Key Points

  • President Joe Biden said the federal Medicare program should negotiate prices for at least 50 prescription drugs each year, up from the current target of 20 medicines.
  • That proposal is one of several new health-care policy plans Biden will outline during his State of the Union address Thursday.
  • But the fate of his new proposals will be in the hands of a divided Congress, making it highly uncertain whether they will pass into law.
  • @givesomefucks
    link
    English
    269 months ago

    Or we could just readdress healthcare since in 2008 we got a more conservative version of the Republican’s plan and then promptly forgot about ever improving it

    We need actual progressives to get shit done, Biden and other “moderates” just won’t even try, and want us to be happy for crumbs.

    • BraveSirZaphod
      link
      fedilink
      359 months ago

      Biden could be spontaneously replaced with Mao Zedong and that still wouldn’t suddenly make a Congress with a Republican House start passing laws.

    • @FlowVoid
      link
      English
      129 months ago

      Healthcare reform is passed by Congress, not the president. So first you need 50, or better yet 60, Senators who are interested in getting it done.

      • @go_go_gadget
        link
        -39 months ago

        So first you need 50

        We had that. They squandered it.

            • @LifeInMultipleChoice
              link
              29 months ago

              They had that? When did we have a progressive president for 2 terms, a Congress and a Senate that was all progressive. It hasn’t happened in my life

              • @go_go_gadget
                link
                09 months ago

                Democrats had a majority in the Senate and the house for four years. If you’re acknowledging that establishment Democrats are corrupt pieces of shit then I agree with you but it seems like you’re trying to avoid acknowledging that fact.

        • @FlowVoid
          link
          English
          29 months ago

          No, we never had 50 who would kill the filibuster

          • @go_go_gadget
            link
            19 months ago

            From 2007 to 2011 Democrats controlled both the house and the senate. Obama was president from 2008-2012.

            Democrats squandered it.

            • @FlowVoid
              link
              English
              7
              edit-2
              9 months ago

              Democrats only had a Senate supermajority for 72 days.

              Furthermore, a supermajority of exactly 60 votes only allows Democrats to pass something that 100% of them support. And Lieberman did not support anything more far reaching than the ACA, such as a public option.

                • @go_go_gadget
                  link
                  19 months ago

                  What’s your narrative? Democrats had control of both the Senate and the house with a Democrat president for years and somehow it’s still Republicans fault they did basically fuck all with it?

              • @go_go_gadget
                link
                19 months ago

                Doesn’t change the fact. Democrats had control of both the Senate and the house. They squandered it.

                • @FlowVoid
                  link
                  English
                  29 months ago

                  On the contrary, they squeezed everything they could out of that majority.

                  • @go_go_gadget
                    link
                    19 months ago

                    And if that’s not sufficient evidence to believe either our Democracy is completely broken or Democrats are corrupt or incompetent then you must be someone who’s continuing to benefit from all of this while quality of life deteriorates for the rest of us.

    • tws
      link
      fedilink
      English
      79 months ago

      I am not an American so there’s parts of this I don’t get. My national health agency negotiates prices for all drugs, thousands of them so this reads weird to ke.

      Article says even these measures are uncertain to become law, does that mean it would be even less likely if something more ambitious was planned?

      • @cogman
        link
        99 months ago

        Medicare negotiating prices is a fairly new thing for the US and something that could ultimately be killed by the supreme court (it shouldn’t be, but we have a majority of extremists on the court).

        Why it’s uncertain to become law is because our right wing party (republicans) have historically been completely opposed to any social program. Our “left” party is also fairly centrist and arguably even right leaning in parts so it’s uncertain that even with a majority of them in power that improvements would pass.

        The problem we have is the filibuster in the senate. It allows any senator to kill a bill. To overturn it takes 60 votes (out of 100) and the senate is currently split 50/50.

        The meager changes we got under obamacare literally happened because a republican senator died which opened the gate to ram through a few pieces of legislation which would otherwise not pass. Obamacare was overall an OK bill with some good stuff in it, but it really just re-enforced the current crazy capitalist market system. That was all the right leaning democrats would stomach. There was talk about an option for using government healthcare but that was quashed.

        • tws
          link
          fedilink
          English
          29 months ago

          I know all political systems have their problems and limitations, gotta say that sucks especially the part about one man blocking new laws and also having extremists running a court? That’s literally the opposite of what a court should be in my opinion.

          I guess that would make it really hard for anyone, even a president, to put meaningful changes in place.

          Over here we have a competent leader totally bogged down and derailed by their party extremists. He could be good, but the system itself means he’s really not. Sounds like America has a version of that too.

          • @9point6
            link
            29 months ago

            I assumed you were talking about the UK until you said competent leader.

            At least you don’t have an unelected, actively malicious kleptocrat in charge, emboldened by the extremists like we do in good ol’ blighty right now.

          • @cogman
            link
            29 months ago

            I guess that would make it really hard for anyone, even a president, to put meaningful changes in place.

            Yup. We can pass legislation that says “hey SC, you are wrong about the interpretation of this legislation so do it right”. However, they’ve invented this “major questions doctrine” principle that basically lets them strike down “big” things that they don’t like.

            The only solution to that problem is either justices dying or legislation being passed to raise the cap on justices and the president packing the court. Which runs right into the filibuster problem.

            At the beginning of biden’s term democrats nearly nuked the filibuster. However, 2 centrist democrats squashed that.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        19 months ago

        Sometimes they get elected, but the system is so filled with corruption that it seems those progressive values are quickly abandoned. Justice Dems are, sadly, often good examples of this.

        We have to end the legalized bribery and get money out of politics before any true progressive agenda can be implemented.

      • @go_go_gadget
        link
        09 months ago

        “Actual progressives” can’t get shit done because they can’t get elected.

        But then the people who won’t vote for progressives browbeat progressives into voting for their pro-corporate trash candidates. Or scream and cry when their pro-corporate trash candidate loses in the general.