Kirzinger, associate director for public opinion and
survey research, KFF, Nov. 25, 2019
Hart
Research Associates, “NBC News/Wall Street Journal Survey: September 2019,” Oct. 1,
2019
Email
interview with Jeff Horwitt, senior vice president, Hart Research Associates,
Nov. 25, 2019
KFF, “Health Tracking Poll — September 2019: Health Care Policy in Congress
and on the Campaign Trail,” Sept. 12, 2019
CNN, “Black Democrats Prefer the Public Option to ‘Medicare for All’,”
July 27, 2019
SSRS, “CNN Politics Democrats and Health Care June 2019 Poll,” July
1, 2019
Telephone
interview with Robert Blendon, Richard L. Menschel professor and senior
associate dean for Policy Translation and Leadership Development, Harvard T.H.
Chan School of Public Health, Nov. 25, 2019
The
Commonwealth Fund, The New York Times, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public
Health, “Americans’ Values and Beliefs About National Health Insurance Reform,”
October 2019
S. 1129 – “Medicare for All Act of 2019,” sponsored by Sen.
Bernard Sanders, 2019-20
H.R. 1384 – “Medicare for All Act of 2019,” sponsored by Rep.
Pramila Jayapal, 2019-20
For
registered Democrats, the results were close between two of the proposals: 46%
preferred Medicare for All and 45% preferred improving the existing ACA. Only
7% preferred replacing the ACA with state health plans. In this survey,
Medicare for All was not preferred by a majority of Democrats.
But
Blendon noted that survey respondents often will say yes to a “one-off
question” about whether they support something and that answer can change once
they have to choose among options, such as in his organization’s survey.
“The
answer is that Democrats are divided on whether or not they want to build on
the ACA or whether they want to do Medicare for All,” he said.
Congressional
Support And Another Context
Horwitt
also made the point that it wasn’t clear in Biden’s statement which group of
people he was referencing.
“I
recall hearing the statement in real-time, but in looking now at just the
statement from Biden below, it is unclear to me if he is talking about elected
Democrats or Democratic voters when he references the “vast majority,” Horwitt
wrote via email.
While
the Biden campaign did direct us to public opinion polls, they also pointed out
that the Senate and House Medicare for All bills are “only sponsored by a
fraction of the members of the respective Democratic caucuses that would be
needed to secure passage.”
The
Senate Medicare for All bill, introduced by Sen. Bernie Sanders, has 14
co-sponsors, while the House’s Medicare for All bill, introduced by Rep.
Pramila Jayapal, has 118 co-sponsors. (There are currently 233 Democrats in the
House and 45 Democrats
plus two independents in the Senate.)
Our
Ruling
During
the recent presidential primary debates, Biden said: “The fact is that right
now the vast majority of Democrats do not support Medicare for All.” Based on a
cursory review of polls, this statement appears off-base. After all, most polls
find that when Democrats are simply asked if they support Medicare for All,
they answer “yes.”
However,
when those same polls dig deeper into this support by asking about the
favorability of other Democratic-favored health policies — Medicare for All,
the public option or expansions of the Affordable Care Act — or if such a
Medicare for All program should replace private insurance, this support becomes
weaker. The polls do seem to suggest support among Democrats for the moderate
reforms Biden backs. Still, the evidence is lacking to support Biden’s claim
that a “vast majority” of Democrats oppose Medicare for All.
For
these reasons, we rate this statement Mostly False.
Victoria
Knight: vknight@kff.org,
@victoriaregisk
https://khn.org/news/did-joe-biden-overstate-democratic-voters-opposition-to-medicare-for-all/?utm_campaign=KHN%3A%20Topic-based&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=80362629&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-8LbsdyZqPacFmMOI0UmzI9Kp1JT7PhW6-orAmkfr2FO9WFV2N78KBXYSU9D2JJnPNg2SeSBgsuoL7F4f57ztwKAUoRwg&_hsmi=80362629
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