"When the year began, the expectation was that the new Democratic-led Congress and President Bush would make some headway on the problem many voters placed at the top of the nation's domestic agenda—healthcare for the uninsured and rising medical costs that are squeezing the middle class," according to the Los Angeles Times, but "lawmakers fell back into the old pattern of harsh partisan rhetoric and stalemate."
The fact that Congress and the White House could not even find an agreement on the expansion of the popular State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) highlights the difficulties in dealing with the issue of health care and shows that major reforms require "support from all the key players," reports the Times. Despite strong, bipartisan support for the SCHIP bill, "the politics of the debate became too polarized," with Bush "suggesting that one relatively small program for children could put the nation on a slippery slope toward government-run healthcare" and the Democrats calling the president "heartless."
While some attribute the failure to pass a SCHIP bill to partisan politics, others say that "the real political problem was division within the GOP," according to the article. Len Nichols, director of the health care program at the New America Foundation, said, "The debacle is not a partisan war between Democrats and Republicans over how to cover children, it's a civil war within the Republican Party over the role of government and health policy in general." Nichols pointed out that, while the right-leaning portion of the Republican party "carried the day," reflecting a "majority position among Republican primary voters," he did not believe "it's a majority position among the American people."
Friday, December 21, 2007
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