Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire
  • omnibus

Single Payer Health Care Still More Popular Than Obamacare
23 Dec 2015

A Black Agenda Radio commentary by executive editor Glen Ford

Obama’s legacy is having set back the cause of universal health care many years through his duplicitous switch to a corporate-based scheme, in 2009. Since then, half of the non-profit health insurance co-ops created as a consolation to the Left have gone out of business. However, “a new Kaiser Poll shows 58 percent of the public are in favor of Medicare for All, including 81 percent of Democrats” – more popular than Obamacare.

Single Payer Health Care Still More Popular Than Obamacare

A Black Agenda Radio commentary by executive editor Glen Ford

“With every year, more and more companies and jobs are tied directly to the cash flow of the privatized system Obama created.”

Boosters for the Obama administration claim that his Affordable Care Act is a legacy that qualifies Obama for permanent residence in the pantheon of progressive domestic policy presidents, like Franklin Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson. Black Agenda Report takes the opposite position: that, in 2009, newly-elected President Obama set the cause of universal health care back many years with his surprise endorsement of a Republican health insurance plan, hatched in the bowels of the Heritage Foundation in the 1980s and championed by GOP presidential candidate Bob Dole in 1996 and Massachusetts Republican Governor Mitt Romney shortly thereafter. Obama’s bill was written by the health insurance and pharmaceutical corporations, and brutally imposed on the Left wing of the Democratic Party, whose members were threatened with loss of party campaign support if they resisted.

Cleveland Congressman Dennis Kucinich was the last holdout for the so-called Public Option, a scaled down alternative to Obama’s corporate-based scheme that finally disappeared altogether – as did Rep. Kucinich’s seat in Congress, which was redistricted out from under him.

The White House justified its abandonment of Single Payer health care, claiming compromise was necessary in order to get Republican votes. But the Democrats controlled both Houses of Congress, and Obamacare passed without a single Republican vote.

As a consolation for the loss of the Public Option, Obama offered to create non-profit health insurance co-ops in the various states. However, more than half of these co-ops have gone out of business in an environment dominated by cut-throat health care capitalists.

“Majorities of Americans still support Single Payer health care.”

Our biggest concern seven years ago was that Obama was setting in concrete the corporate role in health care, planting the insurance and drug companies right smack in the middle of a multi-trillion dollar river of federal money – and that it would take decades to pry their profiteering hands loose. We still feel that way. With every year, more and more companies and jobs are tied directly to the cash flow of the privatized system Obama created. As Bruce Dixon has warned, conservative judges are increasingly likely to rule that rolling back corporate pillaging of health care would constitute an illegal “taking” and seizure of reasonably expected profits. Under Obama’s Trans Pacific Partnership trade rules treaty, the corporations would win.

Therefore, it is encouraging that majorities of Americans still support Single Payer health care, in the form of Medicare for All. A new Kaiser Poll shows 58 percent of the public are in favor of Medicare for All, including 81 percent of Democrats. That’s only slightly below the high mark of Single Payer support in the months before new President Barack Obama announced that he wasn’t really talking about Single Payer when he used the term “universal coverage” – he meant universal payment to private corporations, under penalty of law. His plan, Obamacare, remains less popular than Medicare for All. Obama’s legacy is that he has made it far more difficult to dislodge the corporations from their parasitic role in U.S. health care.

For Black Agenda Radio, I’m Glen Ford. On the web, go to BlackAgendaReport.com.

BAR executive editor Glen Ford can be contacted at [email protected].



Your browser does not support the audio element.

listen
http://traffic.libsyn.com/blackagendareport/20151223_gf_SinglePayerStillPopular.mp3

More Stories


  • Attack Against Haiti’s De Facto Prime Minister on Independence Day (+Core Group)
    José Manuel Blanco Diaz
    Attack Against Haiti’s De Facto Prime Minister on Independence Day (+Core Group)
    04 Jan 2022
    The Core Group chose Ariel Henry as the de-factor president of Haiti, in defiance of the people's wishes. But a conflict among factions makes his position insecure and resulted in a recent assa
  • MLK Day at Camp Lemonnier, US Army
    T.J. Coles
    Using and Abusing Djibouti: How the US Transformed a Tiny African state Into a Hub of Imperial Aggression
    04 Jan 2022
    From Djibouti, the US trains proxies and bombs strategically-important countries in the name of democracy and counterterrorism.
  • Why We Must Defend Julian Assange
    Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
    Why We Must Defend Julian Assange
    14 Dec 2021
    Julian Assange is one of the political prisoners that the US claims not to have.
  • Essay: Lynch Law in America, Ida B. Wells-Barnett, 1900
    Black Agenda Review
    Essay: Lynch Law in America, Ida B. Wells-Barnett, 1900
    14 Dec 2021
    Ida B. Wells-Barnett’s “Lynch Law in America” remains a compelling account of white violence as both savage and systemic, and of the US as irredeemable.
  • On the Fundamental Differences Between Capitalist “Democracy” and Socialist Democracy
    Danny Haiphong , BAR contributor
    On the Fundamental Differences Between Capitalist “Democracy” and Socialist Democracy
    14 Dec 2021
    The United States recent democracy summit would have been laughable if its implications were not so serious.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us