Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Single-payer setback unsettles other states

Activists elsewhere say they’re working to learn from California’s failure to enact universal healthcare.

- By Angela Hart Hart writes for Kaiser Health News. This story was produced by KHN, one of the three major operating programs at the Kaiser Family Foundation.

SAN FRANCISCO — Single-payer healthcare didn’t stand a chance in California this year.

Even in this deep-blue bastion, Democratic lawmakers shied away from legislatio­n that would have put state government in charge of healthcare and taxed California­ns heavily to do so — a massive transforma­tion that would have forced them to take on the powerful healthcare industry.

Gov. Gavin Newsom, who had promised to spearhead single-payer care when he ran for governor four years ago, dashed its chances this year when he declined to publicly support it.

Instead, the first-term Democrat, who is running for reelection in November, is pushing for “universal healthcare,” which aims to provide all California­ns with coverage but, unlike singlepaye­r, would keep private health insurance intact.

Newsom’s retreat devastated progressiv­e activists and the powerful California Nurses Assn. union, which championed the cause. The death of single-payer care in the nation’s most populous state also deals a major blow to similar campaigns elsewhere in the nation — which had looked to California for inspiratio­n and leadership — casting doubt on their ability to succeed.

“We’re also fighting in New York, but just like in California, there’s not 100% Democratic consensus among legislator­s,” said Ursula Rozum, co-director of the Campaign for New York Health, which is working to pass single-payer legislatio­n. “It feels like a constant question of ‘Can we win this?’ ”

Health policy experts agree that California’s failure to adopt single-payer care dampens momentum across the country.

“California, given its size and politics, has always been a bellwether for progressiv­e policy, so this certainly sends a signal to other states about how hard this is,” said Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy at the Kaiser Family Foundation.

But Rozum and singlepaye­r activists in Colorado, Washington state, and elsewhere say that rather than giving up, they are taking key lessons from California’s failure: It is essential to win — and keep — support from the governor. Groups pushing single-payer care must unite Democrats, bringing in business-friendly moderates and broader support from organized labor. And they say they must learn how to counter intense lobbying by doctors, hospitals and health insurance companies fighting to preserve the status quo.

“We’ve seen what happened in California, so we are working hard to get our governor on the record in support of single-payer so she will sign it when it gets to her desk,” Rozum said. “And just like there, our union movement is divided. We know we need them to have any chance of moving forward with our bill.”

So far, single-payer proponents haven’t been able to broaden their movement beyond liberal activists or convince people that they should pay higher taxes in exchange for scrapping healthcare premiums, deductible­s and copays.

The only state that has passed single-payer, Vermont, didn’t implement it.

Vermont adopted a single-payer plan in 2011 with unequivoca­l support from its then-governor, Democrat Peter Shumlin. But he abandoned the effort in 2014 amid growing concerns about tax increases and runaway healthcare costs.

“There isn’t a political party in the world that’s going to raise their hands every year to increase taxes on

hard-working citizens,” Shumlin told Kaiser Health News. “That’s the big mistake I made in Vermont.”

But progressiv­e dreams for single-payer care didn’t die when Vermont retreated. “Medicare for All” became a liberal rallying cry for Democrats nationally when Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders stumped for it during his presidenti­al campaigns. After Joe Biden was elected president, the movement shifted to the states, in part because Biden has opposed Medicare for All.

Activists in Colorado are mobilizing for another single-payer campaign after the overwhelmi­ng defeat of a 2016 ballot initiative that failed partly because of intense healthcare industry opposition. Organizers in Washington state are pushing legislatio­n and trying to get a single-payer initiative on the ballot next year.

Shumlin said Democrats must be prepared to take on deep-pocketed industry groups and rein in soaring healthcare spending — or they’ll be confronted with the political difficulty of constantly raising taxes.

“California is the best state to lead this because it has the fifth-biggest economy in the world. It’s all about scale,” Shumlin said. “And if California gets it right, other states and the federal government will follow. But this is hard stuff, so get ready to

get bloodied.”

Some Democratic lawmakers and the California Nurses Assn. had hoped California would lead the way this year and that Newsom would be their champion.

State Assembly Member Ash Kalra (D-San Jose) introduced legislatio­n sponsored by the union that would have created government-run health insurance for all state residents while significan­tly raising taxes on employers, employees and businesses to pay for it. State estimates pegged the cost at roughly $360 billion a year, with a little less than half coming from tax increases and the rest from the federal government.

On Newsom’s first day in office in 2019, he said: “I committed to this and I want folks to know I was serious.” But since then, he has distanced himself from singlepaye­r care.

Instead, he has created a commission to study the concept and asked the Biden administra­tion for permission to collect federal money that f lows to the state via the Affordable Care Act, Medicaid and Medicare, which California could use to help finance a single-payer system. But Biden can’t simply approve the request — California would need complicate­d federal waivers and approval from Congress.

Newsom has shifted to a platform of “universal healthcare,” which includes Medicaid coverage for all income-eligible immigrants who are in the country illegally and state-funded subsidies for California­ns who buy health insurance from Covered California, the state’s Obamacare insurance exchange.

Newsom said in January that he has long believed single-payer care is “inevitable,” but signaled that the federal government should take the lead.

Kalra decided not to bring his bill up for a vote in the state Assembly, saying on Jan. 31 that he couldn’t muster enough support.

“It makes it harder to get the votes you need when I’m trying to convince my colleagues that there’s an absolute path to success,” Kalra said. “We have a governor who campaigned on singlepaye­r, and if we’re going to successful­ly have singlepaye­r healthcare in California, at some point we need his engagement and it needs to be genuine.”

Kalra said he’s considerin­g introducin­g another bill next year but conceded that he must shift his strategy to bring more Democrats and unions into the campaign.

These are lessons other states are heeding.

“There’s no question that had California passed a single-payer healthcare plan, we’d be in a position in the state of Washington to say, ‘Look what California is doing,’ ” said Andre Stackhouse, campaign director for Whole Washington, an advocacy group trying to get a single-payer initiative on the ballot next year.

Stackhouse worked on behalf of California’s singlepaye­r campaign this year, helping with a phone-banking campaign to pressure lawmakers. He’s part of a new national coalition called Medicare for All Everywhere, a group of organizers and volunteers working to identify why single-payer efforts fail and how to overcome political and lobbying obstacles.

California was a key test, he said. “We’ve learned all the ways Democrats can kill a bill, but we can’t spend all of our time grieving this loss and the huge setback that it is,” Stackhouse said.

For instance, a major goal for the movement is to persuade more unions to join the fight. Although the nurses union is leading the battle in California, other unions are against singlepaye­r care.

“As trade unionists, we believe everybody should have healthcare, but there’s a big fear that we’re going to lose the benefits that we have,” said Chris Snyder, political director for the local Internatio­nal Union of Operating Engineers in Northern California.

“We have our own healthcare trust fund, and we don’t want benefits that we’ve fought for for decades to be taken away or watered down.”

Lack of union support is a major problem in New York, where Democratic Assembly Member Richard Gottfried has introduced a single-payer bill in every legislativ­e session for the last 30 years.

“What is keeping the bill from moving in the Legislatur­e is opposition from public employee unions,” Gottfried said. “They feel they have negotiated excellent coverage, so we need to convince them that the New York Health Act is as good or better than what they have now.”

Gottfried said he has been negotiatin­g with teachers, sanitation workers and other trade unions on legislativ­e language that would provide “more explicit guarantees” that union members would receive better coverage without paying more out of pocket than they already do.

It’s not clear if the measure will get a vote this year.

“Whichever state goes first will help build momentum for other states,” he said.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? SUPPORTERS of single-payer healthcare march to the state Capitol in Sacramento in April 2017.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press SUPPORTERS of single-payer healthcare march to the state Capitol in Sacramento in April 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States