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<text id=93TT1247>
<title>
Mar. 22, 1993: Operation Hillary
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Mar. 22, 1993 Can Animals Think
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
HEALTH CARE, Page 36
Operation Hillary
</hdr>
<body>
<p>The First Lady is discovering whether the best way to reform
health care is to put the smartest people in a big room and
pull a lot of all-nighters
</p>
<p>By MICHAEL DUFFY
</p>
<p> Hillary Rodham Clinton appeared last Thursday to be
taking it easy. Her office announced that she had only one
meeting planned--with five female Senators to discuss health
care. What her aides neglected to mention, however, was that
before that session Hillary had a 45-minute chat with
Representative Ron Wyden about the "core benefits" package that
Oregon law guarantees its eligible residents. Then came an
hourlong chat with Senator Jay Rockefeller, Representative Sonny
Montgomery and others about how best to integrate the nation's
$14 billion veterans' hospital system into a new national
health-care framework. Next she tackled some financing questions
in a private conference with Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan.
Before she finished, around 7 p.m., she had squeezed in radio
interviews with 20 different stations and satellite interviews
with nine TV outlets in Florida and Iowa.
</p>
<p> Ever sensitive to critics of the First Lady's influence,
Hillary's office refused to release the full details of her day
even after it ended. But other White House officials were
undaunted. "O.K., O.K., O.K.," said one. "I guess we might as
well admit that we actually have 12 Hillarys."
</p>
<p> The White House may soon wish it had even more than that.
For Hillary's still-developing plan to transform the nation's
health-care system is emerging as the most challenging and
far-reaching domestic initiative of Bill Clinton's presidency.
Selling Congress, much less the American people, on a complete
overhaul of an $800 billion-a-year industry that represents
one-seventh of the gross domestic product makes selling a
controversial budget plan look easy. "Of all the decisions he
has made," said one adviser, "doing health care involves the
highest risk and is most indicative of his desire for change."
</p>
<p> Some of Clinton's top advisers still don't understand why
he is so intent on reforming health care this year. Yet Clinton
has said for weeks that businesses won't start hiring unless
they are free of rising medical costs. The President's
political aides note that much of the free-floating anxiety that
Americans feel is rooted in fears of health-care expenses and
worries about losing their coverage. "People are not going to
feel secure," said an adviser, "until they feel they can afford
to be sick."
</p>
<p> In many respects, the health-reform task force is going to
test a central working assumption of the Clinton team: that the
best way to solve any problem is to assemble the smartest
people in a big room and pull a lot of all-nighters. The goal
is nothing less than to find a way to provide universal access
to health care while lowering costs for patients, companies and
the government. Though the American Medical Association and
other groups have complained of being cut out of the process,
more than 400 task-force officials have held 237 meetings with
outside interest groups and have convened more than a thousand
private sessions of its working groups. White House aides
dismiss critics' complaints of exclusion. "The AMA doesn't just
want a seat at the table," says one. "They want the whole
bleeping table."
</p>
<p> The White House won an important victory last Wednesday
when a federal judge ruled that the task force and its
subgroups may meet in secret if they are preparing or providing
advice for the President--a ruling Hillary applauded as "a
stamp of approval." Still, not everyone at the White House is
convinced that the health-care tangle can be unraveled by
unnamed experts working around the clock in secret. Asked last
week if the crash program will be successful, Treasury Secretary
Lloyd Bentsen paused, smiled and said, "We're about to find
out."
</p>
<p> The task force is proceeding according to a carefully
scripted, day-by-day "work plan," written by White House aide
Ira Magaziner, that one official called "more complicated than
a major state university's schedule of classes." During the
100-day life of the task force, the 34 working groups will
report seven times to a large review board called a Tollgate and
chaired by Magaziner. At first, participants were skeptical of
the Tollgate sessions, during which options are discussed and
amended. "Now," said a working-group member, "people can't
handle it unless we're having a Tollgate." Last week in the
ornate Indian Treaty Room on the fourth floor of the Old
Executive Office Building, Tollgate 3 went on for 18 hours one
day and 14 hours the next, with only three breaks.
</p>
<p> This week Magaziner's team begins to move from gathering
ideas to discarding them. Only the barest outlines of the plan
are known. Hillary is leaning toward a health-care delivery
system called managed competition, in which giant networks of
businesses would negotiate with insurers, health-maintenance
organizations and other health-care providers for the best care
at the lowest price. In theory, competition among providers
would force down costs and drive doctors into joint practices
and HMOs. Employers would be required to provide basic health
insurance to all employees, while the government would provide
coverage for the uninsured.
</p>
<p> The tricky part of selling such a scheme will be
convincing Americans who already enjoy lavish health-care
coverage that they will have to pay more for fewer options. So
it is likely that the Clintons will try to modify managed
competition to meet the range of political imperatives. The task
force must design a package of core benefits in conjunction with
hospitals and insurance companies, determine how people who want
more coverage can obtain and pay for it, decide how to keep the
costs incurred by the new super-providers from rising as fast
as health-care costs are already rising, calculate how to help
small businesses that can't afford to provide insurance, and
determine how best to integrate the enormous Medicaid, Medicare
and veterans' beneficiaries into the new system. Hillary has
indicated to lawmakers that the final package will also include
some kind of liability reform, both to help bring down doctors'
costs and to enlist their support for the plan.
</p>
<p> The stickiest questions turn on costs. Bill Clinton has
signaled that he will boost taxes on alcohol and tobacco to help
meet the $50 billion-to-$70 billion price tag for providing
insurance to America's 37 million uninsured. Sin taxes alone,
however, won't be enough. Last week Magaziner privately asked
representatives of large and small businesses how best to cap
costs in the short term while phasing in benefits more slowly.
That idea concerns some in the White House, who insist, as one
put it, "We have to create winners before we create losers."
</p>
<p> In the past two weeks, the AMA, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
and the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association have publicly
jumped on the managed-competition bandwagon. Under fire from the
White House for price gouging, the drugmakers last week asked
the Justice Department to grant an exemption from antitrust
prosecution so that they can negotiate voluntary price
restraints. "The train is leaving the station," said a drug
lobbyist. "We're just trying to slow the train down long enough...to get on board."
</p>
<p> Until now, Hillary has not submerged herself in the
day-to-day work of the task force but has been briefed regularly
by Magaziner. For the most part, she has played congressional
lobbyist, paying calls on members and listening for ideas while
a trio of aides take copious notes. Lawmakers report that the
First Lady, for all her reputed aloofness, knows the right
moves. When Illinois Democrat Dan Rostenkowski suggested to
Hillary that her husband was sending her into a "huge hellfire"
on health care, she adroitly replied, "You know, Mr. Chairman,
Chicago looks a lot better as a result of that fire."
Legislators always get a letter the next day--and sometimes
a picture--thanking them for their thoughts on very specific
subjects. "This is not a casual exercise," said a top White
House aide. "She is making a set of judgments about where there
are sensitivities and who will be natural allies."
</p>
<p> She is also involved in legislative strategy. For the past
few weeks, Democratic leaders in the Senate have been wrestling
with ways to attach the health-care bill to the economic
package in a giant superbill later this year. Senate rules made
the gambit look unlikely from the start, but last week Hillary
joined one final push on the issue before Senator Robert Byrd
confirmed that it wouldn't be appropriate.
</p>
<p> The general public has yet to see the Hillary who is
everywhere at once, perfectly conversant on 100 different
health-care topics. For now, her goal is to avoid becoming a
distraction--or a target for opponents. At a health-care forum
last Friday in Tampa, Florida, a visibly tired Hillary listened
quietly while witnesses made their cases for various reforms.
She usually made her comments, such as they were, in the form
of a question, much as Justices do when they hear oral arguments
at the Supreme Court. Meanwhile the other 11 Hillarys were
probably working back in Washington.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>