Following up on an earlier item, one of the more interesting exchanges on John McCain’s appearance on ABC’s “This Week with George Stephanopoulos” yesterday came when McCain was confronted with a quote from Elizabeth Edwards.
“The truth is, a health care policy that covers everything but cancer doesn’t exactly do me a lot of good,” Edwards said. “And John McCain and I have something in common — neither one of us would be covered by his health care policy.” After the video clip, Stephanopoulos asked, “Why not guarantee that anyone with a preexisting condition should be able to get health care?”
McCain, falsely, responded, “We’re not leaving anybody behind. But what we’re not doing is we’re not going to have a big government takeover and mandates. They’ve tried that in other countries. Both Senator Obama and Senator Clinton’s plans are big-government solutions.”
STEPHANOPOULOS: What’s wrong with government — what’s wrong with government-run health care?
MCCAIN: And we continue to have these debates — what’s wrong with it? Go to Canada. Go to England and you can find out what’s wrong with it. Governments don’t make the right decisions. Families make the right decisions.
STEPHANOPOULOS: One of the points Mrs. Edwards made in the Wall Street Journal, she said that your whole life, you had government health care. You were the son of a Naval officer, a Naval officer, now a member of Congress. And her point is, why shouldn’t every American be able to get the kind of health care that members of Congress get or members of the military get?
MCCAIN: It’s a cheap shot, but I did have a period of time where I didn’t have very good government health care. I had it from another government.
There’s quite a few angles to this, not the least of which is McCain trying to defend his approach to health care by highlighting his experience as a prisoner of war in Vietnam. I also found the question itself to be slanted — who’s advocating “government-run health care”? It’s necessarily a conservative frame.
But as Elizabeth Edwards herself explained today, her question was anything but a “cheap shot.”
As Edwards explained, this is actually a “potentially life and death question for tens of million of Americans.”
McCain’s health care plan is centered around the idea that we’d be better off if more Americans bought health coverage on their own, rather than receiving it through a job or government program. But maybe since he has never purchased insurance in the individual market, he does not know the challenge it presents for Americans with preexisting conditions.
A recent study showed that nearly nine out of every ten people seeking individual coverage on the private insurance market never got it. Insurers will disqualify you for just taking certain medicines because of the possibility of future costs, including common drugs as Lipitor, Zocor, Nexium, and Advair. People who have had cancer are denied coverage and those who get cancer run the risk of simply being dropped by their insurer for any excuse that can be found. And insurers make it a practice to deny coverage to individuals in high risk occupations, such as firefighting, lumber work, telecom installation, and pretty much anything more risky than working in an office.
McCain opposes universal health care because he claims it represents a “big government takeover and mandates.” But yesterday, he said he would help cover people with preexisting conditions by creating a “special Medicaid trust fund.”
A “special Medicaid trust fund”? Talk about a big government takeover. Tens of millions of Americans have preexisting conditions. If he is going to expand Medicaid to cover Americans with preexisting conditions, he is talking about a massive, massive increase in the Medicaid program. He says he opposes more government involvement in health care, but his idea really would be government-run health care.
My questions is: why is he doing this? If he is so concerned about expanding government’s role in health care, why doesn’t he just tell the insurance industry that they have to cover people with preexisting conditions? Why is he more concerned about protecting the insurance industry — an industry which, by the way, his corporate tax cut plan gives a $1.9 billion tax cut to — than the tens of millions Americans with preexisting conditions?
Regrettably, Stephanopoulos didn’t think to ask. In all likelihood, though, it wouldn’t have mattered; I’m pretty sure McCain couldn’t have answered the question anyway.