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<text id=94TT0283>
<title>
Mar. 14, 1994: Oh Noooo!
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Mar. 14, 1994 How Man Began
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
HEALTH CARE, Page 34
Oh Noooo!
</hdr>
<body>
<p>The public grows fearful of Clinton's plan and shows little
faith in alternatives. Is reform doomed this year?
</p>
<p>By George J. Church--Reported by Laurence I. Barrett, Suneel Ratan and Dick Thompson/Washington
</p>
<p> Ted Koziol, a retired General Motors assembly-line worker,
flew into a passion. At a January meeting in Venice, Florida,
called by Republican Congressman Dan Miller to hear his constituents'
views, Koziol burst out, "My health benefits are great! Do not
touch what I worked 34 years to earn! What our President is
talking about now is to tax my insurance or take it away. Right
now I can choose my doctors. Regardless of what Hillary says,
that's not the case with their plan."
</p>
<p> Though he drew loud applause in Venice, Koziol at the time was
part of a distinct minority in the nation. But his fears have
spread so widely that, just as congressional subcommittees begin
serious debates on health care, polls for the first time show
more people against the President's plan than for it. A TIME/CNN
poll last week by Yankelovich Partners disclosed 45% against,
41% in favor--a startling swing from 50% for, 33% opposed
as recently as January. Some apparent reasons: 70% now think
Clinton's plan would make them pay more for medical care; 55%
believe that they would have less choice of which doctor to
see, and 41% fear that the quality of care they receive would
go down, vs. only 16% who expect it to improve. And the more
people think they know about health-care reform, the less they
like Clinton's plan; the 22% in the TIME/CNN poll who said they
understand the debate "very well" opposed it 60% to 37%.
</p>
<p> To be sure, what people think they know might not be so. The
White House charges that critics have been running expensive
ads contending that "there are all kinds of things in my plan
that aren't there," as President Clinton put it in an interview
on CBS This Morning. Koziol to the contrary, for example, the
plan would have little if any effect on the benefits he gets
from GM, and it proposes no direct new taxes except for one
on tobacco (though new insurance premiums that some companies
and workers would have to pay are often considered a tax by
another name). As for fears of declining quality of care, a
more cogent criticism would be that the Administration has made
the benefits it would guarantee to everybody more generous than
most insurance plans now provide--raising a serious question
of whether the plan contains anything like an adequate method
of paying for them.
</p>
<p> Aides preparing Clinton for his CBS interview last week began
with a blunt sample question, phrased by political adviser Paul
Begala: "Your health-care reform is in trouble, the polls look
bad, [Senate Republican leader Bob] Dole says your plan is
dead." (Actually, Dole carefully qualified his statement, saying
"in its present form.") The President's response, says Begala,
"was all energy, energy, energy. To Clinton the notion that
he's getting into trouble is invigorating." The President and
Hillary Rodham Clinton plan an intensified grass-roots campaign
to build public support. Bill Clinton gave an example Wednesday
by phoning eight people who are struggling to care for seriously
ill family members and telling them his plan will assist them
to hire help.
</p>
<p> It looks, however, to be an uphill struggle. Large public majorities
still favor Clinton's goals; 65% of those questioned in the
TIME/CNN poll agreed that "the Federal Government should guarantee
health care for all Americans." But the Administration has done
such an inept job of justifying its plan that it seems to have
lost control of the debate. Some congressional voices already
pronounce two of the basic elements of Clinton's approach dead.
They are the alliances that would force most health-insurance
buyers into mandatory purchasing pools, and the requirement
that most employers pay at least 80% of their workers' insurance
premiums. Clinton, on CBS, inferentially conceded that Congress
might not approve either element--though he challenged the
lawmakers to come up with some substitutes.
</p>
<p> In all the debates, the Administration has been endlessly weighed
down by the sheer complexity of its 1,342-page bill. "Sure it's
complicated, because it's working with the existing system and
the existing system is phenomenally complicated," says Princeton
sociologist Paul Starr, an architect of the plan. But that explanation
is no help in winning support. Asked if even he comprehends
all the details of the plan, a White House aide who is helping
develop the Administration's sales pitch replies incredulously,
"Of course not!"
</p>
<p> In part, the Administration has been driven into this morass
by a strenuous effort to reconcile conflicting goals: cover
those people (the latest White House estimate is 39 million)
who do not have health insurance, make certain that those now
insured can never lose their coverage, improve benefits for
the great majority, yet hold down the frightening increase in
medical costs. One way might have been to switch to a Canadian-style
system in which the government is the sole insurer and pays
all medical bills, but the White House rejected that as impossible
to get through Congress. Another idea would have been to tax
somebody--employers, employees or both--on the medical benefits
companies provide to their workers. At present most workers
pay no tax on the benefits and the employers deduct the insurance
premiums from their taxable profits, an arrangement that is
thought to cost the government $75 billion a year. But Clinton
determined early that nothing labeled as a large tax increase
would fly politically. So his planners were driven to a Rube
Goldberg scheme of mechanisms designed to hold down costs of
extending care to the uninsured; one lobbyist describes it as
"an elaborate way of getting around having to tax people."
</p>
<p> Sylvester Schieber, a benefits consultant, asserts further that
to hold down costs the planners want "to push people ultimately
into health-maintenance organizations and for those HMOs to
compete with each other. But they know that a lot of people
don't want to go into HMOs." So they are offered fee-for-service
plans and the right to go outside an HMO for some services.
Result: still more complication.
</p>
<p> Even so, the legislation is not much more convoluted than the
legislative maze through which it must pass. In the House, three
committees will have a major share in shaping the plan, and
four more will play minor roles. So far, they have been unable
to choose among the Clinton plan, a host of other proposals
floated by lawmakers, or even a one-from-Column-A-and-one-from-Column-B
approach. After two dozen hearings, Henry Waxman, chairman of
the health subcommittee of the House Energy and Commerce Committee,
gave up on trying to get a majority for any program and tossed
the problem to the full committee. Chairman Pete Stark hopes
to get a six-Democrat majority of the Ways and Means health
subcommittee to sign on this week to a plan focusing on an expansion
of Medicare to the non-elderly who do not get health insurance
through an employer. That idea has hardly even a remote chance
of becoming law, but Stark wants to get something specific on
the table.
</p>
<p> In the Senate, Ted Kennedy's Labor Committee has reported out
major health-care reform bills in each of the past three Congresses;
it probably can do so again. But its product, if any, will have
to be reconciled with the product--if any--of the Finance
Committee, which will not even end hearings and start deliberations
until late April. Then come votes in each house, negotiations
with the Administration, and a conference to reconcile differences
between House and Senate bills that promises to produce one
of the all-time hassles.
</p>
<p> Ending with what? Much will depend on how Republicans resolve
an intense internal quarrel. A conservative group led by Texas
Senator Phil Gramm wants to propose only minimal reforms and
fight Clinton's plan to the bitter end. Moderates clustered
around Rhode Island Senator John Chafee would like to form a
coalition with centrist Democrats behind a much broader reform.
A G.O.P. health-care "retreat" last week in Annapolis, Maryland,
resulted only in a vague agreement to try harder for a unified
approach. Where Dole comes down may be crucial, but so far he
will not go beyond a typical quip: finding the right position
is as difficult "as a one-armed man wrapping cranberries."
</p>
<p> It is possible that a congressional majority will come together
behind a plan that, while more modest than Clinton's proposal,
would allow both sides to claim victory. The President could
hail at least a start toward his goal of goals, universal coverage;
the Republicans could contend that they saved the country from
socialized medicine. But it is also conceivable that the process
would bog down irretrievably, and support would grow for some
sort of bare-bones, stopgap proposal. Thirty legislators--15 Democrats, 15 Republicans--have now introduced just such
a bill. It would help sick people hold on to their insurance,
discourage malpractice suits, expand community health centers
to aid the uninsured--and that is about it. In any event,
anyone who judges the President's plan to be the ultimate in
complexity is being premature; the congressional debate is just
getting started.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>