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Vouching Toward Gore
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Toward
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the end of Friday's Nightline debate, after Al Gore had called Bill
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Bradley's health-care proposal a "voucher" plan for the third time, Bradley
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finally woke up and smelled the danger. "They're not vouchers, Al," Bradley
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protested. "It is not vouchers. The health-care program doesn't have vouchers."
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Two days later, in their debate on Meet the Press , Gore elaborated:
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"There are 75 million Americans today who get Medicare and Medicaid. They are
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all left out under Sen. Bradley's plan because he eliminates Medicaid and
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replaces it with little $150-a-month vouchers." Bradley fired back immediately.
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"That's wrong," he insisted. "It's not a voucher."
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The
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"voucher" debate represents the third and decisive stage of the Democratic
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presidential contest. In the first stage, each candidate tried to put his best
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issues on the agenda. Gore pushed suburban sprawl, health care, and education.
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Bradley pushed gun control, health care, and campaign reform. Each man got one
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of his issues on the agenda--campaign reform for Bradley, education for
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Gore--plus the issue on whose importance they agreed: health care. In the
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second stage, the candidates fought for the high ground on those three issues.
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Gore won the high ground on education by proposing a $115 billion school aid
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package while portraying Bradley as a voucher sympathizer. Bradley won the high
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ground on campaign reform by offering a comprehensive reform plan while teaming
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up with John McCain against a fund-raising system whose corruption McCain
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helpfully traced to the Clinton-Gore White House.
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The
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third stage is the battle over the remaining issue: health care. Each candidate
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is trying to marshal his assets on this battleground by building a thematic
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bridge to it from the issue he is already winning. Bradley is trying to carry
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his message of comprehensive reform from campaign finance to health care. He
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proposes to replace Medicaid with subsidies that would make health insurance
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affordable to more people but would require those with sufficient incomes to
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pay part of their premiums out of their own pockets.
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Gore,
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meanwhile, is trying to carry his message of public responsibility from
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education to health care. He wants to convince Democrats that Bradley, by
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substituting partial subsidies for guaranteed benefits, would gut the public
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health-care system as well as the public education system. If Gore succeeds in
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linking the two issues this way, Bradley will lose the health-care debate, and
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with it the nomination. That's why Gore has distilled this linkage to a single
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word--"vouchers"--and why Bradley is fighting to extinguish that word with such
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fury.
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In the
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context of education, Gore has defined the word "voucher" in two negative ways.
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First, vouchers are a zero-sum game. As Gore sees it, every penny spent on them
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comes out of funds previously allocated to a fully subsidized program.
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"Experience shows there's a set amount of money that communities have been
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willing to spend on education," Gore argued on Meet the Press . "If you
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drain the money away from the public schools for private vouchers, then that
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hurts the public schools." Second, vouchers don't cover the cost of the program
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they replace. "The flaw with the voucher theory," said Gore, "is that the vast
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majority of those who receive a tiny little down payment on the tuition cannot
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afford the rest of it."
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Having
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packed these two poisonous assumptions into the word "voucher," Gore is now
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injecting that poison into Bradley's health-care proposal by applying the same
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word to both contexts. "Every single time vouchers came up in the Senate, Bill,
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for 18 years, you voted for them. Now you're proposing vouchers in place of
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Medicaid capped at $150 a month," Gore charged on Nightline . "You
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canceled Medicaid and give people $150 vouchers to try to replace it. … If we
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cancel Medicaid and substitute little vouchers capped at $150 dollars a month,
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there's not a single plan available here in New Hampshire that you can get for
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anything approximating the cap in this plan." On Meet the Press , Gore
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said Bradley expects recipients of health insurance subsidies to "buy into the
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federal employee benefit plan. Ninety-five percent of all the health insurance
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plans that are part of [that] plan have premiums that are far in excess of $150
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a month."
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The
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"voucher" attack has at least made Gore's ideological position coherent. For
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months, Gore vacillated between calling Bradley a liberal budget-buster and
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calling him a crypto-Reaganite menace to federal entitlements. Now that
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question is settled: Gore will attack Bradley from the left. Gore will defend
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Medicaid, the public schools, and other government-guaranteed programs. He will
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accuse Bradley of threatening to replace these programs with risky and
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inadequate "voucher" schemes. And he will direct this argument to specific
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Democratic constituencies such as senior citizens, blacks, gays, and labor
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unions.
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What's
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not yet clear is whether Bradley will accept this arrangement. On Meet the
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Press , he challenged Gore's leftist dogma against school vouchers: "If
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[voucher] experiments demonstrated that the quality of public education was
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improved, does that mean that you would not even consider vouchers?" Then he
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scoffed that "Al proposes an education program" that "comes from Washington."
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Yet Bradley refused to cede the left to Gore. Rather than defend the idea of
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substituting vouchers for government control of schools, Bradley insisted that
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the two options are compatible. "Every time I voted for vouchers, I voted for
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it as an experimental basis," said Bradley. "And I also said that I would not
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take any public money that was set aside for schools. This would be new
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money."
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Similarly, Bradley refuses to defend the mildly libertarian position Gore has
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assigned him on health care. Bradley could affirm that his subsidies for health
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insurance don't cover the entire cost of premiums. He could argue that
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individuals ought to bear responsibility for paying a portion of their
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premiums. Or he could simply argue that the amount of money the government
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takes from taxpayers to subsidize health care should be limited. He could, in
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short, embrace and defend the idea of vouchers.
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Instead, Bradley repudiates the word. On Meet the Press , he insisted
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that the $150 he allots to each person's monthly insurance premium is "not a
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cap. It's a weighted average." In a "Memo to National Reporters" after the
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debate, Bradley's campaign drove home the point: "THE BRADLEY PLAN IS SUPPORT
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FOR HEALTH INSURANCE, NOT 'VOUCHERS.' " Calling the $150 a "cost estimate," the
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memo provided dictionary definitions of "subsidy" and "voucher," indicating
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that vouchers are explicitly finite whereas subsidies are not. The implication
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of these caveats is that if universal health insurance turns out to cost even
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more than the $65 billion a year Bradley has allotted to it, the government
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will tax and spend more to cover the difference.
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Listening to Bradley's equivocal remarks on school vouchers, and looking at the
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sliding scale of subsidies and tax breaks he proposes for health insurance, you
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get the feeling he's rather sympathetic toward solutions that take account of
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market dynamics. You get the feeling that this sympathy is what he's hiding
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behind noncomittal words such as "cost estimates" and "weighted averages." You
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wonder whether he could win a general election coming out of the right lane of
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the Democratic Party. But first he has to get the Democratic nomination, a race
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he has clearly decided he can't win in that lane.
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In a way, it's Bradley's
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fault. On firearms and campaign finance, he defined reform as government
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control. He thought he could pass Gore on the left. Instead, Gore cut him
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off--and now Bradley can't connect his campaign-finance crusade, under the
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rubric of reform, to his challenges to existing welfare-state policies on
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health and education. Every time Gore utters the word "vouchers," he's bumping
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Bradley closer to the right edge of the road. It's going to be a short race if
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Bradley won't bump back.
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