A RECORD OF POST-PASSAGE PROGRESS....
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The liberal Ohioan
talked to Benjy Sarlin yesterday about his position, and repeatedly cited the work of Jacob Hacker, the Yale professor who was largely responsible for crafting the idea of a public option. That's an odd rhetorical choice -- Hacker has
repeatedly said he wants Congress to pass the Democratic proposal. Kucinich is citing a scholar, while ignoring the scholar's judgment. Perhaps he doesn't know about Hacker's conclusion?
But
this observation, related to the public option, was even more striking.
Kucinich says he doesn't buy Obama's latest argument to progressives that there will be other opportunities to improve upon the legislation once they help him pass this bill.
"Fix it later, are you kidding?" he said. "If you don't get it in the bill up front, it's not going to happen."
... Kucinich's entire approach has repeatedly been proven false.
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When Medicaid passed, for example, it did very little for low-income adults, which is now seen as the point of the program. ...
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When Medicare passed, it all but ignored people with disabilities, didn't cover prescription drugs, and made no allowances for home health services. It was, at best, a limited program at its inception. ...
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When Social Security passed, the benefits were negligible, and the program excluded agricultural workers, domestic workers, the self-employed, railroad employees, government employees, clergy, and those who worked for non-profits. The original Social Security bill offered no benefits for dependents or survivors, and included no cost-of-living increases. ...
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Notice a pattern here? FDR and LBJ had huge electoral mandates and gigantic Democratic majorities in Congress (
bigger than the congressional majorities Obama currently enjoys), but they still couldn't get everything they wanted.
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