September 18, 2007

Hillarycare, Then and Now (Plus Proof That She Intends to Cover Illegals)

Filed under: Economy, Health Care, Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 12:41 pm

So her skeletal “plan” is out. At the same time, there’s a story in a “progressive” publication claiming that Mrs. Clinton really didn’t have much to do with what came to be known as Hillarycare in 1993-1994.

In what should henceforth be known as a Hillary Howler, Paul Starr, co-editor of the American Prospect, tries to convince us that Hillary was, in essence, a figurehead (late HT to Instapundit; bolds are mine):

Though the media scarcely registered it at the time, (Bill) Clinton had described this approach in a speech and referred to it in the presidential debates. Moreover, he saw health-care reform through the prism of economic policy, believed that reducing the long-term growth in health costs was a national imperative, and insisted that even while making coverage universal, health-care reform had to bring down future costs below current projections for both the government and the private economy. Among Clinton’s close advisors, Ira Magaziner championed the view that these aims were achievable. When he became the director of the health-reform effort and Hillary the chair, their job was not to choose a policy, but to develop the one that the president had already adopted.

Despite all the attention it received, however, the President’s Task Force — consisting of members of the cabinet and several other senior officials — proved to be useless for reaching decisions and drafting the plan. It immediately became the subject of litigation and dissolved at the end of May without making any recommendations. Bill Clinton actually never gave up control of the policy-making process, and the work fell to a small team of advisors and analysts that Magaziner directed. Beginning in March and continuing in a stop-and-go fashion until September, the decision meetings about the plan took place outside the formal structure of the task force, usually in the Roosevelt Room of the White House, and the president ran the meetings himself.

My knowledge of this process is first-hand.

It seems to me that Mr. Starr is admitting “first-hand” that the Clinton Administration used the publicly-visible “Task Force” as a front-group distraction to shield the actual work of the insiders’ “task force” from public scrutiny. How “clever.”

As to Starr’s claim about Hillary’s non-involvement: Nice try, pal. No sale.

If Mrs. Clinton didn’t really have much to do with Hillarycare, as Starr claims, I don’t see how this is possible (also here at Wikipedia):

September 28, 1993 - Hillary Clinton begins several days of testimony on health care before five congressional committees. Her appearance is both dramatic and triumphant. Its very success, however, triggers new and intense activity among opponents who see in her a foe whose defeat will require their most determined efforts.

How did Hillary get through “several days of testimony” without being very knowledgeable about what the insiders’ “task force” had developed? Likely answer: Mrs. Clinton, in additional to being in charge of the public “Task Force,” was also one of the insiders on the non-public one, or was kept so well-apprised of what it was doing that she might as well have been.

Additionally, 13-1/2 years later, but six months before some campaign-consulting “genius” apparently came up with the idea that Hillary’s close association with what came to be known as Hillarycare would not be helpful, Ms. Clinton said the following (scroll down about 40% of the way to the “Hillary Clinton on 1990s Hillarycare” section) at the March SEIU Democratic Health Care Forum in Las Vegas (bolds are mine):

I feel a little bit like this is deja vu all over again. All those years ago, we tried to convince the country and the Congress–we convinced the country but we didn’t convince the Congress!–that we needed to move toward and achieve universal health care coverage. Now, I am proud we tried. We may not have succeeded, but we set the groundwork in place so that now people are saying, boy, we wish we had done that back then because costs have continued to increase. Pressures on the system, on our doctors, our nurses, our health care workers have just been so stressful. So what we need to do is to make a commitment. And I’m proud that everyone running on the Democratic side is committed to universal health care coverage. I am in favor of universal health care coverage that brings in the 47 million who are uninsured–which is a disgrace–and begins to guarantee coverage to people who already have insurance, because there are a lot of people who think they have insurance except when they need it.

Why, if what Mr. Starr claims about her non-involvement is true, would she not have given credit to her husband instead of using “we” so many times — the bolded uses of “we” substitutable with “my husband and I”? And if she really wasn’t very involved, why would she have allowed everyone to believe she was all these years — up to and including that March speech? A saying about not being able to have one’s cake and eat it too comes to mind.

And now, a free bonus: Allah at Hot Air is wondering whether Mrs. Clinton’s plan will give “universal coverage” to illegal immigrants. Six months ago, her statement that “I am in favor of universal health care coverage that brings in the 47 million who are uninsured” made it crystal-clear that the 12 milllion or so illegals who are included in that 47 million would indeed be covered.

There’s no need for Allah to wait for Clinton policy adviser Laurie Rubiner to “get back to” him. Her boss has already given us the answer.

Cross-posted at NewsBusters.org.

1 Comment

  1. People need to be reminded of how terrible her plan was. How it was an onion-skin veiled political and economic power grab by a command economy cabal of Arkansas mafiosi.

    Being the fan of political hardball that I am, people also forget about how much of a visionary and political strategy genius Newt Gingrich was/is ( http://www.pbs.org/newshour/forum/may96/background/health_debate_page1.html ).

    If only the Republicans would have listened to him and gave Bob Dole - the only Republican in ‘96 that wouldn’t have beat WJC - the ol’ heave hoe. Instead he was thrown overboard by the “moderates” when the capi di regime and Media blamed him after Clinton shut down the government. Long story short, this set up a short succession of conservative leaders (Gingrich, Livingston, Delay) who kept getting whacked for trumped up scandalettes - the double standard - Clinton did routinely for real and worse.

    They already had a puppy in the Senate - Lott. When the Dems got someone they could roll in the House- Hastert - they were able to run out the clock. With weak “moderates” in “control,” they botched an impeachment that an eighth grade debate team could have won.

    They also baled on uncovering the more important reasons to remove the patron saint of political corruption - trading nuclear technology for campaign contributions. [Thanks to ex-hero and treason enabler John Glenn. I hope your bribe of a Shuttle ride was worth selling out your country.] Apparently perjury and obstruction of justice aren’t high enough crimes or misdemeanors anymore, but listening to “slam dunk” intelligence from everyone in the world is.

    Thanks to a serendipitous technological revolution and peace dividend, and conservatives providing spending cuts, capital gains tax cuts, and welfare reform for him, they could have skated into history with only the benign legacy of a blue dress. However, we know that our luck conveniently ran out for them in 2001, when we had to suffer the brunt of his inner circle’s foreign policy incompetence.

    The rest is history as they say, as we haven’t had a conservative in charge since - least of all George “LBJ” Bush, and probably won’t. But what really amazes me is that there are a**-holes in this country that want to put that group of criminals and commies in The White House, AGAIN!

    Comment by Joe C. — September 18, 2007 @ 7:20 pm

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