Richard Wolffe
|
May 30, 2007 04:32 PM
Barack Obama grabbed the headlines. And Hillary Clinton
unquestionably has the deepest roots on the issue. But the driving
force in the Democrats' health-care primary to date has been
third-place contender John Edwards--as even some of his rivals concede.
Sen.
Obama, under pressure from critics who complain he's been all style and
little substance thus far in the campaign, finally unveiled a detailed
health-care proposal Tuesday. Introduced in Iowa, a state Edwards has
worked hard in the early going, Obama offered a plan that is ambitious
and expensive. He offeeds the uninsured a chance to buy affordable
coverage similar to that enjoyed by federal employees. He promised to
reduce the cost of insurance for a typical family by $2,500--through
better use of technology, and by having the government pay for the most
expensive catastrophic care. He would require all employers to make
what he termed a meaningful contribution to their employees' coverage,
while offering exemptions for small businesses. And he aimed to ensure
that all children have coverage, and that young adults up to the age of
25 be eligible to continue with their parents' plan. The price tag: $65
billion a year, to be financed by rolling back the Bush tax cuts for
the wealthiest Americans.
Obama's aides acknowledge that as they
pieced together the proposal, they had their eye on Edwards--worrying
about the scale of the former North Carolina senator's own package of
health-care reforms, and how their offerings would be judged when the
two plans were placed side by side. Edwards, whose plan resembles the
Massachusetts model, calls for universal health care coverage, and he's
clearly hoping that position will better endear him to Democratic
primary voters; upon learning of the Obama plan, his aides faulted it
for not going far enough.
Clinton, meanwhile, welcomed Obama to
the health-care debate, as an old pro welcomes a rookie--even though
she has yet to detail her own proposal for the 2008 campaign. "America
is ready for universal health care," says a statement on the Clinton
website. "Hillary has the vision and the experience to make it a
reality." Yet the only glimpse of that vision to date was a speech at
George Washington University last week that promised to focus on
preventive health care and technological advances to lower costs.
Clinton decided instead to spend Tuesday talking about income
equality--another issue on which Edwards has staked out early ground
(who can forget the "two Americas" mantra from his 04 campaign?). He
may trail Obama by 20 points--and Clinton by 38 points--according to a
recent sounding by the Pew Research Center. But if the domestic policy
speeches of the frontrunners is any indication, Edwards is making his
presence known.
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