People Power Matters: The Public Option Lives!

by: Dean Baker, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

Public Option in Capital hands.
Threats of a filibuster on the public option raise questions among grassroots activists. (Photo: Ionia K. / Truthout Adapted: keithius / flickr)

    In spite of the best efforts of the insurance industry and their followers in Congress and the media, it is still very possible that the health reform bill passed by Congress will include a robust public plan. This is a case where the simple facts and persistent grassroots pressure may overcome the political power of a major industry.

    If the bill passes with a serious public plan, it could make an enormous difference for the future of health care in the United States. However, the fact that the public option is even on the table at this point, after all the political experts had counted it out, shows the enormous potential for popular pressure to influence policy debates in this country.

    The basic story is that President Obama and the Democratic leadership in Congress had always been lukewarm in their support of a public plan. President Obama had included it in his original proposal, but has made it clear on numerous occasions that he did not view it as an essential part of his health care plan.

    Of course, that is not the way that presidents get measures passed that they really want. President Clinton never said that he didn't view NAFTA as being a big part of his trade policy. President Bush didn't say that Congressional authorization of the Iraq war was a relatively small matter in his larger foreign policy agenda. President Obama's statements, that a public option was not essential, were an invitation to Congress to give him a bill that did not include a public plan.

    This could have been the end of the story for a public plan, except for the determined efforts of progressive activists to insist that Congress include a public plan. While the plan's opponents argued that the leadership did not have the 60 votes needed in the Senate to end a filibuster, public plan supporters pointed out that public plan opponents did not have the 218 votes needed in the House to get a health care plan approved without a public option. The logic was simple, if progressive members in the House refused to back a health care bill without a public plan, then any health care bill that passes Congress would have to include a public option. A large coalition of progressive groups kept up the pressure, insisting that Democrats in the House insist that any bill include a public option. They bombarded members with phone calls, faxes, emails and staged protests and organized petitions. This coalition was helped by polls that consistently show a large majority of the public support giving people the option to join a Medicare-type public plan. In fact, a recent New York Times poll showed people supporting a public option by a margin of 65 to 26 percent. The same poll showed that overall health care reform package losing by a small margin.

    Supporters of a public plan have also been helped by the facts. The Congressional Budget Office's analysis shows that a robust public plan, with rates tied to Medicare rates, can save $100 billion over the next decade. This is a substantial portion of the money needed to cover the cost of the health care bill. Given the popular support for a public plan and the evidence that it could save substantial amounts of money, it is clear that opponents of a public option are not responding to constituents or concerns over costs.

    The sustained pressure from progressives seems to have firmed support for a public plan in the House, but there is still the issue of getting 60 votes in the Senate. Here, it is important to make a distinction that the media and political pundits have tried to hide. It is not necessary to get 60 senators who will support a public plan. It is necessary to get 60 senators who will allow the Senate to vote on a public plan. This is very different.

    Until recently, filibusters were unusual. It was standard practice for a senator to support cloture - allowing a piece of legislation to come up for a vote - but then to vote against the bill itself. Filibusters were reserved for extraordinary issues that members of the Senate felt were especially important.

    Currently, Democrats have 60 seats in the Senate. This means that the party just needs its members to allow the central piece of its president's legislative agenda to come to a vote. That should not require too much party discipline; after all, the senators could still vote against the bill itself.

    It's too early to know if this "no filibuster" path will succeed, but the fact that a public plan is still in the mix is a testament to the ability of grassroots activists to move the national political agenda. The political insiders will do their best to deny it, but political pressure from the masses can and does make a difference. It has made a difference in the debate over health care and it can make a difference in other areas. Let's see what a little grassroots activism can do for the Wall Street banks.

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Dean Baker is a macroeconomist and co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, DC. He previously worked as a senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute and an assistant professor at Bucknell University. He is a regular Truthout columnist and a member of Truthout's Board of Advisers.


Comments

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Could it be that Obama has

Could it be that Obama has been inspired by the many grassroots activists who elected him, and believes they can also pass a robust public option without his help as well? For many, Obama was himself in the way of his election, being black and of relatively little DC experience. But those inspired by what he stood for elected him anyway. The fact that the Senate is infiltrated by the very industry that stands to lose the most from a robust public option is of course a major setback. But the House is where the people speak the loudest, and arguably where healthcare reform will emanate, given it's relationship to middle class America, where the vast majority of healthcare dollars are spent. The robust public option that anyone can enroll in is evidently the best we can do (if the as-yet unreported details are not in fact Trojans for the status quo) in this round of reform legislation, so we must get this done first. Then the issue of passing single-payer healthcare can continue in earnest, as well as replacing all Blue Dog Democrats who do not care about the views of their constituency.


Too much data. Too little

Too much data. Too little understanding. Too much passion (I know a bit about too much passion). Too little thinking. The entities that truly do not want health reform have real/actual power to push against it, including manipulating "progressives". Grass root pressure is most useful countering them. It is embarrassing that you may believe those entities include Obama or that Obama may not deserve any credit if it passes. (If I am wrong, please clarify)... Anyway, I am inclined to believe a public option is the best option, but I do not know. If there are other good paths they are worth considering. Not rocket science.


At this point, everyone

At this point, everyone should be wary of a potential double-cross - ie: get Senators, including supporters of a public option, to agree to support cloture, then introduce a bill WITHOUT a public option, or with the useless "trigger". These corporate sell-out politicians simply cannot be trusted to act in the public interest!


The Obama/Emanuel bipartisan

The Obama/Emanuel bipartisan bystander tactics have seriously undermined the President's standing with progressives. Unbelievable that he expended his political capital courting Olympia Snow instead of leading. He may be what Republicans said: a bright orator, and not much more.


Through this debate the

Through this debate the insurance companies have convinced me of one thing, that a public option only is not the way to go. To fix our healthcare problems we need a single-payer system, or at least a single-cost system where all procedure and drug prices are negotiated collectively by insurance, with government regulation. The current market is already so fragmented among the various insurance providers, and their negotiating power varies so much, that from market to market the cost of a simple procedure could go from $1,300 in one, and $13,000 in the next. The insurer with the largest share in that market will pay $1,300, and the care provider will make up the difference by charging more to the insurers with less market share. The public option by itself has the potential to only increase rates by reducing the negotiating power of insurers in markets where they are already weak.


Does anyone seriously

Does anyone seriously believe that Republicans would actually filibuster against a Senate health care bill? Let Harry Reid put a bill on the floor and announce that he will leave the bill there until a vote is taken. Let the opponents argue against it all they want. Let them hold up all other Senate business for several days or even weeks and show themselves to be truly "the Party of No." Let them try this strategy and then let us see how well they do in the next election cycle.


This is an emotional issue

This is an emotional issue for many Americans. This so-called “public option” in Government run health care presents serious challenges for us. As Consumers we should be able to compare the cost and quality of health care services. How much is a specific surgery at one hospital, as compared with another? http://www.friendsoftheuschamber.com/media/


LOL @ Anon. 21:11. Thanks SO

LOL @ Anon. 21:11. Thanks SO much for the link. I followed it just for fun, and what I saw at the top of the video list was a Faux News report, then a Bill O'Reilly attack and more. Poor Chamber... can't call all the shots. I loved the threat about the 2010 elections, too. Yay for democracy!! The Chamber sure supported Obama when he bailed out the banks and large businesses, but they won't support anything for that actual human beings in this country. Yeah, I want their opinion... like I want to bit by a rattlesnake. No thanks.


The public option, now being

The public option, now being spun as the consumer option or the competitive option, is not a result of a grassroots movement. It is the result of Pelosi and the Dumbocrats trying to force their will once again on the American voters. If this is such a good idea, why to they keep changing the name? A rose by any other name is still a rose. You can say the same about crap.


Well, if PEOPLE POWER

Well, if PEOPLE POWER ACTUALLY STILL MATTERS, then perhaps the Usurpation of Our Country, Government, Economy, Neighborhoods, Citizenship, Brotherhood and Humanity by Global Corporations through the use of The Global Corporate Media Monopoly and Global Corporate Lobby Money in the Halls of Government isn't quite yet a fait accompli. Maybe there are still a few semi-good souls left in Corporate Washington. Who knows..? The truth is more obscure than ever on all fronts in America these days thanks to 24/7-ANYTHING-GOES-GLOBAL-CORPORATE-FOR-PROFIT-BEFORE-ALL-ELSE MEDIA.., Where anyone willing to pull whatever out their butts with tears in their eyes on camera can become an instant Star of National Division with Commercial Sponsorship and a Real Fan Club... :-D