NobleSavage
Veteran Member
If it wasn't already obvious, dreams of single-payer in the US are officially dead.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/theapot...-payer-health-plan-was-doomed-from-the-start/
http://www.vox.com/2014/12/22/7427117/single-payer-vermont-shumlin
Last week, Vermont Governor Peter Shumlin (D.) announced that he was pulling the plug on his four-year quest to impose single-payer, government-run health care on the residents of his state. “In my judgment,” said Shumlin at a press conference, “the potential economic disruption and risks would be too great to small businesses, working families, and the state’s economy.” The key reasons for Shumlin’s reversal are important to understand. They explain why the dream of single-payer health care in the U.S. is dead for the foreseeable future—but also why Obamacare will be difficult to repeal.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/theapot...-payer-health-plan-was-doomed-from-the-start/
"You'd think that, if there was any state where this could fly politically, it should have been Vermont," said Matthew Dickinson, a political science professor at Middlebury College. "But in this case, the price was so big that even a state as solidly blue as Vermont wasn't able to swallow it."
When I interviewed Shumlin in March, he said that whether or not Vermont succeeded at its single-payer push would have huge national ramifications. Back then, his state had the potential to serve as a model. It could be what Romneycare was in Massachusetts: a template for national reform. But if single-payer couldn't succeed in deep-blue Vermont, Shumlin and others mused, how could it possibly move forward anywhere else?
http://www.vox.com/2014/12/22/7427117/single-payer-vermont-shumlin
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