President Donald Trump greets supporters after arriving at Ocala International Airport, Thursday, Oct. 3, 2019, to give a speech on health care at retirement community, The Villages. Evan Vucci / AP Hide caption
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Evan Vucci / AP
Evan Vucci / AP
Updated at 4: 30 PM ET
President Trump gave a speech and signed an executive order on health care Thursday, casting the “Medicare for All” proposals from his Democratic rivals as harmful to seniors.
His speech, which had been billed as a policy discussion, had the tone of a campaign rally. Trump spoke from The Villages, a huge retirement community in Florida outside of Orlando, adeep-redpart of a key swing state.
His speech was marked by cheers and standing ovations, and intermittent chants of “four more years” by an audience of mostly seniors.
Trump spoke extensively about his administration’s health care achievements and goals, and the health policy proposals of Democratic candidates for president, which he characterized as socialism.
The executive order he signed had previously been titled “Protecting Medicare from Socialist Destruction” on the White House schedule, but has since been renamed, “Protecting and Improving Medicare for Our Nation’s Seniors . “
” In my campaign for president, I made you a sacred pledge that I would strengthen, protect and defend Medicare for all of our senior citizens, “President Trump told the audience of retirees. “Today I’ll sign a very historic executive order that does exactly that – we are making your Medicare even better, and … it will never be taken away from you, we’re not letting anyone get close.”
The order is intended, in part, to shore up Medicare Advantage, an alternative to traditional Medicare that’s administered by private insurers. That program has beengrowing in popularity, and this year,premiums are downand plan choices are up.
Theexecutive orderdirects the Department of Health and Human Services to take action to improve several aspects of Medicare, including expanding plan options for seniors, encouraging innovative plan designs and payment models, and improving the enrollment process to make it easier for seniors to choose plans.
The order includes a grab bag of proposals, including removing regulations “that create inefficiencies or otherwise undermine patient outcomes,” combating waste, fraud, and abuse in the program , and streamlining access to “innovative products” like new treatments and medical devices.
The president outlined very little specific policy in his speech in Florida. Instead, he attacked Democratic rivals and portrayed their proposals as threatening to seniors.
“Leading Democrats have pledged to give free health care to illegal immigrants,” Trump said, referring to a moment from the first Democratic presidential debate in which all the candidates on stage raised their hands in support ofhealth care for undocumented migrants. “I will never allow these politicians to steal your health care and give it away to illegal aliens.”
Health care is a major issue for voters, and one that has dominated the presidential campaign on the Democratic side. In the most recent debate, candidates spent the first hour hashing out and defending various health care proposals and visions. The major divide is between a Medicare for All system – supported by only two candidates, Senators Sanders and Warren – and a “public option” supported bythe rest of the field.
Trump brushed those distinctions aside. “Every major democrat in Washington has backed a massive government health care takeover that would totally obliterate Medicare,” he said. “These Democratic policy proposals … may go by different names whether it’s single payer, or the so-called public option, but they’re all based on the totally same terrible idea: they want to raid Medicare to fund a thing called socialism . “
Towards the end of the speech, he highlighted efforts his administration has made to lower drug prices, and then suggested that drugmakers were helping with the impeachment inquiry in the House of Representatives. “They’re very powerful,” Trump said. “I wouldn’t be surprised if … it was from some of these industries, like pharmaceuticals, that we take on.”
Drawing battle lines through Medicare may be a savvy campaign move on Trump’s part.
Medicare is extremely popular. People who have it like it, and people who don’t have it, think it’s a good thing, too. Arecent pollby the Kaiser Family Foundation found that more than eight in ten Democrats, independents, and Republicans think of Medicare favorably.
President Trump came into office promising to dismantle the Affordable Care Act, and replace it with something better. Those efforts failed, and the administration has struggled to get substantive policy changes on health care.
On Thursday, administration officials emphasized a number of its recent health care policy moves.
“[Trump’s] vision for a healthier America is much wider than a narrow focus on the Affordable Care Act,” said Joe Grogan, director of the White House Domestic Policy Council at a press briefing earlier.
Secretary of Health And Human Services, Alex Azar, said at that briefing that this was “the most comprehensive vision for health care that I can recall any president putting forth. “
He highlighted a range of actions the administration has taken, from a push onprice transparencyin health care, to a plan toend the HIV epidemic, to moregeneric drug approvals. Azar described these things as part of a framework to make health care more affordable, deliver better value, and tackle “impassable health challenges.”
Without a big health reform bill, the administration is positioning itself as a protector of what exists now – especially Medicare.
in our system and fixing what’s broken, “Azar said. “Sixty million Americans are on traditional Medicare or Medicare Advantage. They like what they have, so the president is going to protect it.”
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