FDL
                     By: 
David Dayen Tuesday December 22, 2009 12:57 pm              
 President Obama has been deployed  to rebut criticisms, from the right and the left, about the Senate’s  health care bill.  He says that “every single criteria for reform I put  forward is in this bill,” which seems wrong  on several key points.  But the more remarkable claim is this one,  where Obama says he never campaigned on the public option:
 He said the Senate legislation  accomplishes “95 percent” of what he called for during his 2008  presidential campaign and in his September speech to a joint session of  Congress on the need for health-care reform [...]
 Obama said the public option “has become a source of ideological  contention between the left and right.” But, he added, “I didn’t  campaign on the public option.”
 “We don’t feel that the core elements to help the American people  have been compromised in any significant way,” Obama said. “Do these  pieces of legislation have exactly everything I want? Of course not. But  they have the things that are necessary to reduce costs for businesses,  families and the government.”
 I guess it depends on the meaning of the word “campaign.”  Because  the public option was clearly part of the President’s health care plan.   He signed  on to the HCAN principles during the campaign.  His white  paper on health care included a public option.  The set of  principles, including a public option, are on the Obama  campaign website.  Plenty of media reports noted  that the Obama plan had a public option.  Obama talked  up the public option in this candidate questionnaire on the website  of The Washington Post:
 Every American has the right to  affordable, comprehensive and portable health coverage. My plan will  ensure that all Americans have health care coverage through their  employers, private health plans, the federal government, or the states.  My plan builds on and improves our current insurance system, which most  Americans continue to rely upon, and creates a new public health plan  for those currently without coverage. Under my plan, Americans will be  able to choose to maintain their current coverage if they choose to. For  those without health insurance I will establish a new public insurance  program, and provide subsides to afford care for those who need them. My  plan includes a mandate that all children have health care coverage and  I will expand eligibility for the Medicaid and SCHIP programs to help  ensure we cover all kids. My plan requires all employers to contribute  towards health coverage for their employees or towards the cost of the  public plan. Under my plan a typical family will save $2,500 each year.  We will realize tremendous savings within the health care system from  improving efficiency and quality and reducing wasted expenditures  system-wide. Specifically, these savings will result from investments in  health information technology, improvements in prevention and  management of chronic conditions, increased insurance industry  competition and reduced industry overhead, the provision of federal  reinsurance for catastrophic coverage, and reduced spending on  uncompensated care.
 Even if you agree with Obama that he did not “campaign” for a public  option during the campaign, which I assume means that he did not  actively talk about it in speeches, he most certainly campaigned for it  multiple times while President, including in his address to  Congress in September.  If it wasn’t important and wasn’t featured  in his health care plan, he didn’t have to bring it up while President.
 This just seems like the worst kind of revisionist history.
 UPDATE: Think Progress picks  up the story and notes how many times Obama publicly spoke out for a  public option while President, and then refusing to push for it  internally in the final days.
           
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