In recent days, numerous media
figures have claimed or suggested that President Obama has proposed -- or that his health care plan will
lead to -- "socialized medicine," a
"single-payer" system, a "single-payer government-run system," or "nationalized
health care" like the British or Canadian models. However, Obama has not proposed a
single-payer or a nationalized health care system and has explicitly rejected the idea that the
United
States should adopt the British or Canadian
models of providing
health care. As PolitiFact.com noted in a March 4 post, "Obama's plan leaves in place
the private health care system, but seeks to expand it to the uninsured" and
"the plan is very different from some European-style health systems where the
government owns health clinics and employs
doctors."
Moreover, during a March 26 online town hall discussion, Obama
said he did not support enacting a "single-payer system" for health care like
those in England and
Canada. When asked, "Why can we not have a universal
health care system, like many European countries, where people are treated based
on needs rather than financial resources," Obama replied, "I actually want a
universal health care system; that is our goal." But he said a "universal health
care system" does not have to be a "single-payer system" like
England or Canada
has, and rejected getting rid of the
current employer-provided private health insurance system: "I don't think the
best way to fix our health care system is to suddenly completely scrap what
everybody is accustomed to and the vast majority of people already have. Rather,
what I think we should do is to build on the system that we have and fill some
of these gaps."
These false characterizations of
Obama's health care plan echo debunked claims that conservatives
made -- and the media repeatedly echoed -- during the 2008
presidential campaign. In fact, as The New York Times reported in
a May 3, 2008, article, "Senator John McCain has
been repeatedly suggesting that his Democratic rivals [Obama and
then-presidential candidate Hillary Clinton] are proposing a single-payer, or
even a nationalized health care system along the lines of those in countries
like Canada and Britain" but "[t]he suggestion is incorrect." As Media Matters for America has documented, as far back as the 1930s,
conservatives have attempted to smear progressive national health care reform
proposals by calling them "socialized medicine" or a step toward that inevitable
result.
There are numerous examples in the
last week alone of media repeating or failing to challenge the characterization
of Obama's health care proposal as socialized medicine:
- In his April 30
Wall Street Journal
column, Fox News contributor Karl
Rove wrote that, in 2008, the Obama
campaign "ran ads attacking 'government-run health care' as 'extreme.' Now Mr.
Obama is asking, as he did at a townhall meeting last month, 'Why not do a
universal health care system like the European countries?'
"
- On the April 29 edition
of his Fox News program, Glenn Beck said,
"Are we on the road to universal health care? If so, what dangers
could we face as other countries with universal health care, like
Canada, are facing now?" Beck then
said he didn't want the Canadian health care system, and that "I kind of like ours," and asked president and chief executive
officer of the Pacific Research Institute Sally Pipes to "[t]ell [him] about
Canada's health system." Pipes then
said, "Where are we going to go as patients and where are the best doctors in
the world going to go if Obama's health care plan comes through? We have
universal coverage; we don't have universal access. We will have Medicare for
all, single-payer government-run system. It's not the American way, and it has
to be slowed down."
- On the April 29 edition
of Fox News' Special Report,
syndicated columnist Charles Krauthammer asserted that Obama is pushing "a
radical domestic agenda which involves, as he puts it every time, a holy trinity
of health care reform, by which he means nationalizing health care. ... And this
is all in the service of leveling the differences between rich and poor and
leveling the differences between classes."
-
During the April 29 edition of Fox
News' Your World, host Neil Cavuto asked Sen. Jim DeMint
(R-SC) about what Republicans might do before the 2010 midterm elections to halt Democratic
initiatives. In response, DeMint asserted: " A lot of Democrats are not going to
get a lot of support back home for socialized medicine.
So I think if people stand up and speak out, we have a chance of stopping a lot
of this nonsense that they're talking about now, and maybe it will give us a
shot in 2010 to reorganize this Congress and to put back some checks and
balances for President Obama." Cavuto did not challenge DeMint's suggestion that
Obama has proposed "socialized medicine."
- In an April 29 post to The Fox Forum, FoxNews.com
financial columnist Liz Peek wrote: "Team Obama wants to set up
government-managed health insurance programs which will, in theory, compete with
private insurers. The likelihood is that the public programs will ultimately
drive the private players out of the business, as has been the case in student
lending, leading to rising costs and ultimately to rationing of health care
spending. Many people fear that it is but a short hop from nationalized health
insurance to nationalized health care -- a truly horrifying prospect for anyone
who has studied the disaster of English socialized medicine. Do you want
bureaucrats deciding whether you should get that MRI? Would you like to wait six
months for a breast exam? If you think HMOs are a pain, think airport security
screeners, or motor vehicle clerks. That should make you take your vitamins!"
- On the April 28 edition
of Fox News Radio's Brian & The
Judge, co-host Andrew Napolitano suggested that "what may be coming"
under Obama's proposed health care plan is similar to the systems used in Canada
and the United Kingdom: "You want a situation like we have in Canada, where you
have to wait 16 months to have nonelective surgery? Do you want a situation like
they have in Great
Britain, where only the rich can go to private
clinics and everybody else from the upper-middle class -- from the upper-middle
class on down has bad teeth and poor health and has to get the permission of a
bureaucrat before they can see a doctor? That is what may be coming without a
meaningful debate, without a meaningful alternative, without input from you." He
later added, "Do you think that it's a coincidence that the government would be
enacting this takeover of health care in the same week that we have fears of an
epidemic and a pandemic about swine flu? Remember how fear -- remember how the
government uses fear to get people to give up their
freedom."
- On the April 27 edition
of Special
Report, chief political correspondent Carl Cameron
falsely suggested that Obama has proposed a nationalized health care system
similar to those of the U.K.
and Canada when he asserted: "The battle is already one
of this year's most polarizing and partisan. Conservatives for Patients' Rights
launched a new ad with British and Canadian doctors warning Americans about the
perils of nationalized health care."
- In an April 25 Wall Street Journal article, editorial board member Brian Carney
reported that "given the balance of power in Washington, [Sen. Judd] Gregg
[R-NH] gives the Democrats good chances of success in nationalizing our
health-insurance market. 'I think the odds are pretty good that it's going to
happen -- that you'll have a major health-care reform bill pass.' " Carney also
quoted Gregg asserting: "There's no question ... that this is a debate about
rationing to a large degree. All your single-payer systems are rationing
systems. It's also a debate about technology and innovation. Because you will
not have capital pursuing technology, innovation and science if it's health-care
related, because the return on capital won't be there. And these things are so
expensive, especially on the pharmaceutical side and the biologic side, that
you'll dramatically slow improvements in the quality of health care through
science with a single-payer plan."
- During the April 24
edition of Special
Report, White House correspondent Wendell Goler cropped a comment by Obama and took
it out of context -- effectively reversing the statement's meaning -- to falsely
suggest that Obama supports creating a health care system "like the European
countries." Goler claimed that Obama "doesn't want to do it halfway" on health
care and then aired a clip from the March 26 online town hall event of Obama
saying, "If you're going to fix it, why not do a universal health care system
like the European countries?" Following the clip, Goler reported: "His critics
worry universal health care would mean government-run health
care."
- In a column printed in the April 24
edition of The Washington Post, Krauthammer asserted that
"[i]n the service of his ultimate mission -- the leveling of social inequalities
-- President Obama offers a tripartite social democratic agenda: nationalized
health care, federalized education (ultimately guaranteed through college) and a
cash-cow carbon tax (or its equivalent) to subsidize the other
two."
From the April 29 edition of Fox
News' Your World with Neil
Cavuto:
CAVUTO: Does that mean, though, that
you have to wait until 2010? Because assuming Al Franken steps in as that 60th
filibuster-busting Democrat, you guys are just, you know, gonna be looking to
order fries, right? I mean, what are you going to
do?
DeMINT: Well, what we have going for
us, Neil, is what you and Dick Armey were just talking about. Americans are
pushing back. They're standing up. They're speaking out as they haven't done in
years. And there are some Democrats who could get the message, who understand
that electricity tax is going to hurt their constituents. They could stop
that.
A lot of Democrats are not going to
get a lot of support back home for socialized medicine.
So I think if people stand up and speak out, we have a chance of stopping a lot
of this nonsense that they're talking about now, and maybe it will give us a
shot in 2010 to reorganize this Congress and to put back some checks and
balances for President Obama.
CAVUTO: So this is like your Reagan
moment.
From the April 29 edition of Fox
News' Glenn Beck:
BECK: Now, did you know that we had
a health emergency? Yeah, it's a health crisis. Are we on the road to universal
health care? If so, what dangers could we face as other countries with universal
health care, like Canada, are facing
now?
Sally Pipes, president and CEO of
Pacific Research Institute, and author of The Top Ten Myths of American Health Care: A
Citizen's Guide. Help me out on -- because everybody says that, gosh,
Canada, they've got -- I mean,
wouldn't you love to have the Canadian health service up
there? No, not really. I kind of like ours. Tell me about Canada's health
system.
PIPES: Well, Glenn, you know, I am
from Canada. I became an American two
years ago, but I grew up under a single-payer, government is the only provider
of healthcare. And few people in America know that they have long
waiting lists for care. In Canada today, the average Canadian
waits 17.3 weeks, over four months, from seeing a primary-care doc to getting
treatment by a specialist. They have rationed care and lack of access to the
latest technology. So, you know, if that's what we want in America, then people
should support Governor -- President Obama's public plan,
which will be part of an insurance -- national insurance
exchange.
[...]
PIPES: And I like
to say, you know, Canadians have an escape valve, they just hop over the border
--
BECK: Yeah, it's
true.
PIPES: -- and pay
to get their MRI done timely. Where are we going to go as patients and where are
the best doctors in the world going to go if Obama's health care plan comes
through? We have universal coverage; we don't have universal access. We will
have a Medicare for all, single-payer government-run system. It's not the American
way, and it has to be slowed down.
BECK:
OK.
PIPES: People
need to know in America this is not what they will
want if they want good health
care.
&mdash D.C.P. & C.S.
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