Elizabeth Warren's healthcare toggle switch: A two-year review
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An hour ago I stumbled on a two year old post teasing out Elizabeth Warren's ambivalence about Bernie Sanders' Medicare for All bill, as expressed on the occasion of her co-sponsoring it. That's led me to reflect on the apparent cross-currents in Warren's mind drawing her alternately toward and away from fast-track hard-core single payer.
Here are some longstanding key points in Warren's healthcare stance, fleshed out in the links provided at bottom.
1. Warren's entire political outlook and diagnosis of the U.S.'s economic and political woes is founded on her understanding of the impact of medical debt and other costs of illness (e.g., lost wages) on ordinary Americans.
2. Warren's outrage against banks and other financial institutions that she views as helping Americans "drown in debt," taken up several notches in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, transfers easily to outrage against health insurers -- which are, after all, financial institutions of a sort.
3. Warren has consistently, one-dimensionally, focused all her outrage about the huge medical costs foisted on millions of Americans on health insurers and pharma -- the traditional targets -- while giving predatory healthcare providers a pass (as have virtually all her peers, with the recent exception of Pete Buttigieg).
4. Notwithstanding that outrage, Warren's own healthcare reform bill and proposals prior to kicking off her presidential campaign would be quite palatable to insurers. In brief, she would require insurers to provide more comprehensive coverage while boosting federal subsidies to make that better coverage affordable to enrollees (and profitable for insurers).
4. For two years, Warren has expressed support for Sanders' Medicare for All bills -- while betraying ambivalence about Sanders' sweeping, tear-it-all-down approach. That ambivalence has most often been expressed in statements to the effect that there are multiple paths to universal coverage -- see, e.g., the Sept. 2017 post that's my starting point here; Warren's all-Medicare-buy-ins-are-good riff in a March CNN town hall, discussed by Charles Gaba here; and Warren's New York Times interview, published shortly before the June 26 CNN debate. That "alternative paths" back-beat has gotten fainter since the CNN debate, in which Warren declared "I'm with Bernie on Medicare for All," but it hasn't disappeared entirely.
Here are posts tracing this winding path:
Elizabeth Warren is for single payer, sort of. And against healthcare profiteering...sort of (9/11/17)
Warren was in favor of putting Bernie's bill on the table - not necessarily passing it.
Elizabeth Warren is faking it on healthcare (1/26/18)
In a speech at the annual Families USA conference, Warren presented the unaffordability of healthcare in the U.S. as purely a product of insurance industry rapine.
Elizabeth Warren roars at health insurers, but her ACA 2.0 offers them a pretty sweet deal (3/22/18)
Warren introduced a bill that would sharply increase ACA premium subsidies and tighten rules on insurers.
Elizabeth Warren is faking it on healthcare, part 2 (6/27/19)
Reflections on the CNN debate, in which Warren went all-in for BernieCare.