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"Would the public option cost less than $900 per month? If so how would it either get costs lower per-person than Medicare or find the money to subsidize enrollees?"
A large part of the objection to the public option from many conservative democrats was that they couldn't quite figure out how the premiums would be set, and to what extent it would be subsidized. That was the concern of the insurance companies as well. They would have enough trouble competing with the public option, they would have none if the premiums were basically subsidized.
Your question also gets into the debate between the "robust" public option and some of the stripped down versions. Most of that had to do with who would be eligible for them, or over what regional areas any particular "plan" would apply. With the robust option, there was the possibility that the government would get the barganing power to negotiate extremely low rates, partially through the trade off of having a very streamlined billing system. There was even concern that it could get combined with the medicare system giving the feds even more barganing power.
Funding was another serious point of debate. It was to some extent why Obama ultimately walked away from the public option. In the short run it wasn't going to save the feds any money. In the end HCR was all about saving the feds money, not anyone else. They succeded at that, but a public option could have been problematic in that because they'd either have to initially charge "what it cost" well before they'd have a chance to negotiate lower rates, or they'd have to subsidize it until they got the costs in line with the rates. The House suggested raising taxes on the top 2% of wage earners, the Senate prefered mandates and cadillac taxes. The White House sided with the Senate.
Another big concern was that the PO would be too popular, too fast. If they got costs or premiums in line as they wanted to, or held the line on premiums when the insurance companies weren't, there could have been a "run" on the PO by individuals and small companies. Progressives were sure that is what was going to happen and we'd end up with a defacto single payer. Conservatives were afraid it would happen and we'd end up with a defacto single payer. The conservatives fears trumped the progressive's hopes.
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