Where does President Obama stand now on including a public option as part of health care reform? It's unclear. CNN has the latest:
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The White House sought to reassure jittery supporters Monday that President Obama is not abandoning the fight for a public health insurance option.
The assurance came amid a media firestorm ignited over the weekend by administration officials seeming to indicate a willingness to drop such an option in order to secure congressional approval of a health care reform bill.
"The president has always said that what is essential is that health insurance reform must lower costs, ensure that there are affordable options for all Americans, and it must increase choice and competition in the health insurance market," White House aide Linda Douglass said in a written statement.
"He believes the public option is the best way to achieve those goals."
The administration seemed to step back from its insistence on such an option over the weekend, when Obama said it is "not the entirety of health care reform."
White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said the president could be "satisfied" without it. And Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius told CNN's "State of the Union" that a public insurance plan is "not the essential element."
Clearly, the White House is flirting with the idea of dropping the public option. As former Gov. Howard Dean says, doing so would destroy the goal of obtaining anything close to universal health care:
Former Democratic Party Chairman Howard Dean, a leading figure in the liberal wing of his party, said Monday he doubts there can be meaningful health care reform without a direct government role.
Dean urged the Obama administration to stand by statements made early on in the debate in which it steadfastly insisted that such a public option was indispensable to genuine change, saying that Medicare and the Veterans Administration are "two very good programs that have been around for a long time."
Dean appeared on morning news shows Monday amid increasing indications the Obama White House is retreating from the public option in the face of vocal opposition from Republicans and some vocal participants at a town-hall-style meetings around the country.
The former Vermont governor was asked on NBC's Meet the Press about President Obama's statement over the weekend that the public option for insurance coverage was "just a sliver" of the overall proposal. Obama's health and human services secretary, Kathleen Sebelius, advanced that line, telling CNN on Sunday that a direct government role in a system intended to provide virtually universal coverage was "not the essential element."
Dean argued that a public option is fair and said there must be such a choice in any genuine shake up of the existing system.
"You can't really do health reform without it," he said. Dean maintained that the health insurance industry has "put enormous pressure on patients and doctors" in recent years.
He called a direct government role "the entirety of health care reform. It isn't the entirety of insurance reform. ... We shouldn't spend $60 billion a year subsidizing the insurance industry."
The president needs to hear from supporters of a public option now. Without his strong leadership the Republicans and Blue Dog Democrats are just about to kill any meaningful chance for health care reform. Write the president today and tell him to stand firm.
Related Link: Health Care and The Christian Tradition
Related Link: Letter to President Obama On The Public Option
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