Proposal to Reach Millions Echoes Ideas Outlined in First Term
The budget President Bush unveils next week will propose spending an extra $140 billion over 10 years to expand health coverage to millions more Americans, his top health adviser said yesterday. But many of the proposals are familiar ideas that never made it past the talking stage in Bush's first term.
Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt said Bush wants to spend more money to enroll children in government-funded health programs, give tax credits to individuals and companies that purchase insurance and build more community health centers.
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"That would be a historic step forward to make that much progress within the decade," he told reporters in a leisurely conversation in his new office at HHS headquarters, as he offered a rosy preview of the health-related components of the budget in advance of Monday's release of the actual numbers.
But many of the ideas Leavitt sketched out have been offered by the Bush White House in the past, eliciting little interest on Capitol Hill and deep skepticism about how many more Americans would be covered.
About half of the $140 billion appears to represent Bush's plan to provide refundable tax credits for the purchase of health insurance. Rolled out during Bush's first year in office, the credit would cost $70 billion to $90 billion over a decade, according to administration figures.
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A61677-2005Feb3.html