IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Kerry, Bush squabble on health care

Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry on Thursday linked a slow rate of hiring by employers to rising health care costs and promised to implement a health insurance plan that would help cut premiums for the average family by $1,000.
/ Source: The Associated Press

Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry on Thursday linked a slow rate of hiring by employers to rising health care costs and promised to implement a health insurance plan that would help cut premiums for the average family by $1,000.

Kerry blamed President Bush for doing nothing in response to an explosion of health care costs, a net loss of jobs, and a tax code that he contends rewards companies for outsourcing jobs overseas.

People are being hired for part-time and temporary jobs that often don’t include health insurance, Kerry told the International Association of Fire Fighters convention in Boston. He was carrying a similar message to a “front-porch visit” later in the day at a home in Derry, N.H.

“We’re losing good jobs and replacing them with ones that just don’t pay the bills,” he told the firefighters. “When I’m president, America will stop being the only advanced country that doesn’t understand that health care is not a privilege for the elected or the connected or the wealthy but a right for all Americans.”

Kerry said his health plan includes tax credits to make insurance more affordable and allowing all Americans to buy into the health plan members of Congress enjoy.

Among initiatives aimed at firefighters, Kerry pledged to create a fund to hire 100,000 firefighters nationwide.

The Kerry campaign commissioned a study that says high health care costs are a key reason for the weak job market. Businesses that pay more for health insurance have to pay more for workers, which leads to cuts in employment, the study says.

Bush’s campaign says the president has a plan to cut health care costs, which are rising at $60 billion to $100 billion annually, according to the administration. But the Bush campaign says Kerry and running mate John Edwards, both senators, are among those standing in the way. Bush favors caps on medical malpractice claims.

“All across the country, doctors are being litigated out of practice and American families are finding it more difficult to find health insurance because senators like Kerry and Edwards are opposed to commonsense fixes,” Bush campaign spokesman Steve Schmidt said

Bush would like to cap non-economic damages, including pain and suffering, to $250,000, among other measures. Kerry and Edwards, a former trial attorney who made millions winning medical malpractice cases, oppose Bush’s limit.

The Democratic ticket supports another kind of tort reform, including requiring that a qualified specialist certify the merits of a medical malpractice lawsuit before it can proceed.

New Hampshire has one of the nation’s lowest unemployment rates and highest rates of health insurance coverage.

The state has a small stake in the electoral college, with just four of the 270 electoral votes needed to win the Nov. 2 election. But it could have made the difference for Democrat Al Gore in 2000 and is being contested by both candidates this year. Bush won the state over Gore by 1 percentage point.

Bush has visited New Hampshire seven times as president. Kerry traveled there extensively while campaigning for its Democratic presidential primary last January.

Kerry also says he would lower health care costs by having the federal government pick up three-fourths of an employer’s costs for catastrophic care, which he says would result in about a 10 percent drop in premiums.

He would give tax credits for health care to small businesses, people aged 55 to 64 and low- to middle-income workers, and allow the federal government to negotiate better drug prices through Medicare and import drugs. He also says he would eliminate waste, fraud and abuse in the medical system through technology.

Bush also favors allowing small businesses to pool their resources so they can offer low premiums.