Wasn't Hillary way ahead of the pack in terms of a National Health Plan?
http://www.cnn.com/2006/POLITICS/04/06/greenfield.romney.health/index.htmlGreenfield: Health plan could jump-start a Romney presidential bid
By Jeff Greenfield
CNN Senior Analyst
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Massachusetts is close to adopting a plan for near-universal health coverage for all its citizens -- funded by a mix of individuals, businesses, and government subsidies. If Gov. Mitt Romney decides to seek the presidency, this plan is likely to attract the attention of states across the country; it not only suggests a way out of the most daunting fiscal pressure the states face, but the near-unanimous votes in both houses of the Legislature also suggest a way to find consensus out of conflict.
There's a potentially powerful political element to this plan. It could well be the centerpiece of a GOP presidential run by Mitt Romney. Why? Because it fits a pattern of governor-candidates who point to their Statehouse record as a way of appealing across party lines.
The fact that governors have done better in modern times as presidential candidates is common knowledge. Four of the last five presidents have been governors and former governors; and after an era where governors-as-presidential-nominees were losers (Alf Landon in '36, Tom Dewey in '44 and '48, Adlai Stevenson in '52), all but one in this era has been elected president. What these winners have had in common is a record -- or at least, a claim -- as governor to have crossed ideological lines.
When former Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter ran in 1976, he boasted that he was "not from Washington," a big plus in the post-Watergate era. He also talked of cutting and streamlining state government, a pitch usually made by Republicans.