Wyden Open To Public Health Care Option If His Plan Stalls

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First Posted: 05-26-09 12:30 PM   |   Updated: 06-26-09 05:12 AM

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Wyden

Sen. Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, is a key player in the health care debate, the sponsor of the only bipartisan health care bill in the Senate. Backers of the major Democratic plan, which would allow patients to buy into a public plan, see Wyden's bill, however, as an obstacle preventing centrist Democrats from fully jumping aboard the public-option train.

In an interview with the Huffington Post, Wyden said several times that if his proposal fails to become law, he's open to the public option. Wyden has been under pressure at home from unions and a health-care reform coalition to embrace the Democratic proposal.

"If I don't get my first choice and get various other options, I'm going to look at them," he said when asked about the public option. "I think there's a better, simpler consumer protection alternative. But if I don't prevail on that, then I'm going to look at the other ones."

Sens. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) and Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) both told the Huffington Post they were open to a public option, but were backers of Wyden's bill and were hoping it would become law first. Wyden's openness to a public option gives his allies more room to maneuver.

For now, though, Wyden is still pushing his own proposal, which taxes employer-sponsored benefits and makes health care a legal guarantee. Insurers would be required to provide coverage at least as good as members of Congress get and the system would be subsidized by the taxes on current benefits. "I think I've got the ultimate consumer protection, and that is a legal guarantee that all Americans get health coverage at least as good as a member of Congress's," he said.

Labor has been pressuring Wyden at home; the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees and the AFL-CIO have been running a campaign -- StopWydensHealthTax.com -- that charges Wyden's plan with undermining the employer-sponsored system.

Wyden says that his proposal goes down well at home.

"If you come to a town hall meeting in Oregon and you ask people about what they want in health reform, you get a bunch of folks who are for single-payer, you get a bunch of folks on the other side, and somebody stands up and says, 'What we really want is coverage like you people in Congress have,' and then the whole row erupts in applause," he said. "And that's what we've got in the Healthy Americans Act, we're going to fight for it, we'll see how I do when the Senate Finance Committee is actually marking up legislation in June."

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Wyden didn't want to address the public option head on, saying instead that he thought his plan superior.

"I guess what I'd say is that there are a variety of ideas that are in circulation right now. I've told you what my first choice is. I think it's simple, I think it's understandable; I think it is a populist, proven approach. It's what I have and every other elected official has," he said.

The reform coalition Health Care for America NOW! has been pressuring Wyden with an ad in Oregon calling on him to embrace the public option. Watch:


Wyden's fuller comments to the Huffington Post on health care reform are below:

"You know, this is the heavy lifting period. When you're talking about paying for it, you get down to what I call the gut level issue, and I'll give you the math. This year in the United States we're going to spend $2.5 trillion on medical care. There are 305 million of us. If you divide 305 m into 2.5 trillion, you could go out and hire a doctor for every seven families in the United States and pay the doctor $225,000 for the year to take care of seven families. And whenever I bring this up with a group of physicians, they say, 'Ron, where would I go to get my seven families? Sounds pretty good.' So we're spending enough on health care, we're not spending in the right places. And that in my view is what today and some other discussions about containing costs is all about."

"The public option was not raised today. I was there for almost all of it, and then a couple bathroom breaks. It has been raised extensively in the Finance Committee discussions, so if you want to talk about public option I'm happy to do that, but it wasn't raised today."

"A couple of points. First, the Senate Finance Committee is going to go in in June, and I want to see what's presented. I think I have in the Healthy Americans Act, which is the first bipartisan bill there's been in the Senate with a big group of sponsors, I think I've got the ultimate consumer protection, and that is a legal guarantee that all Americans get health coverage at least as good as a member of Congress's. That is a legal guarantee ... and with that guarantee, you're linking the well-being of the typical American with what members of Congress have. And if you come to a town hall meeting in Oregon and you ask people about what they want in health reform, you get a bunch of folks who are for single-payer, you get a bunch of folks on the other side, and somebody stands up and says, 'What we really want is coverage like you people in Congress have,' and then the whole row erupts in applause. And that's what we've got in the Healthy Americans Act, we're going to fight for it, we'll see how I do when the Senate Finance Committee is actually marking up legislation in June, and if I don't get my first choice and get various other options I'm going to look at them."

"We have the most generous subsidies of any of the legislative proposals. And by the way, you know, the public option does not guarantee subsidies. The public option just simply says that Medicare or some other program would be available. In other words, you still have to find a way to pay for it. And we have the most generous subsidies, up to 400 percent of poverty, because we make tough insurance reforms. We slashed administrative costs, we take away tax breaks for some high-flyer who can go out and get a designer smile and bill it to the taxpayer, and it's all in the Congressional Budget Office report on our bill, which said that the legislation is budget-neutral. In effect, we have better legally guaranteed benefits at a cheaper price."

"I guess what I'd say is that there are a variety of ideas that are in circulation right now. I've told you what my first choice is. I think it's simple, I think it's understandable, I think it is a populist, proven approach. It's what I have and every other elected official has. So that's my first choice, and you know what I tell folks is I'm gonna listen to all the ideas that are presented in the Senate Finance Committee. But I think if you come to a town meeting in my home state, this is the one that brings people together across the political spectrum."

"The insurance industry has... been strongly opposed to parts of the legislation, and I think there's an obvious reason why. It is that I am an insurance reform hawk. I think the insurance model is about cherry picking. I think it's about taking healthy people and sending sick people over to government programs more fragile than they are. And what I do is I throw that insurance model in the trash can and I say that the companies can't discriminate against people with preexisting illnesses. There's very strong community rating. They compete on the basis of price, benefit and quality, not who's the best at scouring the rolls and filtering out anybody who's sick and sending them out to fend for themselves. So we've gotten a lot of flak from the insurance industry and I've got a lot of history on this. The toughest law that's on the books today is the Medigap law that governs the supplements sold to the elderly and I wrote it. And basically when I came to the Congress it was pretty common for a senior citizen to have a shoebox full of health insurance policies. A lot of them weren't worth the paper they were written on, and I went in and drained the swamp."

"I'm very much committed to working with them [Kennedy, Baucus and others leading the way]. Let's kind of break it down. If you take Chairman Baucus's white paper and the Healthy Americans Act, there are mostly areas of agreement, much of which we've talked about here. Insurance reform, covering everybody, personal responsibility, buying value. If you take the white paper and lay it on one side of the desk and you take the Healthy Americans Act and lay it on the other side of the desk, there's mostly agreement. In the areas where there's going to be debates are, for example, on the issue of how you allow everybody to keep the coverage they have, while at the same time being able to make other choices, choices I advocate like members of Congress, and benefit financially when they make a good selection. But if you take the Healthy Americans Act and Chairman Baucus's white paper and look at what Chairman Kennedy has said about health in the past, there are many more similarities."

"The next step we've finished now six sessions in the finance committee during this work period on coverage, delivery and finance and I think the next step is going to be working with the senators on the committee and others to pull together what I hope will be a bipartisan coalition. I think there is a real breakthrough opportunity here. I think that a lot of Republicans recognize that Democrats are right that you have to get all Americans good quality, affordable coverage to fix the system. Because if you don't have all Americans with that kind of coverage, there's too much cost shifting and not enough prevention. In other words, you can't begin to organize a market unless you cover everybody with good quality, affordable coverage. And then I think a lot of Democrats like me have said we think the Republicans have got some valid points too. We're willing to work with them."

"I think there is a better alternative [to the public option] that brings people together. And that is coverage at least as good as that held by members of Congress. And I don't want to sound like an old-days broken record, but I think there's a better, simpler consumer protection alternative. But if I don't prevail on that, then I'm going to look at the other ones."

"I think the other thing I think is a big plus for reformers is that it's clear that you cannot get this economy back on track unless you fix health care. Because the reason the take-home pay of a typical worker isn't going on is because medical costs are gobbling it all up. And you've got to contain the costs. In other words, I'm a strong supporter of climate change and Huffington can call me about climate change sometime. But you don't have the same immediate economic edge to the climate-change question that you have to holding down healthcare costs and fixing the system. And the President has really zeroed in on this theme and I talked to him yesterday and he's going to push very hard for healthcare reform to get it done this year."

"He made it clear he's going to push very hard this year, get it done this year." "I'm not going to talk about our conversation yesterday."

"I think it's possible to bring Democrats and Republicans in together to fix healthcare, hold down the costs, make sure people have choice and quality, and he laid out some of his key priorities in the campaign, getting to keep the coverage you have, protecting middle-class people from taxes and I'm very much committed to reform that honors those pledges."


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Sen. Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, is a key player in the health care debate, the sponsor of the only bipartisan health care bill in the Senate. Backers of the major Democratic plan, which would allo...
Sen. Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, is a key player in the health care debate, the sponsor of the only bipartisan health care bill in the Senate. Backers of the major Democratic plan, which would allo...
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I don't have health insurance right now, but prescription costs have become increasingly difficult to manage. I started saving by switching to generic drugs by using Medtipster.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:22 PM on 05/26/2009
- kewe I'm a Fan of kewe 10 fans permalink
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this is and will be Obama's biggest challenge as a leader - not about health care, but about the simple fact that just because he sets a pretty good - not perfect by any stretch - example toward not letting the corporate lobby rule public representation, it does not mean it will apply to congress.

"Corporatacracy" cannot legislated out with executive order - it can only be voted out

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:15 PM on 05/26/2009

Wyden needs to get on the right side of history. Does he want to waste this opportunity to create healthcare for all Americans or does he want to derail this historic opportunity and sell the people out for campaign money.

Do the right thing. This will be as historic as social security and medicare and a feather in the cap of anyone who votes for it. The American people have been hurting for a long time and singlepayer could be a big step for the other 90% of Americans.

Please don't sell us out.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:03 PM on 05/26/2009
- jmpurser I'm a Fan of jmpurser 196 fans permalink

I'm getting the feeling you're too late. It's too late for all of us. Between the flat out corporate whores and the practitioners of the utterly damnable Clintonian "Politics of the possible" it's looking like the real "single payer caucus" could meet in the closet.

Oh well, maybe next global economic meltdown we'll get our turn.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:13 PM on 05/26/2009
- waverly I'm a Fan of waverly 24 fans permalink
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We must eliminate corporate control over our healthcare with a single payer plan. I worked for years in the medical field and witnessed so many of our dedicated doctors leaving the profession because insurance companies would hamper them from giving quality care for their patients. The medical field had to hire a slew of people just to deal with the insurance companies to make sure they would receive payments for services rendered. The insurance industry has full control over your lives and we have to fight hard to eliminate this control. Please make your voices heard to all of your representatives.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:35 PM on 05/26/2009
- jmpurser I'm a Fan of jmpurser 196 fans permalink

No honest and aware person who's worked "inside the sausage plant" sees it any other way. Not passing single payer is national suicide. Again.

Anybody wanna bet we don't get it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:02 PM on 05/26/2009
- JimR I'm a Fan of JimR 38 fans permalink

Single payer doesn't have a chance in hell of getting passed, and you know it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:35 PM on 05/26/2009
- TheBaffler I'm a Fan of TheBaffler 56 fans permalink
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Anyone else remember when the conventional wisdom was that Wyden was a crazed socialist?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:26 PM on 05/26/2009
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Ah, if only!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:39 PM on 05/26/2009
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My husband's on Medicare as of last November. In Feb. he had a congestive heart failure attack that was unforseen. Since we don't have a suplimental plan, we're responsible for about $2,000 of left-over fees. He has $96.40 taken out of his SS each month for coverage....I'd be more than happy to pay the same to be covered but that's not an option for me with any insurance company due to a cancer issue 3 years ago.

I have a disk going out in my back, need hip replacement in the next couple of years, both rotator cuffs are bad and there are arthritic spurs around my lumbar nerves. I deal with it and shouldn't have to. Having spent the past 3 days in bed with my back, I'd LOVE to be able to have the necessary tests done to see exactly where I stand with these issues.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:16 PM on 05/26/2009
- Itsmyland2 I'm a Fan of Itsmyland2 9 fans permalink
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My wife had a hip replacement two weeks ago. Just got the bill today from the hospital - $51,463.55 and that does not include the surgean or anesthetist. Just the hospital stay for one week. I have to pay $3k of this even though I pay over $5K out of pocket for my insurance annually. The ONLY reason she has health-care at all is that the Bank I work for has a deal with the insurance company so they do not look at pre-existing conditions.

I have had to fight with the insurance company to get her the care she needs all the way as they only care about money not patients.

We need Single Payer health-care system in this country. They can TAX me $5K a year for it and I will gladly pay it!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:19 PM on 05/26/2009
- schatsie I'm a Fan of schatsie 87 fans permalink

You and I will see a minimal difference in the net cost...the deal is that the RICH are going to kill it and ask for more tax cuts...paying 17% is just so much money when you are taking home 250 million a year...

Don't you feel sorry for them paying less than 20% when you and I are choking on Payroll taxes etc that everyone knows we pay more and deduct less....

Don't you feel sorry that their Bush tax cut only amounted to 6 billlion last year for the 400 of them?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:45 PM on 05/26/2009
- ajax2 I'm a Fan of ajax2 24 fans permalink
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The fight against public health can be summed up in one on air statement by Dem. Chairman Baucus, "... a Single Payer System will not pass the Senate ..."

Why won't the most efficient system pass? Why won't the health care system that will help the U.S. economy, the uninsured, both big and small businesses the most, pass? Why will the health care system that a majority of voters want not pass?

These questions are rhetorical. The U.S. Senate, no matter what party, does not represent the people or our democracy. The only answer in a democracy is to remove them from office and find candidates who will.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:11 PM on 05/26/2009
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We have a neighbor who has been on medicare or medicaid since she was 16 due to epilepsy. Her husband is on disability due to uncontrollable diabetis.

She doesn't want public health care because she "doesn't want the government telling her what doctor she can go to and what hospital she can go to". So, I asked her which insurance company she had....and how her Medicaid/Medicare has limited her availability to doctors, hospitals and tests. "Oh, I can go anywhere and get any test because I'm on Medicare/Medicaid".

She really doesn't know that she's already under a government sponsored health care policy...she's real d***.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:21 PM on 05/26/2009
- schatsie I'm a Fan of schatsie 87 fans permalink

dense, right...she has been brainwashed by Murdoch....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:46 PM on 05/26/2009
- LeLoup I'm a Fan of LeLoup 32 fans permalink
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"... a Single Payer System will not pass the Senate ..."

It could...if we guarantee to our Senators that they'll never sit in office again if they don't pass single payer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:26 PM on 05/26/2009
- schatsie I'm a Fan of schatsie 87 fans permalink

This is a class and generation war....The people without insurance are the poor and the children and this is horrible....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:45 PM on 05/26/2009

The democratic party would be foolish not to pass Universal Healthcare. If they want to keep the right in the wilderness for forty years like in Canada then they'd be smart to pass this and other progressive, socialist reforms in this country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 PM on 05/26/2009

These government schmucks ( you know who I mean) forget it is us that are paying for their health care.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:44 PM on 05/26/2009

We are able to pick any insurance company now. The trouble is the cost. I don't want to have to deal with that and I don't think our companies should have to deal with that. Let the government keep them in line and offer us the best there is out there. I don't see the insurance companies overcharging them the way they have gouged us all these years because we have had no recourse but to pay it or go without. Single payer!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:42 PM on 05/26/2009
- ztwoods I'm a Fan of ztwoods 5 fans permalink

$2.5 trillion on healthcare? Not hardly. I would bet that at least 1/2 or more of that is for administration of insurance and for the profits of insurance companies. If we take out the insurance companies and their for profit mandates then we could all be afforded a healthcare system for everyone. The public option is the only viable alternative to our current situation. We need to put the money into the system instead of investors and CEO's pockets. The road we are currently on is a dead end and right now we have our collective feet on the throttle. The time for change is NOW!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:34 PM on 05/26/2009

Wyden says, "I am an insurance reform hawk."

F that. We don't need health "insurance" reform. We need health CARE.

For-profit health insurance companies are the problem, not the solution. Stuff 'em.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:20 PM on 05/26/2009
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You've got that right! I'm very happy with Medicare and, by the way, it's not free. Part D needs to go away too, along with medi gap.
I'm a retired RN after over 30 years in the hospitals. Single Payer is the best shot.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:18 PM on 05/26/2009

I want the kind of coverage where no treatment for an illness I have can be turned down. I want the kind of coverage where I can go to any doctor I choose. I want to work anywhere I choose with non stop coverage. I want to not work if I choose and still be covered. I want the kind of coverage where no bill of any kind comes to my door. I don't care if it's paid for by a soda tax or any other kind of tax shared by everyone. Consider the savings to any employer. They will no longer have to pay half of your health benefit. Each individual will no longer have the hefty health benefit deduction withdrawn from their pay check. If that's then used to pay into a government fund through taxes then so be it. Medicare, medicaid and social security are government run and a national health service run by the government can work also. That's my vision of health care. Just get it done.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:19 PM on 05/26/2009
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Amen!! And include dental and vision in that, too. I need dental work.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:23 PM on 05/26/2009
- LeLoup I'm a Fan of LeLoup 32 fans permalink
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If you want all that, take a look at a country that already has it. (No, it's not Canada or the UK)

http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2007/08/11/frances_model_healthcare_system/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:29 PM on 05/26/2009
- Hawaii5-0 I'm a Fan of Hawaii5-0 16 fans permalink
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If capitalism is soooo much better than socialism, why are the private health care companies complaining that they cannot compete with a single payer plan? If they provide so much better quality, wouldn't everyone go to them anyway. Oh yeah, there is that pesky point about the cost and how 45M Americans cannot afford it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:18 PM on 05/26/2009
- Rog49Thomas I'm a Fan of Rog49Thomas 192 fans permalink

Why is this Democrat labeled a centrist?

Have we defined the political center as just slightly to the left of Karl Rove?

(Note the above is a rhetorical question. I already know the answer, sadly).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:18 PM on 05/26/2009

Ain't that the truth?

I can't remember the last time the Democratic party supported a progressive candidate.

DINOS, RINOS, virtually no difference.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:25 PM on 05/26/2009
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