Cross posted from Slobber And Spittle, where it was entitled "Why We Need The Public Option"
Paul Krugman made some sense today on health care, but I think he missed the boat in at least one regard. He starts out well enough:
Look, it is possible to have universal care without a public option; Switzerland does. But there are some good reasons for the prominence of the public option in our debate.
One is substantive: to have a workable system without the public option, you need to have effective regulation of the insurers. Given the realities of our money-dominated politics, you really have to worry whether that can be done — which is a reason to have a more or less automatic mechanism for disciplining the industry.
He’s right – Switzerland built a good system around using something vaguely like the co-ops that Sen. Kent Conrad (D-ND) is flogging. The problem is that we have been given several solid examples recently of why we can’t trust our government to regulate an industry that’s awash in cash. The banking crisis was brought on by its refusal to regulate the industry. The government has still not done anything remotely like re-enacting the controls that kept that industry out of trouble for eighty years. Yet it barely hesitated before pumping $15 trillion or so into the banking system. We have also seen how little the government is interested in regulating the trading of securities. Given how much the Congress has been at the insurance industry’s beck and call during this health care debate, does anyone with two brain cells to call his own think the same thing wouldn’t happen to any regulations that are part of a health care reform bill?
Perhaps if I’d seen a few years of responsible government following these fiascos I might be willing to try again. But I haven’t. It’s hard for me to believe that anyone could trust the government to do the right thing in this area right now. Having an option to obtain publicly-financed (or underwritten) health care like Medicare is a hedge against that mistrust.
So progressives have their backs up over one provision in health care reform that’s easy to monitor. The public option has become not so much a symbol as a signal, a test of whether Obama is really the progressive activists thought they were backing.
And the bizarre thing is that the administration doesn’t seem to get that.
This is where I part ways. I certainly can’t speak for progressives generally, but I know President Obama isn’t one of us. This isn’t a litmus test or a test of loyalty. It’s really about something that we can trust will cover the health care needs of the 1/3 of Americans who don’t have that coverage. Without a public option, there really is no reason to trust that the government will do what’s required when it comes to regulating the insurance industry.
It has shown quite clearly that it won’t.



14 Comments







Also, if I understand correctly, Switzerland bans for-profit insurers from their basic health-insurance market.
I believe you’re right.
This page of the Swiss health ministry says they must be non-profit, if I’m reading it correctly.
I think you’re not the only one who feels like, no matter the outcome on public option, Obama isn’t “our guy” who is out there working hard for the things he promised or impliedly promised when he was stumping.
I think you point out what Krugman glosses a bit. At the end of this fight, no one who was in the trenches on the public option will look over at Obama and say, “whew, well, at least he proved his leadership.” The Democratic leadership and the President have over and over placed themselves in lockstep with Republicans as the barrier to progress. The endgame for those decisions is that a win on the public option won’t be viewed as Obama and Reid passing the litmus test – it will be viewed as success won, not with them, but in spite of them. And that will be how they go into succeessive elections. After 2006, many were already wary, but what they have demonstrated now, with all the gifts they were given, is enough for most of the rational “base” to realize that they have seen the enemy, and it is all too often an elected Democratic party official.
Yes. Perfect way to say it.
The Democratic leadership and the President have over and over placed themselves in lockstep with Republicans as the barrier to progress.
That’s a point I was trying to make in my previous diary here:
I suspect that by now even the slow learners are starting to catch on.
I am so grateful to FireDogLake.COM
I have been so depressed (that the Dems … seem to be walking away from the real purpose of the Health Care Reform effort) and was about to give up on the party! THANK YOU SO MUCH! And your efforts to get the Progressive Dems to send the letter to the White House and the HHS Sec. They really needed to hear from the real base … that put them in office.
LOL You have earned my unending support! I will send my money to you … from this point on.
Signed
SO Happy!
Jay
Well, I’m not actually with Firedoglake, I’m just someone who shows up here a lot. I appreciate their efforts, too, including giving us a forum for articles like this one. This site is a great community, and it’s to the credit of Jane and her partners here that it is.
Kucinich on MSNBC
Flash! Kucinich on MSNBC – health care status: Dennis will join Ed Schultz on “The Ed Show,” MSNBC, today August 19th at 6:30 pm EDT, to discuss the status of the health care reform proposals.
BE THERE!
I don’t get cable, so hopefully someone will make a video of it.
Elliot has posted a video.
There is only ONE thing blocking US Public Health Care: RAHMBOBAMANIA!
That RahmbObamania manifests itself as Baucus, as PhRMA getting a free extension on the Bush “No Bargaining on Prices” handout from Obama, on all those Democratic Senators playing footsies with the Insurance Corporations to block the Public Option, on the reactionary MSM trying to promote ANYTHING that suggests the Public Option might not be preferred by anyone to the left of Dick Cheney, and so on. NO MORE RAHMBOBAMAMIA!!!
Obama has already betrayed enough of his promises with the filthy air polluters, the greedy & unconscionable bankers, the criminally incompetent AIGers, the grossly sleazy Democratic Senators, the fascistic US Chamber of Commerce — The most interesting question in US Politics now is when will the gliberals overcome their glib?
Productive comment. Thank you so much for enlightening the discourse.
I’ve been watching a lot of videos that are from cable news shows. Many of them actually suggest what you say they don’t – that a public option is a popular choice, and that the Democrats would be foolish to abandon it. While there is plenty of bad reporting that says otherwise, there is some good.
As for the Obama Administration, I’ve written before that nothing they’ve done should surprise us. That doesn’t mean that they’re the only obstacle, or even the biggest. If the pharmaceuticals, insurance companies, and for-profit health care providers didn’t have lots of money, no one would be listening to them very much. My advice has been to give them something to be more afraid of. Jane H. and others have found a way to do that, and I think part of this pushback today is a result.
If they know we’re serious about a real public option, and that we’re ready to make our support contingent on it, then that changes the equation. Whether it changes it enough to change the outcome, we’ll see.