Among Democrats running for governor, single-payer health care gains support
In a recent debate before a union-member crowd, the half-dozen Democratic-Farmer-Labor candidates gave nods to supporting universal health care, meaning everyone would be covered by health insurance. Four of the six proudly said they supported a single-payer health care model, meaning a publicly financed system. Last week, Democrat
The leading
RELATED: Who is running to be
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Since then, the country and state have grappled with the rocky rollout of the ACA, known as Obamacare, seen health insurance costs leap and the number of uninsured decrease. Now, in
Dayton has long said he supports single-payer health care but on a national level and only this year came out with a public option to allow all Minnesotans to buy into a state system.
If a Democrat wins the 2018 election, he or she may struggle with similar political realities. Earlier this year, deep blue
REPUBLICANS WAGING DIFFERENT FIGHT
In a flare-up among
Meanwhile, through executive actions, President
"ObamaCare is a broken mess," the president said on Twitter. "Piece by piece we will now begin the process of giving America the great HealthCare it deserves."
National and state
GROWING SINGLE-PAYER SUPPORT
For most
"A majority of Americans say it is the federal government's responsibility to make sure all Americans have health care coverage. And a growing share now supports a 'single-payer' approach to health insurance," a
More than half of
The idea of single-payer health care is not new. More than 40 years ago, a health care prognosticator predicted in the
But it is getting new life.
"I'd argue on health care, we've exhausted every other alternative," said longtime state Sen.
At the DFL candidates forum in
"I'm a single-payer supporter," said Rep.
State Rep.
'A PATH'
Otto, the three-term state auditor now running for governor, has given the most detail on her plan. She proposes to funnel all the current state and federal health care dollars into a single trust fund, bolstered with cash from new taxes, and deliver health care coverage to all Minnesotans.
'If you are a
Her proposal would do away with co-pays and deductibles -- and much of the role insurance companies play now. Instead, health care providers would be paid quarterly per patient, with incentives to keep people healthy. She said the state would come up with a set of minimum benefits that all residents would receive and businesses or individuals could supplement those if they wished.
The plan still has some blank spaces in it. She said she would work with lawmakers and others to figure out how and on whom to raise taxes. Otto acknowledged that the federal funds
"What I'm creating here is a path," she said. "Somebody has to talk about this and I am willing to talk about this."
Among
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