President Trump on Thursday threatened to veto any single-payer health care plan, a day after Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., introduced a Medicare-for-all bill to the Senate.
‘Bernie Sanders is pushing hard for a single payer healthcare plan – a curse on the U.S. & its people I told Republicans to approve healthcare fast or this would happen,’ Trump tweeted from Air Force One as he returned to D.C. from Florida. ‘But don’t worry, I will veto because I love our country & its people.’
Trump’s comment was not just a warning to Democrats, with more and more potential 2020 contenders lining up behind Sanders’ plan, but Republicans too, as he once again admonished them for not getting an Obamacare repeal and replacement done during the early months of his administration.
President Trump threatened to veto Sen. Bernie Sanders’ single-payer health care plan labeling it a ‘curse’
President Trump also spoke about single-payer to reporters aboard Air Force One calling it a ‘terrible thing for our country’
On Capitol Hill yesterday, Sen. Bernie Sanders rolled out his Medicare for All plan, which is getting support from an increasing number of Democrats, including some rumored 2020 hopefuls
He made a similar comment to reporters aboard Air Force One, but left Sanders out of it.
‘We got poorly treated on the health care plan, and now you see what’s happening where people are going single-payer – exactly what I said would happen,’ he said, ribbing Republicans’ for their inaction and the fact that his own party, with ‘no’ votes coming from Sens. Susan Collins, R-Maine, Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska and John McCain, R-Ariz., derailed the Senate plan.
He added that, ‘single-payer would be a terrible thing for our country.’
The president was echoing his spokeswoman to a tee, with Sarah Huckabee Sanders going after Sen. Sanders from the podium yesterday.
She suggested that if there was a true appetite for government-run, single-payer health care, Sanders – a Democratic presidential candidate – would have won the election.
‘The president as well as the majority of the country knows that the single-payer system that the Democrats are proposing is a horrible idea,’ she said Wednesday. ‘Not only does the president not support it, but America doesn’t support it or Bernie Sanders would be sitting in the Oval Office right now.’
Just up the road on Capitol Hill, Sanders was unveiling his single-payer health care plan, surrounding by Democrats who have ambitions in 2020 and beyond.
‘You, the Republican Party, have shown the American people what you stand for when you voted for legislation that would throw up to 32 million Americans off of the heath insurance they have and, at the same time, give tax breaks to the rich and large corporations,’ Sanders said, taking aim at a GOP Senate health care plan that failed in July.
‘You, the Republican Party have no credibility on the issue of health care,’ Sanders said, railing against the opposition party.
For the first time a substantial number of Democrats have his back, with 16 other Democratic senators signing on to a Medicare-for-all plan, according to Sanders’ office’s count on Wednesday afternoon.
Among them a handful of Democrats being pointed at as presidential material, including Sens. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., Al Franken, D-Minn., Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., Cory Booker, D-N.J. and Kamala Harris, D-Calif.
Over on the House side, Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., has introduced a similar bill, which had garnered 117 co-sponsors as of Wednesday morning.
The bill introduced to the Senate today by the ex-presidential candidate would phase in government-run health care over four years.
At the start, children 18 and under would be enrolled in Medicare, while the minimum age for seniors, which is now 65, would decrease.
By year No. 3 Medicare eligibility would be 35. And then the gap between 18-year-olds and 35-year-olds would be closed by year No. 4.
‘I can’t think of anything worse than having government be more involved in your health care instead of less involved,’ Huckabee Sanders said from the podium today.
Pointing to Sanders she noted how he had pushed these ideas during the campaign.
‘They were rejected, not just by America, but by Democrats – he didn’t make it through the primary, he didn’t make it into the Oval,’ Huckabee Sanders said. ‘I think that’s a pretty clear indication of what America wants to see and it’s not a single-payer system.’
Instead President Trump indicated he would be willing to support an effort by Sens. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Bill Cassidy, R-La., which would repeal and replace Obamacare by getting rid of many of the subsidies and mandate and providing block grants to the states.
Trump sent out a statement earlier Wednesday applauding the senators’ effort.
‘As I have continued to say, inaction is not an option, and I sincerely hope that Senators Graham and Cassidy have found a way to address the Obamacare crisis,’ Trump said.