Kamala Harris Uses Her New Medicare For All Plan To Go After Bernie
Democratic presidential contender and California Sen. Kamala Harris released her Medicare for all plan Monday ahead of the second round of Democratic debates scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday.
Democratic presidential contender and California Sen. Kamala Harris released her Medicare for all plan Monday ahead of the second round of Democratic debates scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday.
Harris seemingly walked back her support for eliminating the entire private health insurance market after saying she misinterpreted a question at the first round of Democratic debates in June.
Her Medicare for all plan is less extreme than that of her presidential rival, Independent Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders. Harris is signed onto Sanders’ Medicare for all plan in the Senate but used her new plan to take aim at how Sanders plans to pay for a government-run health care system.
“[O]ne of Senator Sanders’ options is to tax households making above $29,000 an additional 4% income-based premium. I believe this hits the middle class too hard.
That’s why I propose that we exempt households making below $100,000, along with a higher income threshold for middle-class families living in high-cost areas.
To pay for this specific change, I would tax Wall Street stock trades,” Harris wrote in her plan.
Harris said she could raise “well over $2 trillion over 10 years” by taxing Wall Street stock trades at 0.2 percent, bond trades at 0.1 percent and derivative transactions at 0.002 percent. She would also seek to tax offshore corporate income at the same rate as domestic corporate income.
Harris’ plan also includes:
- Covering emergency room visits, doctor visits, vision, dental, hearing aids, mental health, and substance use disorder treatment, and comprehensive reproductive health care services under Medicare for all
- Giving Americans the immediate ability to buy into Medicare
- Automatically enrolling newborns and the uninsured in the “new and improved Medicare system”
- Allowing private insurers to offer Medicare plans adhering to “strict Medicare requirements on costs and benefits”
Her plan includes a 10-year phase-in period, longer than Sanders’ four-year phase-in, according to NBC News. It’s unclear whether Harris’ plan includes undocumented immigrants in the “uninsured” category of people who would be automatically enrolled in Medicare. Sanders’ plan would cover millions of illegal immigrants, he said in June.
Harris is trailing Sanders by about three points according to the RealClear Politics poll average.
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Image: Reuters.