Republicans to America: Death to Medicare
When the Republicans release their budget next week, they’ll likely
say they have a “new” Medicare proposal that will “save” Medicare
instead of eliminate it. That’s not true. The Republicans still plan to
end Medicare as we know it. But this time they’ll do so with the support
of Democratic Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon.
Based on the draft proposal released
in December by Wyden and House Republican Budget Chairman Paul Ryan,
the GOP’s Medicare plan will give seniors a voucher to buy insurance
coverage just like the last plan. From the start, the vouchers would be
underfunded and won’t cover the costs of the insurance. Under the last
proposal, seniors would pay $6,400 more on day one. Then the voucher
would not keep up with rising costs of coverage. Based on the last plan,
seniors would pay a staggering 68 percent of the cost of their medical
care in 2030, compared to 25 percent if the law remains unchanged.
Here’s what the media say
is going to be different in the new plan: Seniors could go into the
private insurance market or use their voucher to purchase “traditional”
Medicare. But providing vouchers instead of benefits isn’t Medicare as
we have known it for 46 years. Medicare guarantees that beneficiaries
get a specific set of benefits and services, and it pays doctors and
hospitals when those services are provided. You get defined benefits
that you can count on and your costs are predictable. This is what the
Republicans want to get rid of.
The Republican plan — the brainchild of Wyden and Ryan — is the opposite. Your benefits are not guaranteed. You’re on your own in the insurance marketplace. Seniors would be given a fixed dollar amount via the voucher and they would be responsible for purchasing a plan and paying the difference between the voucher and what it really costs to get a plan with the benefits and services they need. As noted above, the difference will be huge and get larger every year. This is how seniors will be crushed by out-of-pocket health care costs. While they’ll have the option to remain in traditional “Medicare,” they’ll have to pay for it as if it were private insurance.
The new choice offered by the Republican plan is a false one because
the Medicare option will go away. The entire scheme is structured so
healthier people get cherry picked by private insurers because the
inadequate voucher will go farther in the private market for healthier
people who need less coverage, while sicker people will prefer the
security of “Medicare.” Older seniors and those with chronic conditions
will simply be priced out of the private market and that will eliminate
one of the key points of Medicare — it spreads out the risk (and has
more purchasing power). If Medicare is saddled with only the sicker
people, it will whither and die, and the Republicans will achieve their
goal. It will just take a little longer. And Medicare won’t be any less
dead because a Democratic senator got bipartisan and agreed to preside
over the interment.
Despite their rhetoric, the Republican plan isn’t about controlling
health care costs, it’s about shifting health care costs from the
government to seniors. Instead of cutting waste and insurance company
profits, the Republicans make seniors pay more. Instead of asking the 1%
to pay their fair share in taxes, the Republicans make seniors pay
more. Instead of eliminating corporate tax breaks like subsidies for
profit-rich oil companies, the Republicans make seniors pay more. And
they do it with a scheme that would totally replace Medicare with
vouchers and private insurance.
The Republicans know that their plan to eliminate Medicare is a
political loser. That’s why they’re trying to dress it up with a new
policy twist and lots of new rhetoric about how they’re the ones trying
to save Medicare when the truth is exactly the opposite. Not
surprisingly, Mitt Romney has been joining this conversation with plenty
of lies of his own.
The Republicans are trying to blur the lines. They’re hoping to make
it harder for voters to see the difference between the two parties on
Medicare.
But it’s a bright line and Democrats should make sure to keep it that
way. It’s a defining issue that separates the Democrats from the
Republicans. Democrats have the moral high ground and a clear electoral
advantage. People like Medicare and the politicians who support it.
Giving up this difference would be a policy and political disaster for
the Democrats.
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