During Congress’ summer break, Sen. Cory Gardner (R-Colo.) hosted a series of town-hall events with his constituents, many of whom were, shall we say, displeased with Gardner’s support for his party’s regressive far-right health care plans. At one event, the Colorado Republican, recognizing the crowd’s attitudes, asked his audience, “How many people support single payer healthcare?”
Many attendees raised their hands, prompting the GOP senator to respond, “Let me tell you what that would mean: this would cost the country 32 trillion dollars.”
That number popped up again yesterday, when the Republican National Committee, responding to Sen. Bernie Sanders’ (I-Vt.) new “Medicare for All” proposal, asked via Twitter, “Where does Bernie think the $32 TRILLION to pay for single-payer health care is coming from?” The Trump White House has been pushing the same figure.
Even some journalists have begun using that price tag as if it were an accepted fact — which is a shame, because it’s not a figure to be taken seriously.
There are legitimate criticisms of single-payer, but this isn’t one of them. Indeed, Cornell’s Robert Frank recently explained that the argument has it backwards: a “Medicare for All” system, with lower administrative costs, increased bargaining power, and lower advertising costs, would be considerably cheaper than our current approach.
The Washington Post‘s Paul Waldman also had a good piece on this:









