In an op-ed for The New York Times, Yale political science professor Jacob Hacker argues that Obamacare’s problems can be fixed by the addition of a “public option”—a government-run health insurance plan that would be available in the exchanges alongside private options.
Near the beginning of the piece, Hacker, who has been touting the public option since before Obamacare was signed into law, dismisses one of the major lines of criticism about the creation of a new, government-run health insurance plan, which is that it would lead to fully government-run health insurance system.
“Critics of the public option are convinced it’s a one-way ticket to single payer (the government alone provides coverage),” Hacker writes. “History suggests the opposite: The public option isn’t a threat to a system of broad coverage through competing private plans. Instead, it’s absolutely critical to making such a system work.”
Now, I have argued in the past that Obamacare is unlikely to lead to single payer in the long run, and I still believe that a fully government run system is an unlikely outcome, at least in the forseeable future.
But one could be forgiven for thinking that the inclusion of a public option would eventually lead to a single-payer system, because that is exactly what Jacob Hacker said would happen when he pitched the public option in 2008.
In a 2008 speech to the Tides Foundation, a liberal policy organization, Hacker touted his then relatively new idea for creating a new government-run health care plan available to all Americans. In his remarks, he explicitly addressed the possibility that it might eventually lead to a government takeover. Here’s what he said:
Someone once said to me, ‘Well, this is a Trojan horse for single payer.’ Well, it’s not a Trojan horse, right? It’s just right there!
I’m telling you, we’re going to get there over time, slowly, but we’ll move away from reliance on employment based health insurance as we should. But we’re going to do it in a way that we’re not going to frighten people into thinking that they’re going to lose their private insurance.
These remarks were captured on video. Watch below:
In 2009, after the video aired on Fox News, Hacker backtracked, saying that he did not see his plan as a route to single payer. That appears to be his position still.
But it wasn’t at first, when he was speaking to a liberal audience. And the dynamics he explained in 2008 certainly provide a plausible enough foundation for the idea that a public option would lay the groundwork for more government intervention.
So it is hard to fully trust Hacker’s current assurances that a public option would not eventually lead to single payer given his previous explanation that it would.
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