Senators are involved in the debate about reforming Medicare. So
are House members. Ditto Capitol Hill staffers, lobbyists, policy
analysts and number crunchers.
But the one person not involved is President Bush-and his absence
puts the future of America's health-care system at risk, according
to Stuart Butler in The Los Angeles Times.
"Rather than sitting in the White House waiting for a bill, Bush
must lead the public debate on the decisions that will affect us
for decades," writes Butler, vice president of domestic policy at
The Heritage Foundation, in a Sept. 22 essay. "If he flinches from
this important duty, he will have failed a critical test of
leadership."
Butler says there are fundamental questions in the debate that
Bush must face, including:
· Can we add a $400 billion-plus prescription drug
entitlement to Medicare, which even now can't survive without huge
transfers of money from our children?
· Is it responsible to promise equal Medicare benefits for
both rich and poor? Should a retired Bill Gates get the same
Medicare coverage as an ex-bricklayer?
· Why can members of Congress choose a wide variety of
health plans, but most Medicare patients can't?
Butler says these are questions Bush can't ignore and should answer
them. Now.
For more information or to receive an e-mail version of
"Medicare Maladies," contact [email protected] or call
Heritage Media Services at (202) 675-1761.
Report Health Care Reform
Medicare Malady #49: Mr. President, The Medicare Debate Needs You
September 24, 2003 1 min read
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