On the campaign trail in January of 2016, Hillary Clinton told Iowa
voters that Bernie Sanders’ single payer health care proposal was an
idea whose time would never come. "People who have health emergencies
can't wait for us to have a theoretical debate about some better idea
that will never, ever come to pass ," said the presumed shoo-in for president. Two years later, one-third of Democrats in the Senate have endorsed Sanders’ Medicare for All Act and half the Democrats in the U.S. House have signed on to Rep. John Conyers’ Expanded and Improved Medicare for All Act, HR 676 . Polls show 75 percent of Democrats
favor “expanding Medicare to provide health insurance to every
American,” and 31 percent of the public at-large wants health care to be
the first problem the Democrats tackled if they win the White House in 2020.
Predictably, however, Hillary Clinton’s favorite think tank is still
trying to make sure single payer health care never happens. The lavishly
funded Center for American Progress (CAP) last week unveiled their
counterfeit, sound-alike health care plan, dubbed Medicare Extra
for All, whose sole purpose is to distract and confuse a public that is
demonstrably “ready” for single payer. The CAP scheme, like Obamacare,
keeps the private insurance corporations at the center of the
money-stream, doesn’t cover everyone, charges fees, co-pays and
premiums, doesn’t save much money, and would fail to provide millions
with adequate coverage.
-- Glen Ford, "The Healthcare Bait-and-Switch: From the Clintons to Obama and Back Again" (BLACK AGENDA REPORT).