2017
September
13
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 13, 2017
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Sen. Bernie Sanders’s proposal for a single-payer (i.e., US-government funded) health-care system isn’t going anywhere in this Congress.

But as Monitor editors discussed today, what makes this “Medicare for all” bill noteworthy is that it highlights a shift: There’s growing support for it, especially among Democratic leaders, and the American public.

Sixty percent of Americans back government-sponsored health care. That’s up 19 percentage points among Democrats in three years, according to a 2017 Pew poll.

Our politics editor says that’s because "Obamacare" was effectively a half step to a single-payer system. Voters with a diagnosed preexisting condition don’t want to lose access to affordable insurance. Once people get a government benefit, as the Republican repeal effort found, it’s really hard to take it away.

Senator Sanders frames health care as a universal human right. Most Americans agree. In 2015, a Harris poll showed that 84 percent of Americans said a system that ensures sick people get the care they need is a moral issue.

Yes, but for most Republicans, putting health care completely under the government is not the morally – or fiscally – correct way to deliver that care. And half of Americans polled also said that government-funded health care would cost too much.

While the Sanders plan isn’t likely to get traction at the federal level, we wouldn’t be surprised to see some states pushing the frontier of universal health care.

Now our five stories today, illustrating unity, reconciliation, and bridge building in the news.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Overlooked

Stories you may have missed
Dar Yasin/AP
Newly arrived Rohingya refugees from Myanmar (Burma) wait to collect shelter-building material distributed by aid agencies in Kutupalong refugee camp, Bangladesh, Sept. 13. As more arrive at camps and makeshift settlements, basic resources are running low.
Courtesy of Natan Leverrier / Office for Science and Technology, Embassy of France in the US
Students from the US visit the Biogis Center, in Compiègne, France, while attending the 'bootcamp' part of a new program, Community College Abroad in France, during the summer of 2017.
Jackie Spinner
A security guard patrols the Dhar Saadane wind farm with his dog. The farm has 126 turbines, which line the mountains above Tangier, Morocco. Wind power from farms in Tangier provide 2.5 percent of the country's electrical energy.

The Monitor's View

Reuters
German Chancellor Angela Merkel talks to Russia's President Vladimir Putin at the G20 meeting in Hamburg, Germany, July 7.

A Christian Science Perspective

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A message of love

Thibault Camus/AP
French athlete Jimmy Vicaut competes in a men's 100-meter heat Sept. 13 in front of the Eiffel Tower in Paris. A vote in Lima, Peru awarded the 2024 Olympic Games to the French capital, so the city has been able to plan its celebrations in advance. Los Angeles is to be named the host city for 2028.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Tomorrow, we're working on a story about who's in charge of the US foreign policy under President Trump. The answer isn't as straightforward as you may think. 

More issues

2017
September
13
Wednesday
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