Straight talk? Not on healthcare

For the past several weeks, John McCain and his campaign have been enraged by the emphasis on his willingness to leave U.S. troops in Iraq for up to 100 years, and the audacity of Democrats to tell voters about his views on the issue. To hear them tell it, misrepresenting a rival’s stated policy position — which Dems really aren’t doing — is completely beyond the pale.

Which is odd, given McCain’s habit of wildly misrepresenting the Dems on healthcare policy.

Senator John McCain has been repeatedly suggesting that his Democratic rivals are proposing a single-payer, or even a nationalized health care system along the lines of those in countries like Canada and Britain.

The suggestion is incorrect. While both Senator Barack Obama of Illinois and Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York are calling for universal health care and an expanded role for government, they stop well short of calling for a single-payer plan.

Mr. McCain has made the assertion several times in recent days, even as he and the Republicans have made repeated calls for accuracy on the campaign trail…. Yet on repeated occasions, Mr. McCain, of Arizona, has inaccurately described the Democrats’ health care proposals, using language that evokes the specter of socialized medicine.

On a campaign stop on Thursday, for example, McCain said Clinton and Obama “want a massive government takeover of the health care system in America.” A few months ago, McCain said the Dems offer a “single-payer big government solution.” A few months before that, he insisted that the Dems are offering a “government-run, single-payer system like they have in Canada and like they have in England.”

Now, it’s worth noting that John McCain doesn’t know the first thing about healthcare, other than the fact that he’s enjoyed generous, quality, taxpayer-financed medical care for his entire life. Given his almost humiliating confusion on most policy details, McCain might actually believe his own bogus talking points. He’s not necessarily lying; it’s just as likely that he’s clueless.

Whether his deception is intentional or not is, however, beside the point. After decrying misrepresentations, McCain can’t bring himself to tell the truth about one of the most important domestic policy issues on the mind of Americans.

The McCain campaign’s defense is rather amusing.

Tucker Bounds, a McCain campaign spokesman, noted that Mr. Obama had called himself “a proponent of a single-payer health care program” in 2003. And he noted that just this week, Mr. Obama had spoken favorably of systems in Canada and Europe and said, “If I were designing a system from scratch, if I were just starting from zero , I would probably set up a similar system, just a Medicare-for-all plan.”

But Mr. Obama has even stopped short of mandating health insurance for everyone.

Mr. Bounds said that Mr. McCain’s characterization of the Democrats’ plans was completely reasonable. “While their proposals may not outline one to the finite extent, they clearly suggest that the movement toward a single-payer system is in their overall interests,” he said.

I see. The “finite extent” is a terrific euphemism, isn’t it? Perhaps I can translate Bounds’ conclusion from spin to English: “If we consider what the Dems have actually said, McCain is lying. But those are just details. Since we think the Dems’ plans might someday kinda sorta lead to something like single-payer, we feel comfortable lying some more.”

My very favorite quote, though, came when McCain said people in a single-payer system “end up in a two-tiered system where the wealthiest can afford to pay for their own health care and those with low income sometimes wait six or eight months for a routine kind of treatment. And that’s what I’m not going to let happen to the United States of America.”

Right. Of course. We can’t possibly tolerate a “two-tiered system” in which those with more money get more care, and lower-income families get screwed.

No, that would be awful. We can’t let that happen in the United States of America.

McCain’s right in a way. If you do not have access to health care, you do not wait for health care. If the lower tier were to just go away quietly and die, there would be no lower tier. Problems solved!
The Straight Talk Express is barreling toward the Twilight Zone.

  • mclame, who has had government healthcare his entire life cannot possibly be a “straight talker” when he talks about the evils of government healthcare. Evidently, the system works fine for him and his extremely rich wife.

    Gotta love it when a senile, corrupt politician (remember Keating 5? He was the 6th!) proclaims himself to be a man of his words.

    Of course, our real problem are the lying liars in the mainstream media that have given this sick old man any appearance of a credible candidate – but then again, he represents the same criminal cabal that made an AWOL alcoholic/cocaine addict our “war president” by stealing 2 elections.

  • If, as JoeW notes, “the lower tier were to just go away quietly and die,” then the upper tier would inherit the responsibility of performing all the mundane tasks in society currently assigned to that lower tier.

    snark on

    Immigration on a massive scale would become necessary; we would no longer be able to protect our borders, as millions upon millions of undocumented aliens cross those borders on a daily basis to fill those millions upon millions of now-vacated lower-tier jobs. Why does John McPhony want to bring al Quaeda to America?

    snark off

    Playing John McPhony’s healthcare plans to the rabid isolationist wing of the GOP in this manner could cost him a few million votes in November, y’know….

  • Hmm, maybe Dems should try the Tucker Bounds approach on Iraq:

    “While McCain’s proposal may not outline a 100-year war in Iraq to the finite extent, it clearly suggests that the movement toward a permanent war is in his overall interest.”

  • I spent the first twenty years of my life in England and I now live in Canada. What’s so bad about our healthcare ? Instead of an insurance company 70% of our healthcare is from the provincial government (assisted by the feds who make sure care is consistent across the country). The doctors get paid by the government and they don’t have to check to see if a procedure is covered or not. It always is. There’s hardly any waiting, drugs are relatively cheap and the care itself is world class for absolutely everyone. We pay for it through taxes but so what ?

  • What bothers me is how Democrats are getting backed into a corner here. It’s like the accusation that Obama is a Muslim. By denying it, he, or they, are tacitly admitting that something is wrong with being a Muslim, or a single payer health insurance solution. It’s kind of like being asked, “Have you stopped beating your spouse?” Why are the Republicans so good at this? Why are the Democrats so ashamed of being, well, Democrats?

    What’s wrong with a single payer system? Nothing. It’s the right answer. It’s just that our system is so screwed up, the special interests so entrenched, the Republicans so intransigent, that we cannot adopt such a system overnight. But McCain’s got them denying that they even entertain such a thought for the future, that something is inherently evil with a government solution to a problem.

    The Republicans are still framing the larger issue, that government is always the problem, never the solution, and the Democrats don’t dare deny it.

  • I agree with Hark that the likely point of this dishonest attack is to push the Democrats into a defensive posture. On the other hand, I haven’t seen that happen yet.

    The tactics aside, the point of the McCain attack is to head off the implementation of universal coverage precisely because, once the public is comfortable with government mandated universal, the psychological barrier to implementing single a single payer system with have come down.

    In fact, McCain the free marketeer is afraid that the markets will speak in favor of single payer. The universal plans permit individuals to buy in to a Medicare style insurance. If most people freely enroll in such plan that will be a very clear indication that single payer is what people want.

    Why is McCain so afraid of the this free market? Let the market speak.

  • elias vecken – top Republican strategists understand that a national healthcare program would be seen as a great liberal success, which is why they fight it tooth and nail (some of them even put this in writing during the Clinton Administration healthcare battle.) The people they actually care about (themselves and rich contributors) are doing just fine with our current system, so as long as they can get their lower-income supporters to vote for them by lying to them about it, they will.

  • sorry guys – but the USA seems so screwed up. how did it get this way ? there is such a thing as being too free

  • Senator John McCain has been repeatedly suggesting that his Democratic rivals are proposing a single-payer, or even a nationalized health care system along the lines of those in countries like Canada and Britain.

    Don’t I wish… Not even in the poor, commie Poland of my childhood and teens had the healthcare system been as broken as it’s here. But here, only Kucinich had the audacity to suggest a single payer for all and see where that got him…

  • McCain is rehashing the same old Republican arguments dating back to when Ronald Reagan denounced “socialised medicine” in the 1950s as some sort of “commie plot.” What the Republicans conveniently conceal is that those who are elected to the Federal Government they claim to hate so much get full health insurance – government-paid!

    I live near the Canadian border and have friends there. I have never heard one of them say they’d trade what they have (however imperfect) for what we (don’t) have.

    Neither of the Democratic candidates plans will solve the problem – only single-payer will do that – but it’s a lot better than what McCain is touting.

    However, should either Hillary or Barack get elected, look for a repeat of 1994 from the Republicans, insurance/pharmaceutical companies and Rush Limbaugh. Who knows, they might even resurrect “Harry and Louise.”

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