Wednesday, June 13, 2007 Election
2008
McClatchy/Minneapolis Star Tribune Examines
Sen. Clinton's 'Cautious Approach' to Health Care Reform in Presidential
Race
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) has
taken a "cautious approach" to health care reform as she seeks the
Democratic presidential nomination, McClatchy/Minneapolis Star Tribune reports.
Clinton has stated she still has "scars" from her failed effort to
overhaul the U.S. health care system as first lady in the early 1990s,
according to the McClatchy/Star Tribune. Although some Democratic
presidential candidates have offered detailed health care proposals,
Clinton has focused on the "need for a national consensus on the issue"
and has offered only "non-controversial" proposals to reduce costs, the
McClatchy/Star Tribune reports.
Clinton campaign
spokesperson Phil Singer said that Clinton will offer a detailed health
care proposal, but he did not specify when she would release the plan.
Meanwhile, some Republicans have used her failure with health care reform
in 1993 to attack Clinton.
Robert Blendon, director of the Program
on Public Opinion and Health and Social Policy at Harvard University,
said, "It's a problem for her, given her history. She wants people to
think about her experience as a U.S. senator and not go back to relive the
details of her health care reform plan and her task force and all the
problems they had." Blendon added, "She's put together things that don't
look at all like '93-'94. She's been very cautious and very
establishment-oriented about what she's proposing" (Hutcheson,
McClatchy/Minneapolis Star Tribune, 6/12).
Giuliani Releases 12-Point Pledge
In other campaign news,
former New York City Mayor and presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani (R) on
Tuesday offered a 12-point pledge that includes a provision to provide
U.S. residents with more choice in health care. As part of the proposal,
Giuliani said that he would provide tax incentives to allow residents to
purchase private health insurance policies. The pledge also includes
provisions addressing national security and education, among other issues
(Campanile, New York Post, 6/13).
Opinion Piece
Clinton and presidential candidate Sen. Barack
Obama (D-Ill.) might have decided to "tread lightly" in the health care
debate because "Democrats feel they're winning" on the issue, David
Gratzer, a senior fellow at the Manhattan
Institute, writes in a New York Post opinion piece.
According to Gratzer, "America is implementing HillaryCare on the
installment plan: We are slowly succumbing to government-financed health
care." Gratzer writes that "Clinton proposes little because, in some ways,
she's already won the arguments of the 1990s."
He adds, "As
Washington today debates expanding SCHIP, the only question is by how
much," and states "from California to New York are pushing to expand
Medicaid." However, Gratzer writes, U.S. residents "in principle" are
opposed to "everything in Hillary Clinton's plan" from 1993, and
Republicans have an opportunity to "champion breaking the wage and price
controls of Medicare, fostering competition within health care through
deregulation and challenging the rising costs by empowering people with
more market-friendly options like health savings accounts" (Gratzer,
New York Post, 6/12).