Trump On ‘Medicare for All’ And The Costs Of Extending Health Care To Undocumented Immigrants

 

During the 2020 State of the Union address, the president truthfully commented that 130 Democratic legislators endorsed legislation that would provide taxpayer-funded healthcare to immigrants. That was about the only somewhat truthful thing he said on the topic. (In fact, 118 congressmen have endorsed Jayapal’s Medicare for All Act of 2019, and 14 senators have endorsed Sanders’ Senate version of the act, which adds up to 132, not 130, endorsers.) Trump’s additional comments that Medicare for All would increase the overall cost of U.S. healthcare, bankrupt the nation, and socialize U.S. medicine do not stand up to scrutiny, as detailed in this analysis by Politifact and the Kaiser Family Foundation.   — The HEAL Team

 

Trump On ‘Medicare for All’ And The Costs Of Extending Health Care To Undocumented Immigrants 

One point: While the single-payer system outlined in the pending legislative proposals would increase public spending — and by a significant amount — its backers say that total health care spending likely wouldn’t change that much. That’s because, as the plan is envisioned, while government spending would go up, private health expenditures would disappear.

“Medicare for All would dramatically shift how we pay for health care, but not necessarily how much we spend in total,” said Larry Levitt, a vice president at the Kaiser Family Foundation. “It’s hard to make the case that it would bankrupt the country.” (Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent program of the foundation.)

Furthermore, to suggest that providing undocumented immigrants with insurance would bankrupt the country is misleading. Those immigrants make up a small number of the population — about 11 million, compared with the total national population of approximately 327 million.

“A very, very small percentage of the total cost is associated with that 11 million people,” said Linda Blumberg, an analyst at the Urban Institute, a Washington think tank. “We’re talking about a strawman.”

In fact, she noted, many existing programs on the state, county and local levels already provide health benefits to undocumented immigrants. Those programs haven’t led to bankruptcy.

Part Of A Broader Theme

Trump’s claim on health care for undocumented immigrants was part of a larger broadside on Democratic health proposals. He also argued Democrats would “impose a socialist takeover of our health care system” and “raid the Medicare benefits our seniors depend on.”

Those statements are also misleading.

For one thing, Levitt noted, Medicare for All would not socialize the medical care system, even if it would replace private insurance with all public programs. Under the current proposals, hospitals and doctors would still stand as private entities.

“It would in no way mean a socialist takeover of the health care system,” Levitt said. “When Americans think of health care, I suspect they think of the people who actually deliver that care.”

The idea of “raiding” Medicare is also tricky, as we noted last October. While the single-payer plan would replace conventional Medicare with a new government program, that program (according to the Sanders and Jayapal bills) would have more generous benefits than Medicare currently offers. If anything, then, benefits wouldn’t be raided; they would be bolstered.

The result, analysts said: a series of arguments that distracts from the actual debate at hand.

“It is worthwhile having a serious debate over the inherent trade-offs of the reform being discussed,” Blumberg said. “But this is the same kind of throwaway line and inflammatory language to thwart serious conversation.

Our Ruling

The president said Medicare for All would “bankrupt our nation by providing free taxpayer-funded health care to millions of illegal aliens, forcing taxpayers to subsidize free care for anyone in the world who unlawfully crosses our borders.”

While the program is meant to cover undocumented people, it is, at best, a gross exaggeration to suggest this expense would “bankrupt” the United States, especially since Medicare for All’s overall price tag looks fairly similar to what we currently spend on health care. (It changes who pays.)

We rate this claim Half True.

 

SOURCES:

State of the Union, Feb. 4, 2020.

Email interview with Larry Levitt, vice president, Kaiser Family Foundation, Feb. 4, 2020.

Telephone interview with Linda Blumberg, institute fellow, Urban Institute, Feb. 4, 2020.

KHN/Politifact “Trump Speech Offers Dizzying Preview Of His Health Care Campaign Strategy,” Oct. 3, 2019.

 

Kaiser Health News (KHN) is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente. This story was produced in partnership with PolitiFact.

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