[Mb-civic] Can Mass. health plan go national? - Edwin Amenta - Boston Globe Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Sat Apr 8 05:07:41 PDT 2006
Can Mass. health plan go national?
By Edwin Amenta | April 8, 2006 | The Boston Globe
NOW THAT the Massachusetts Legislature has passed a law requiring health
insurance, is this possible for the United States? It is worth asking,
because innovative state action was the harbinger for America's most
successful social reform -- Social Security, which passed in 1935 and
covered almost all workers by 1950. Proponents of insuring the 45
million Americans that remain uncovered can learn lessons from that
earlier struggle.
It never happens that contentious reforms, once an innovator or two take
the plunge, are simply seen as such good ideas that state after state
will gladly adopt them. New York and California, as well as
Massachusetts, passed innovative old-age programs in the early 1930s
that compelled counties to participate, but many Southern and Midwestern
states continued to drag their heels. If there is going to be health
coverage for all Americans, the federal government will have to get
involved.
But state-level action does matter in providing models and leaders.
Franklin Roosevelt was governor when New York's landmark old-age
legislation was passed, and he was committed to the issue when he was
elected president in 1932. Representatives from California and
Massachusetts provided congressional leadership to steer old-age
proposals to passage.
Social Security also provided language that shielded politicians from an
American public that can become hostile to government, even when public
opinion is in favor of action. The makers of Social Security called the
payroll taxes for the program ''contributions," making them seem like
private insurance policies, and levied them on employers and employees
alike, claiming that burdens were being shared. Roosevelt railed against
the ''dole," which represented in the public mind the European approach
to social policy.
The Massachusetts legislation provides similar political cover. By
requiring individuals who can afford health insurance to buy it, the
proposal emphasizes individual responsibility. By placing fees on
businesses that fail to cover their workers, the proposal sanctions
those not carrying their weight. A Massachusetts proposal writ large can
be favorably contrasted to the highly complicated and much maligned
Clinton health security plan of the 1990s.
It is also key, however, for mass-based political organizations to
demand a more radical approach. Social Security would never have never
gotten off the ground without the demands of the Townsend Plan, which
organized 2 million older Americans into Townsend clubs that demanded
far more generous treatment to retirees than Roosevelt and Congress
offered. The Townsend Plan and other pension organizations also had
supporters in Congress calling for universal, government-provided pensions.
Their analogues today include advocacy groups such as Health Care for
All and others, like Senator Edward Kennedy, supporting the extension of
the single-payer Medicare program down to younger Americans. As in
Massachusetts, for America to solve the problem of health coverage
religious organizations will have to press for an alternative, and, so,
too, will labor unions and other groups with membership and clout like
the AARP.
Unfortunately for Mitt Romney, the Massachusetts governor who hopes to
ride the issue to the White House, if healthcare is going to run
according to the Social Security playbook, he cannot lead the way. The
governor is threatening to veto an uncontroversial $295 per employee fee
on businesses who deny coverage to prove his antitax credentials to
Grover Norquist and the Republican right.
But such a substantial governmental commitment will take some revenues,
whether one calls them fees, premiums, or contributions, and can happen
only if the Democrats return to power. Social Security was hashed out
over 15 years during which only Democrats Roosevelt and Harry Truman
occupied the White House, while former president Herbert Hoover and
candidate Alf Landon were taking potshots from the outside. Too many
Republicans today are tied to regressive tax-cut policies in the way
that Hoover and his congressional supporters were.
That earlier Democratic run took more than a little luck. Though not
entirely the fault of Hoover, the Great Depression discredited the
Republican Party as whole, including its tax cuts and backward approach
to social policy. Possibly the highly unpopular war in Iraq, the
mishandling of Katrina, and the bribery and illegal fund-raising
scandals will engulf the Republicans in a similar way.
It happened before. It could happen again.
Edwin Amenta, professor of sociology at University of California,
Irvine, and New York University, is author of the forthcoming ''When
Movements Matter: The Townsend Plan and the Rise of Social Security."
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2006/04/08/can_mass_health_plan_go_national/
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://www.islandlists.com/pipermail/mb-civic/attachments/20060408/8f947158/attachment.htm
More information about the Mb-civic
mailing list