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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
03.07.2008
Harry and Louise, Meet Elizabeth Edwards

Political autopsies of the failed campaign for universal health care in the 1990s frequently focus on the activities of special interests who opposed it. Not that many people saw the infamous "Harry and Louise" ads, in which an average-looking couple sat at their dining room table worrying that the Clinton health plan would take away their choice of doctor. But the ads came to symbolize the misleading, and expensive, lobbying campaign waged by small insurance companies, the pharmaceutical industry, and other conservative groups. Perhaps no less important, it gave the opposition to universal coverage a visible and sympathetic face (or, to be more accurate, set of faces).

But it wasn't just the lobbying against the Clinton health care plan that killed it; it was also the lack of lobbying for it. Proponents of reform had hoped that like-minded interest groups would push back against the anti-reform lobbies. But the unions, famously, sat out most of the health care debate because they had spent so much time and money fighting the North American Free Trade Agreement in 1993. The AARP, meanwhile, had to hold its fire because leaks about possible Medicare cuts had spooked seniors. 

This time around, progressives seem determined not to make the same mistake. Back in February, the Service Employees International Union--the labor movement's largest and most powerful memeber--announced it was launching a $75 million lobbying campaign for universal coverage. Now comes word that the Campaign for America's Future, a Washington-based group that has also been agitating for universal coverage, is helping to launch a new, $40 million campaign of its own.

The campaign, which will go by the name "Health Care for America Now," represents an array of interest groups, large and small--everybody from the American Academy of Pediatricians to the Idaho Community Action Network. It will include both television advertising and grassroots organizing, all designed to generate the kind of political pressure for reform that didn't materialize in 1994. And just to make things really stick, it's tapped Elizabeth Edwards to speak at the inaugural press conference on Tuesday.

It's not clear yet what other role Edwards might play in the campaign. But Edwards--who, as readers of this blog know, is a serious health care policy wonk--has in the last few months emerged as universal coverage's most effective advocate, frequently going after John McCain on the inadequacies of his health care reform proposals. If she can become reform's most visible face, in the same way Harry and Louise came to epitomize the opposition to reform in 1994, chances of actually passing universal coverage this time around should be signficantly greater.

--Jonathan Cohn 

Posted: Thursday, July 03, 2008 7:48 AM with 6 comment(s)

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emigdio said:

As I'm sure Tep will be quick to remind everyone, the key here is to get voices BEYOND the usual suspects to speak up in favor of aggressive reform. The more man-bites-doggish, the better. The grand prize? Big business, particularly firms with unionized workforces, which have as good a reason to lobby for reform as anyone, as they're most likely to end up saddled with too-high health costs.

MoveOn.org-style lobbying is easy for conservative dems and centrist republicans to ignore. But if it's Detroit asking for it...well...

July 3, 2008 9:22 AM

Mickey Weinber said:

"But it wasn't just the lobbying against the Clinton health care plan that killed it;" it was the tangled mess of the plan, itself, and the refusal of those famous fighting Clintons to use the bully pulpit to stand up for it.  Nor did they climb to that pulpit to sermonize for adequate heakthcare policy in any serious way throughout the remainder of their White house residency.  The rest is "managed care."

Biden or Sibelius for veep.

July 3, 2008 10:56 AM

fougasseu said:

Serious health care reform will happen when the national media covers stories like the UnitedHealth Group scandal. Yesterday the media covered the media: Headlines everywhere about the 125 layoffs at the LA Times.

But no headlines about the 4,000 layoffs at UnitedHealth, the world's largest health care company, or its $900 million class-action settlement involving the back-dating of stock options. And behind the scenes (and intimately involved): Clinton cronies Jim Johnson and Donna Shalala, and UnitedHealth's now ex-CEO (and big Republican contributor) Bill McGuire. Crony Capitalism at its best...only this time they got caught.

Big Health is Big Business.

Time for a Change.

July 3, 2008 11:05 AM

bsemple said:

Who needs Harry and Louise when so many "liberals" are advocating for so-called universal coverage which insures the insurance companies and underinsures the rest of us. Real reform of how we finance our health care will happen when we throw out the crazy quilt of public and private insurance we now have and establish single payer financing. Not having a national health insurance plan is the main reason we spend twice that of other industrialized countries, have lousy health outcomes and leave many of us to financial ruin due to health care.

July 3, 2008 11:23 AM

CRS9TNR said:

Normally I try to avoid Jon Cohn's drivel on Healthcare, but I didn't realize this was his, until the end.

The Unions did not sit out the Health Care Debate because of resource spent on the Nafta Campaign.

Unions sat out the debate because Universal Health Care is not in their best interests.  As Steve Yokich said at the time 'If you want Health Insurance, Join a Union'.  (I can't find this quote, but I remember him saying this.  I think it was in the Detroit Free Press.)

The unions publicly want UHC and make official statements in support of this.  However, one of the first benfits negoitiated is Health Care.  So if you already have Health Care, why would you need a union?  

In a true irony, General Motors and other large employers supported Clinton Care to help their situations.  However GM Support was criticized as corporate welfare for trying to dodge a cost they negoitiated with the UAW.

Wlater Reuther argued for UHC way back in the 19405's & 1950's.  Today's excellent employee provided Healthcare is due in a large part to the Union.  Now with VEBA's it is in the Union's interest to pass this cost on to the Government and the Democrats would love a pay back like this.

Elizabeth Edwards will have her work cut out for her trying to get this off the ground.

July 3, 2008 1:58 PM

The Plank said:

Physicians for a National Health Plan is one of those groups that should get a lot more attention than

July 11, 2008 2:40 PM