Friday
Sep112009
Health Care Analysts: Obamacare Won't Meet Same Fate As Hillarycare
Leah Valencia, University of New Mexico-Talk Radio News Service
While the heated debate over health care reform is often compared to the struggle that former President Bill Clinton faced in the early nineties, there are several key differences, according to a number of health care analysts.
"[President Barack Obama's] effort was initiated when the economy was in free fall, unemployment still rising, we were on the brink of a world wide financial meltdown," Urban Institute President Robert Resichauer said during a panel discussion at the American Enterprise Institute Friday. "In 1992 the economy wasn't chugging, but it was improving."
Resichauer said the current economic circumstances have forced the government to take extraordinary action, which makes the American public leery of the role government is playing in the economy's life.
Resichauer said that it is imperative to have a bipartisan effort on health care reform in order to win the support of the American public.
Health care attorney Dean Rosen said the political atmosphere surrounding the current debate also stands in contrast with Clinton's efforts.
"I think it will be very difficult to find more than a few Republicans in the Senate who are willing to do this," Rosen said. "It makes it a political necessity for this to be a Democrats-only enterprise. This was not the case in 1993 or 1994."
Ultimately, all panelists in attendance agreed that the current reform effort will meet a different fate than Clinton's.
"It is not whether we are going to have it, it is when and how," Resichauer said. "At least at a superficial level we have a lot more support on this than we ever have."
While the heated debate over health care reform is often compared to the struggle that former President Bill Clinton faced in the early nineties, there are several key differences, according to a number of health care analysts.
"[President Barack Obama's] effort was initiated when the economy was in free fall, unemployment still rising, we were on the brink of a world wide financial meltdown," Urban Institute President Robert Resichauer said during a panel discussion at the American Enterprise Institute Friday. "In 1992 the economy wasn't chugging, but it was improving."
Resichauer said the current economic circumstances have forced the government to take extraordinary action, which makes the American public leery of the role government is playing in the economy's life.
Resichauer said that it is imperative to have a bipartisan effort on health care reform in order to win the support of the American public.
Health care attorney Dean Rosen said the political atmosphere surrounding the current debate also stands in contrast with Clinton's efforts.
"I think it will be very difficult to find more than a few Republicans in the Senate who are willing to do this," Rosen said. "It makes it a political necessity for this to be a Democrats-only enterprise. This was not the case in 1993 or 1994."
Ultimately, all panelists in attendance agreed that the current reform effort will meet a different fate than Clinton's.
"It is not whether we are going to have it, it is when and how," Resichauer said. "At least at a superficial level we have a lot more support on this than we ever have."
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