Boston Herald (MA) December 29, 2019
Dec.
29--DOVER, N.H. -- Bernie Sanders' long-championed "Medicare for All"
health care system will cost people their jobs, the Vermont senator said
Saturday while campaigning in the home of the first-in-the-nation primary.
"Will
there be job loss? Yes, there will be," Sanders said in response to an
audience question during a health care-themed town hall in Dover, N.H.
But
Sanders suggested job re-training as a way to help those who would lose their
jobs in the transition to the government-run health care system that abolishes
private insurance.
University
of Massachusetts Amherst economist Robert Pollin told Kaiser Health News
earlier this year Medicare for All could cost some 2 million jobs.
Sanders
was forced to address the issue Saturday when answering a question from Maine
resident James McCoy, a health insurance grievance and appeals analyst, about
what would happen to his job under Medicare for All.
"What
we have to do is make sure people should not have to argue with you or anybody
else. If they are sick, they deserve the coverage and that's what Medicare for
All is about," Sanders said.
Sanders
acknowledged his system would result in job loss before offering his potential
solution.
"We
are putting into Medicare for All what we are calling a 'Just Transition
Program,' which will help everybody in the industry for a five-year period
maintain their income, get the job training that they need to get another
job," Sanders said.
While
U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren has largely taken the heat over Medicare for All,
Sanders has had to admit the middle class will pay more in taxes -- though he
says they'll save on health care costs through the elimination of premiums,
co-pays and deductibles -- and has previously said the plan would result in job
loss.
McCoy
told Sanders he was a progressive trying to decide between the Vermont senator
and his Massachusetts colleague. Afterward, he told the Herald he preferred how
Warren would handle job loss under Medicare for All.
"I
respect his honesty," McCoy said of Sanders, adding that those in the
health insurance industry are not trying to be "evil people. We're just
like everyone else, trying to support our families."
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