As Second Lady in the Obama Administration, Dr. Jill Biden worked closely with First Lady Michelle Obama on behalf of bettering lives for military families. VP Joe Biden, candidate for President, is proposing a plan to reinvigorate and expand that program for military families, caregivers and survivors. This is from the Biden campaign:
FACT SHEET: The Biden Plan to Fulfill Our Commitment to Military Families, Caregivers and Survivors
As parents of a service member who deployed to Iraq, Vice
President Joe Biden and Dr. Jill Biden understand that it’s not just military
members who sign up to serve our nation, their families do too. The Bidens
understand the sleepless nights, wondering if your deployed loved one is safe;
the difficulties children experience while their parent is serving far away;
and all the added sacrifices and challenges, big and small, military families
face because they choose selfless service. Our military families never fail to
give their best to the United States, and we owe them our best in return.
Less than one percent of Americans sign up to serve. They volunteer to
shoulder the sacrifices necessary to keep our country safe. That’s why Vice
President Biden has long been adamant that, as a nation, our one truly sacred
obligation is to properly prepare and equip our troops when we send them to
war, and to take care of them and their families — during deployments and when
they return home.
Building on the Biden Commitment to Military Families
The Obama-Biden Administration made support for our military families a
signature issue–and a personal priority. Together with First Lady Michelle
Obama, Dr. Biden created Joining Forces, a national initiative driving
top-level focus on the issues that matter to military families, service
members, and veterans including employment, education, and wellness. Joining
Forces supported opportunities that led to the hiring or training of more
than 1.5 million veterans and
military spouses and drove reforms in all 50 states to reduce credentialing
barriers for qualified military spouses seeking employment. Dr. Biden also
supported the Department of Defense’s (DoD’s) Military Spouse Employment
Partnership, which brought together hundreds of companies to help 100,000 military spouses find
jobs.
As a life-long educator, Dr. Biden spearheaded “Educate the Educators”–a
commitment from more than 100 colleges and universities to
take steps to meet the unique needs of military-connected children–and championed the GI Comparison tool to
help veterans and military family members choose high-quality post-secondary
educational institutions. She also worked to make sure that all 50 states signed the Interstate
Compact on Educational Opportunity for Military Children to better
address relocation challenges facing military school-aged children.
Vice President Biden and Dr. Biden continued this commitment after leaving
office, making support for military families a key focus of their continued
public service. The Biden Foundation sought to drive
economic opportunity for military spouses, create supportive educational
environments for military-connected children, and change the conversation
around mental health for service members, veterans, and their families.
As President and First Lady, the Bidens will ensure we keep our national
commitment to military families by relaunching and strengthening Joining
Forces, making it a priority for a Biden Administration.
We know that many future service members come from military families. So family
readiness is integral to mission readiness, both now and in the future. This
cannot be an afterthought. It is a national security imperative, and it should
be resourced and supported as such.
Providing Resources for Military Spouses, Caregivers, and
Survivors
Prioritizing Support for Military Children
President Biden will inspire a future generation of
Americans to volunteer for military service by ensuring we fulfill our
obligations to the generations who have already answered the call to serve our
country and by supporting the well-being of ALL military families.
Modernize Compensation to
Keep Pace with the Current Economy: Today,
more military families are struggling to make ends meet, and
some report food insecurity, lack of quality childcare, and poor financial health.
That is totally unacceptable. Military service members and their families risk
everything for our country–they must be guaranteed a living wage. But the
existing compensation framework simply does not allow military
families–especially those who are young and more vulnerable–to thrive in
today’s modern economy. President Biden will work aggressively to update the
federal workforce compensation framework for service members so that the
government leads the way in ensuring hard-working families can attain a middle
class life, and he will support legislation which will, in the meantime,
provide an additional allowance for military families living below the poverty
line.
Create Stability by
Increasing Time between Permanent Change of Station (PCS) Moves: Every year, more than 400,000 Permanent Change of Station
(PCS) moves occur for service members and their families. This
system is expensive, and it is broken. Military families consider frequent
relocation as a driver for negative outcomes in career opportunities for military
spouses, military child education, and the
development of supportive social networks. While every service member and
family understands that mission is paramount, we must invest in solutions that
build stability for families and set conditions for service member retention
and military family well-being.
As president, Biden will commission research and develop solutions to support
the increase of time between PCS moves while ensuring we meet targets for
Operational and Personnel Tempo in order to meet our national security demands.
This will require that we comprehensively examine the potential positive and
negative impacts of any changes to deployment cycles, unit assignment policies,
and force size calculations. One such solution could be investing in the
creation of virtual or hybrid learning scenarios for mandatory Professional
Military Education (PME) so that service members and their families can remain
in place, rather than PCS to a new base for a short educational tour.
Ensure Military Spouse
Professional and Economic Opportunity: Military
spouses are often more highly educated than their civilian peers, yet they face
an unemployment rate of around 30%. Frequent relocation
and high operational tempos often stifle their career trajectory. The military
personnel system was designed with the single-earner family in mind, but many
military families, like their civilian counterparts, depend on earning a second
income or simply want the opportunity for the military spouse to pursue a
career. Military families are increasingly experiencing challenges such
as food insecurity or insufficient savings for
emergencies, and with far too many military spouses unemployed or
underemployed, meeting these needs is a challenge. LGBTQ military spouses may
also be disproportionately affected when they reside in states that are allowed
to discriminate based on an individual’s sexual orientation or gender identity.
The Trump Administration has not only allowed but encouraged these
discriminatory practices, all while claiming to support the military. It’s
hypocritical and just plain wrong.
To increase economic opportunity for military spouses, President Biden will:
Invest $500 million in a 3-year Department of Defense (DOD)
military spouse entrepreneurship pilot program, which will provide
micro-grants, mentorship, and technical assistance to military spouses who are
interested in starting or growing small businesses.
Ensure that the DoD’s Military Spouse Education and Career
Opportunity office is fully funded and staffed so that effective programming
such as the Military Spouse Employment Partnership (MSEP), My Career
Advancement Account (MyCAA) scholarships, and the Military Spouse Transition
Program (MySTeP) have the opportunity to deliver results and raise awareness
and utilization among military families.
Build bridges between the private sector and the U.S.
government to help educate employers about the value of military spouse talent,
drive commitments to hire, retain, and promote them, and create concrete career
opportunities, as Joining Forces did.
Expand the Work Opportunity Tax Credit (WOTC) to include
military spouses.
Undo the Trump administration’s discriminatory policies and
redouble efforts with state officials to ensure that LGBTQ military spouses
have the support they need to pursue successful careers.
Continue efforts begun during the Obama-Biden Administration
to put an end to unnecessary occupational licensing requirements. While
licensing is important in some occupations to protect consumers, in many
occupations licensing does nothing but thwart economic opportunity. If a
military spouse who works in an occupation that requires a license or
credential and has to move because of their military member’s career, they may
have to get certified all over again. As president, Biden will build on the
Obama-Biden Administration’s efforts to incentivize states to reduce unnecessary
licensing requirements and to ensure licenses are transferable from one state
to the next.
Fully fund installation-based child care facilities and
expand awareness of the DoD fee assistance program, as supported by leading advocates
for military families,, so that military spouses can more easily
pursue their educations and careers and tap into respite care to relieve
stressors of deployments.
Improve Support
for Caregivers:Caregivers of
wounded, ill, or injured service members and veterans face a variety of
challenges, including negative health outcomes, lost wages, and difficulties
planning their future. They are essential to military families and our
veterans, and we owe them the same commitment and support that they show to our
wounded, ill, or injured service members and veterans.
As president, Biden will:
Ensure that caregivers of active duty service members
receive adequate professional and peer support, including competent mental
health care, financial readiness training, and transition support throughout
the rehabilitation timeline (whether that is leading to the service member’s
medical retirement or a return to duty).
Provide transparency and high-touch case management via
in-person or telehealth sessions with caregiver coordinators for those
caregivers enrolled in the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Caregiver
Support Program, especially to provide personalized assistance as they navigate
dual eligibility for benefits and services from both the DoD and VA.
A critical part of meeting our commitment to military
families is to do so on time, something the Trump Administration has failed to
do. President Biden will ensure that the eligibility expansion for the VA
Caregiver Support Program meets its timelines and collects longitudinal
satisfaction data through regular surveying of those enrolled or enrolling in
the program.
Help caregivers of wounded, ill, injured, or elderly
veterans pay for long-term care by providing relief through the creation of a
$5,000 tax credit for informal caregivers, modeled off of legislation supported
by AARP. This tax credit will be in addition to the financial support provided
by the VA Caregiver program.
Support proposals to expand opportunities for much needed
respite care for caregivers, to include those offered within DoD, VA, and
through the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
Institute a waiver for the Survivors’ and Dependents’
Educational Assistance Program (Chapter 35), so that spouses and survivors who
have not accessed their benefits in the allotted time frame will have the
opportunity to request additional time.
Improve Military Child
Education: There are more
than 1 million children of active
duty service members worldwide. Whether they are educated in Department of
Defense Education Activity (DoDEA) schools, local school districts, parochial
schools, home schools, or online schools, military children require support to
ensure they have every opportunity to succeed in their education.
As president, Biden will:
Propose legislation to expand the Military Student
Identifier (MSI) to all military-connected
children (to include children of National Guard and Reserve personnel
regardless of activation/order status), children of veterans, and children of
deceased service members or veterans, who are often impacted by the service of
their parents. Under the Obama-Biden Administration, we passed into law the
Every Student Succeeds Act, which included the MSI, a designation that allows
educators and schools to better understand where military-connected children
are receiving their education, and how we can better support
them. Currently, the MSI extends only to children of active duty service
members, excluding children of National Guard, Reserve, veterans, caregivers,
and children of the fallen. But these children face unique challenges too,
and we need to know who they are so we can determine what support they need .
Promote efforts across states to streamline enrollment
requirements, standardize educational resources, and train teachers and
school-based leadership to ensure we are meeting the unique needs of military
children effectively, no matter where they study or how often they have to
move.
Promote greater awareness of the Interstate Compact on
Educational Opportunity for Military Children among military families,
teachers, and administrators.
Create and disseminate training tools that empower
military-connected parents to better advocate for their children.
Provide financial incentives for school districts to train
educators on the unique needs and barriers faced by military-connected youth so
that they are able to help military children thrive, no matter where they
receive their education.
Support and protect post-9/11 GI benefits for veterans and
qualified family members by strengthening the GI Bill Comparison Tool and
School Feedback Tool to help put an end to post-secondary institutions’
predatory practices.
Enact legislation eliminating the so-called 90/10 loophole
that gives for-profit schools an incentive to enroll veterans, service members,
and military family members who are using the GI Bill or Tuition Assistance in
programs that aren’t delivering results.
Expand and
Improve Behavioral Health Services for Military Dependents: Children and spouses in military families are
resilient, but they do experience high levels of stress, whether due to
frequent moves, deployment and training schedules of the service member, or
weak social/emotional support networks. School-age children and adolescents who
experience separation from a parent (either through deployment or other
assignments) show higher levels
of emotional and behavioral distress. About 25 percent of high
school freshmen and juniors in a military family have reported suicidal
thoughts during the previous year, and the stresses of military life can exacerbate health issues,
among them depression, anxiety, or substance use disorders.
Biden has committed to achieving mental health parity, expanding access to
behavioral health care, and removing the stigma surrounding behavioral health
issues. He will redouble our efforts to ensure enforcement of mental health
parity laws and expand funding for mental health services.
It is also essential that we invest in an infrastructure that promotes health
and well-being, reduces risky behaviors, and provides timely, convenient access
to high-quality mental health and substance use/abuse services for military
dependents. We must ensure that DoD facilities are fully staffed, equipped,
resourced, and able to support the behavioral health of military dependents. If
this capacity is not in place, we must invest in solutions to create additional
affordable, accessible, and high-quality capacity in the civilian sector. Care
must be effective and grounded in evidence-based treatments. Providers must be
culturally competent, educated in the unique needs of military families. And
families who seek support should never go into debt for treatment or be
concerned about confidentiality.
The Biden Administration will:
Increase funding for and expand access to telehealth for
military families, particularly in areas not able to access timely care.
Expand the number of free, non-medical Military OneSource
counseling sessions for military families from 12 sessions to 18
and expand access to Coast Guard families regardless of activation status.
Invest in recruiting and retaining behavioral health care
professionals in military treatment facilities to ensure there are enough
clinicians to support the needs of not only our active duty force, but military
dependents.
Redefine the federal “Health Professional Shortage Areas”
(HPSAs) to specifically include military-impacted geographies.
Expand the National Health Services Corps to incentivize
early professional behavioral health providers to serve this population.
Re-prioritize and expand the work of the Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) interagency task force on the
behavioral health needs of veterans and military families, to include issues
related to traumatic brain injury, substance use disorder and addiction, and
other related conditions. Additionally, President Biden will fully restore SAMHSA’s focus on
evidence-based solutions and appoint a specific position on the
Domestic Policy Council to drive a whole-of-government focus on these
issues.
Direct the Department of Defense to produce a robust, annual
report on the state of military family behavioral health, in coordination with
VA and SAMHSA.
Guarantee Safe
Housing: The government has
broken its trust with military families by providing sub-par housing. Now, we
have to work twice as hard to rebuild this trust. That will require the utmost
transparency and accountability from both the government and the private sector
partners charged with housing the families of our service members.
The Biden Administration will:
Enforce a comprehensive and standardized tenant bill of
rights for all military families, and as advocates have rightly demanded,
ensure DoD senior leadership enforces compliance. We won’t be making more
empty promises to military families. We will hold these landlords, and
ourselves, accountable.
Require regular, standardized, objective, and published
reporting of military family satisfaction and concerns from all housing.
Establish a public-facing document outlining expectations of
quality and consequences for all housing providers and, when necessary,
terminate long-term leases held by private companies.
Know our
Families: Long periods of
sustained war-fighting have made us reactive in our responses to military
family needs. To best support these families and optimize their health and
well-being, we must improve our understanding of their current and emerging
needs. We can’t be caught on our heels. We must anticipate and prepare
solutions that respond to the evolving needs of military families across the
military life cycle. We must be able to track and identify emerging trends so
that we can be nimble and responsive to the changing needs of our military
families.
As president, Biden will:
Convene a multi-disciplinary working group of policy makers,
program leaders, and research and subject-matter experts to construct a
strategic research plan to inform solutions to support military families.
Designate specific resources for research and development
related to military families outcomes within the budget of the Office of the
Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, to include resources
for research within both the Military Family and Community Policy and the
Defense Health Program.
Require that DoD work across the federal government to
leverage national and state-level assessments of health and well-being to
ensure they appropriately assess military affiliation in ongoing data
collections across the United States. It is imperative that all national
surveys include variables that allow us to examine how well military families
fare relative to others.
Vice President Joe Biden, candidate for president, with Dr. Jill Biden, issued a statement on Veterans Day, and his campaign issued a detailed plan about what a Biden Administration would do for veterans. Here are is the statement and fact sheet from the campaign:
John Steinbeck
memorably wrote that, “A soldier is the most holy of all humans, because [they
are] the most tested.” From Fort McHenry to San Juan Hill, from the Argonne
Forest to Midway, from the Mekong Delta to Fallujah, and on every battlefield
between, America’s veterans have always been the most tested among us — and
they have never failed in their duty.
In each generation, a small fraction of Americans serve and sacrifice on behalf
of us all. Less than one percent of our population risks everything to protect
our country, incurring in the rest of us a debt far greater than our nation
could ever repay. We have always believed that the most sacred obligation of
our government is to do right by the men and women who defend our nation at war
— to care for them and their families, both while they are deployed and after
they come home. It’s an obligation we are honor-bound to keep.
Veterans Day offers us a moment to reflect on that obligation, and to recommit
ourselves to all that it truly means. Every one of our veterans deserves
timely, world-class health care — the very best of what our country has to
offer. They deserve comprehensive mental health support, and a thoughtful,
well-funded plan to address the ongoing tragedy of veteran suicides. They deserve
a serious approach to ending veteran homelessness, and greater resources to
help them readjust to life at home once their service concludes. Not only
do they deserve
these things — their families and caregivers do, too.
Our veterans also deserve a leg up when it comes to educational and economic
opportunities — everything from tuition assistance to skills training to
entrepreneurship programs. That isn’t just for their benefit; America benefits
enormously from the leadership, talent, and experience of veterans who gird
every sector of our economy with sinew and smarts. The GI Bill was one of the
greatest engines of widespread prosperity our country has ever conceived,
helping to cement the most resilient middle class in the history of the world
in the wake of World War II. Our veterans and our country deserve that
commitment to be upheld and advanced.
Most of all, our veterans deserve leaders who will fight for them as ardently
and as forcefully as they have fought for us.
That’s why, on this Veterans Day, we are proud to release a detailed and
comprehensive plan to honor the full breadth of our obligation to veterans and their families — and to restore the sacred commitments
that this White House has seen fit to ignore.
This plan and this cause are personal to us. Over the course of many years, it
has been our honor to visit our troops in Bosnia, Kosovo, Iraq, and
Afghanistan, and to witness their incredible strength of character firsthand.
We have been blessed to visit with wounded veterans in Landstuhl, Germany, and
at the Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, and to welcome troops to our
home for Thanksgiving dinners and spend many Christmas Days with the heroes at
Walter Reed. When our son Beau was deployed to Iraq for a year, we whispered
prayers, and learned a small portion of what sacrifice means to the families of
those who serve.
Every one of the more than 18 million veterans in our country has earned our
admiration and our gratitude — but it is our duty to repay them with something
more than that. We must honor their service with bold policies that meet our
sacred obligation, with opportunities commensurate to the sacrifices they and
their families have made, and with trustworthy national leadership.
FACT SHEET:
The Biden Plan to Keep Our Sacred Obligation to Our Veterans
Joe Biden
believes that as a nation, we have many obligations, but we have only one truly
sacred obligation: to properly prepare and equip our troops when we send them
into harm’s way, and to care for them and their families–both while they are
deployed and after they return home. As the parents of a son who deployed to
Iraq, Joe and Jill Biden understand the gravity of this promise. Our service
members ensure our freedoms, our security, and the very future of our country.
They are willing to sacrifice everything. Many do. And each of them deserves
our respect and enduring gratitude, both while on active duty and after
separating from service.
President Trump has repeatedly failed our veterans and ignored this sacred
obligation. From the outrage of deporting undocumented veterans without
checking their record of military service, to allowing his wealthy Mar-a-Lago
friends to drive veterans policy, to pursuing policies designed to privatize
and dismantle the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), Trump neither
understands nor respects the idea of “duty, honor, country” that inspires our
brave military members to serve and imbues our veterans with pride.
The
Biden Record of Delivering for Our Veterans
Joe Biden has fought aggressively for our service members and veterans
throughout his career in public service. His record speaks for itself. On the
broad range of issues that matter to our brave military members and our
veterans, Joe Biden has always had their back.
As a senator, Joe Biden was an early advocate for Vietnam veterans who were
exposed to Agent Orange and other toxins to be able to access the care and
benefits they deserve.
He championed funding for prosthetics for veterans and mammogram coverage for
female veterans, fought for proper burial allowances, and supported the
concurrent receipt of retirement and disability pay for veterans. He
co-sponsored the legislation to establish the Vietnam, Korean, and WWII
memorials in Washington, D.C., as well as the post-9/11 GI Bill to provide
educational benefits to a new generation of heroes.
Biden also led the way in the Senate on critical issues to protect the health
of our military, most notably driving the fight to increase funding for
up-armored Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected vehicles (MRAPs)
by $23.6 billion, which saved thousands of lives and limbs of U.S. service
members in Iraq and Afghanistan. And he introduced legislation to prohibit
cuts to military medical care during times of war.
In the White House, Biden continued to be a clarion voice advocating for our
veterans. The Obama-Biden Administration accomplished major milestones, including cutting the population of homeless veterans by
almost half and reducing the unemployment rate for veterans by more than half.
In 2013, when an unacceptable backlog of veterans’ disability claims was
uncovered at the VA, the Obama-Biden Administration took aggressive action to
rectify the failures and ultimately reduced the backlog by nearly 90 percent in
just over three years. The Obama-Biden Administration also increased the
overall funding request for the VA by more than 85 percent during its years in office,
including a 76 percent increase in funding devoted to the
critical issue of veterans’ mental health. It successfully implemented the
new GI Bill and approved the long overdue expansion of benefits to those
suffering from Agent Orange-related conditions.
During the Obama-Biden Administration, the VA also led in creating the Blue Button app to help veterans access their
health data and medical records more easily. Today, Blue Button is used by
more than 2 million veterans.
Additionally, Dr. Jill Biden and First Lady Michelle Obama created and led
the Joining Forces initiative to build support for
our veterans and military families, including a focus on increasing
employment opportunities. Between April 2011 and the end of the
Administration, Joining Forces supported programs and secured commitments
from employers that led to the hiring or training of more than 1.5 million
veterans and military spouses.
Our longest wars have taken their toll, both on our newest generation of
veterans and on the system built to support them and previous generations of
veterans. According to the most recent census data, there are more than 18 million veterans in the United States, and today’s
veterans population has needs that the VA has never before addressed. This is
reflected both in the growing interest for “anywhere, anytime” health care
service models and in our growing understanding of behavioral health challenges,
the harmful impacts of burn pits, environmental toxins, traumatic brain injury,
and the devastating epidemic of opioid addiction and suicide. The VA must adapt
to meet the ever-evolving needs of the veteran community.
At the same time, the VA continues to struggle with poor organizational
performance, staff shortfalls, leadership gaps, and IT systems failures. The
integration of a new generation of veterans into the VA system has added a
substantial number of veterans eligible for health care and other benefits as
overall demand for services has surged, with the combination creating capacity
challenges across the system. Too often, the VA’s performance in terms of
access, outcomes, cost, and accountability is mixed. There have been both important
successes and intolerable failures or gaps in service. Solving these challenges
will require a substantial investment in talent, leadership time, budget, and
public attention. It’s what we owe our veterans. It is past time to rethink and
reinvent a better VA.
There is nothing partisan about improving support for service members,
veterans, their families, caregivers, and survivors. As president,
Joe Biden will unite the country and restore the VA as the premier agency for
ensuring our veterans’ overall well-being by:
Providing
Veterans World Class Health Care to Meet Their Specific Needs
Driving
Progress to Eliminate Veterans Homelessness and Bring Down Suicide Rates
Creating
Meaningful Employment and Educational Opportunities
Improving VA
Management and Accountability.
To
support the VA mission, a Biden Administration will ensure coordination with
the Department of Defense (DoD), Department of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD), state agencies, and the thousands of non-governmental organizations that
support this vital community. It will work faithfully to restore public trust
in the VA so that no one in the military community or beyond will ever again
question whether the United States of America keeps its promises to those who
serve our country.
Providing Veterans World Class Health Care to Meet Their
Specific Needs
The Veterans Health Administration serves upwards of 9 million veterans and is responsible for their
whole health, physical and mental. Studies have found that health outcomes at VA hospitals are often better than their non-VA counterpart, and more
than 90 percent of those who receive their health
services through the VA report that they would recommend it to a fellow
veteran. As president, Joe Biden will work to ensure that the VA provides the
world class health care that our veterans have earned and deserve and sets the
example for private sector care.
In the area of mental health, the VA and DoD have done pioneering work to
address the specific needs of veterans, deploying innovative treatment
solutions such as telehealth and other platforms to address a variety of
conditions. The private sector trails the VA in its ability to provide
behavioral health services to the nation as a whole, much less to understand
the unique needs of veterans.
At the same time, the VA is also struggling with a rapidly deteriorating
infrastructure, and many VA facilities are more than 60 years old. Further,
across the system, the variance in quality of — and access to — care is
unacceptable. As the demand for treatment has increased, the VA must
continually strive to improve services and outcomes for veterans, especially in
the areas of pain, polytrauma recovery, substance-use disorder (SUD),
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), traumatic brain injury (TBI), and
general behavioral health, in the most effective and cost-efficient way
possible.
In addition to protecting and building on the Affordable Care Act with a public option to expand access to quality,
affordable health care and lower costs, and commitments to keep rural hospitals open and expand health care
delivery models for rural areas, a Biden Administration will:
Rebuild trust
in the Department of Veterans Affairs. During the Obama-Biden Administration,
we improved access to health care offerings for veterans in their communities,
but there is still more work to do. Private sector points of care were designed
to provide care to veterans when it was faster, closer, or offered superior
services for a particular veteran’s needs. We must ensure that health care
purchased in the community actually improves access and convenience and does
not compromise the health of our veterans. President Biden will establish the
right balance of VA care and purchased care, region by region, based on veteran
needs, existing VA capacity, and availability of market alternatives.
Conduct a
thorough assessment of the staffing needs and requirements across the VA to
inform specific hiring initiatives and programs for attracting and retaining
medical professionals. This includes ensuring that professionals are working to
the full scope of their license and creating incentives to support health care
professionals joining the VA workforce.
Refine and
update Community Care Guidelines, ensuring that if a veteran
is referred to a community care provider that does not meet the same level of
access and quality as the VA, the veteran will be referred back to the VA.
This full-circle referral process will better ensure that veterans are seen in
a timely manner and receive the best possible quality of care.
Establish
cultural competency training protocols to ensure that providers in VA
facilities and in community care settings understand and are equipped to
support the needs of LGBTQ veterans in the health care setting.
Work with
Congress to improve health services for women veterans. Biden will ensure that
each VA Medical Center has at least one full-time women’s primary care
physician; and, within 200 days of taking office, make available a women
veterans training module for community health care providers. And, Biden will
work with Congress to enact the Deborah Sampson Act and ensure that the safety
and privacy concerns of women veterans are addressed throughout his
Administration.
Provide funding
to ensure there is safe, reliable child care at all VA Medical Centers.
Work with Congress to eliminate co-pays for preventive
health care for veterans, which can create unnecessary barriers to seeking
basic preventive care.
Expand the list
of presumptive conditions to ensure no veteran who experienced a TBI or had
exposure to burn pits or other environmental toxins goes without access to VA
health care and benefits. We cannot ask our veterans who are suffering to wait
decades, as we did with Agent Orange. President Biden will also increase access
to VA care beyond the 5-year eligibility window for combat veterans, as
conditions related to toxic exposure may take many years to manifest.
Increase
research dollars by $300 million to invest in better understanding the impact
of TBI and toxic exposures (including burn pits) on long-term health outcomes,
and continue to drive research focused on the needs of disabled veterans.
Ensure that
disabled veterans that require a prosthesis are able to access the most modern
prosthetics technology available, and that they are able to upgrade their
equipment at no cost as new developments occur.
Expand funding
for direct and purchase-care treatment for disorders related to the misuse of
alcohol and opioids in order to reduce unacceptably long wait-times for
treatment.
A Biden
Administration will support the legalization of cannabis for medical purposes
and reschedule cannabis as a schedule II drug so researchers can study its
positive and negative impacts. This will include allowing the VA to research
the use of medical cannabis to treat veteran-specific health needs.
Ensure the full
integration of veteran caregivers as members of the health care team for
veterans. The VA offers a diverse array of programs and supports for
caregivers, however, we must ensure that the VA remains a caregiver-friendly
environment and respects their role in ensuring the recovery and rehabilitation
of their loved one.
Increase
funding for and expand access to telehealth through the VA, particularly in
rural areas not able to access timely care.
Modernize VA
hospitals and clinics to serve our veterans better through a nationwide
infrastructure plan that provides a comprehensive refresh of VA health
facilities. Biden will retrofit VA’s existing brick and mortar physical
locations, where patient volume warrants, and repurpose older facilities to
meet new needs such as assisted-living facilities and long-term care
alternatives. Biden will improve both the buildings and equipment, so the VA
continues to lead in providing 21st century care.
Create safe,
modern, clean, and recovery-oriented housing for veterans being treated for
SUDs and those who are homeless by refurbishing buildings condemned or not in
use, such as the massive VA Los Angeles campus.
Driving Progress to Promote Veterans’ Mental Health and
Well-Being
Suicide is a public health crisis–the 10th leading cause of death in the
United States. As a society, we need to work together to eliminate the stigma
felt by those who are suffering and struggling with their mental health. There
is no shame in asking for help. As president, Joe Biden will increase access to
mental health treatment by enforcing full mental health parity and ensuring all
Americans have access to high-quality mental health care, regardless of their
insurance coverage status. Service members and veterans are at an elevated risk
of dying by suicide. Recent data show that, on average, 20 veterans and service members die by suicide every day,
and among some groups, the rate of suicide is rising alarmingly. Even one death
by suicide is devastating, and we must do more to stem the tide. The Trump
administration has grossly mismanaged this crisis, at one point leaving millions of VA dollars dedicated to suicide prevention efforts
unused, and that’s just not right. This is a serious challenge, and
our goal must be to remove the stigma in military communities to seek help,
ensure that every veteran that reaches out is immediately connected to support
and services, and to ultimately end the suicide crisis among veterans. As
president, Biden will ensure a multi-faceted, substantive, and sustained
commitment that addresses this as the public health emergency that it is.
The same is true when it comes to veterans experiencing homelessness. The
Obama-Biden Administration proved that we can make huge inroads to address this
persistent challenge with sustained attention and cross-coordination among
government departments. But with just over 23,000 veterans without shelter on any given night,
we have much more work to do.
A Biden Administration will:
Publish within
the first 200 days in office a comprehensive public health and cross-sector
approach to addressing suicide in veterans, service members, and their
families.
Work
aggressively to facilitate immediate access to mental health services for
veterans in crisis, to include standardizing performance expectations around
same day, walk-in and urgent mental health services; hiring more ER psychiatric
staff and peer specialists; expanding crisis line capacity to ensure all calls
are answered and appropriate referrals occur within hours; and implementing
specific programs to encourage veterans to prioritize their mental health by
reaching out to the VA when they need support. Within the first year in office,
President Biden will have a goal of completely eliminating wait times for
veterans who reach out with suicidal ideation so that they are immediately
taken into treatment.
Together with
states, community-based organizations, and employers, implement public
education and outreach initiatives to help veterans understand that care is
available and effective. We must work to end the culture of silence around
mental health issues and remove the stigma associated with getting mental
health treatment, particularly among service members who are more used to
helping others than asking for it themselves.
Ensure the
DoD’s Suicide Prevention Office and the VA have the resources and staff they
need to make smart investments with allocated funds–and that money dedicated
to suicide prevention efforts never goes unused.
Create a
national center of excellence for reducing veteran suicide, similar to the
National Center on Homelessness among Veterans. Biden will recruit top-level
leadership to build strategic partnerships and solutions that extend beyond the
VA’s health care system.
Require all
providers of veterans services funded by the VA to receive training on suicide
risk identification and safety planning, to include lethal means restriction
and appropriate response and reporting about suicide.
Enact policies
that promote the value and dignity of life by supporting programs that increase
economic stability; promote connectedness through structured social support; and
reduce risky behaviors, such as substance use, poor sleep, and improper firearm storage.
Expand capacity
at Vet Centers to ensure veterans in communities can access readjustment
counseling services and resources, including financial and long-term planning.
President Biden will specifically expand outreach and resources for veterans as
they experience periods of transition, not just out of the military, but
throughout their life, including into post-career retirement.
Tackle issues
that contribute to higher suicide risk. This includes implementing programs to
disseminate high-quality treatments for PTSD, ensuring that veterans have
access to the best treatments available no matter where they receive care, and
instituting policies that seek to eliminate discrimination, end harassment and
hold perpetuators of sexual assault in the military accountable. A Biden
Administration will not tolerate the sexual assault culture that has become all
too common in the military and veteran sector.
Work with
Congress to continue to drive down veteran homelessness by permanently
authorizing the Supportive Services for Veterans Families (SSVF) program, which
provides critical funding for wrap-around services for those facing
homelessness. President Biden will also work to ensure that we better
understand the unique needs of women and LGBTQ veterans experiencing homelessness.
Reform the
policy and review processes for veterans so that less-than-honorable discharges
will not be unjustly awarded for conduct directly linked to the behavioral
health effects of PTSD, TBI, or other trauma experienced while serving.
Creating Civilian Lives of Meaning and Opportunity
The Obama-Biden Administration worked tirelessly to bring down high
unemployment levels among our veterans. Over the course of 8 years, the
Obama-Biden administration cut the veteran unemployment rate by more than half.
That is vitally important progress, but now, we have to think about empowering
our veterans and their future employers with the tools they need to build
pathways to successful, long-term careers. Recent data indicate that veterans
are more likely than their civilian counterparts to take a job at lower skill-level. As president, Biden will
keep his foot on the gas to ensure that service members transitioning back to
civilian lives have the best opportunities to succeed and build fulfilling
futures.
A Biden Administration will:
Work closely
with DoD to ensure that the Transition Assistance Program (TAP) is implemented effectively
and that outcomes are regularly reported.
Ensure that
more transitioning service members are able to access job training and
placement services prior to their end of active duty service. By expanding
private sector relationships through programs like the SkillBridge program, Biden will give qualified
transitioning service members the opportunity to start building a meaningful
civilian career as early as possible.
Work with the
Department of Labor to enforce the Vietnam Era Veterans Readjustment Assistance
Act (VEVRAA) hiring benchmark among federal contractors
and subcontractors, and provide preferences and incentives to corporations that
meet the benchmark.
Promote
corporate mentorship programs between veteran-owned businesses and existing
contractors to support veteran entrepreneurship.
Ensure careful
implementation of the Forever GI Bill so that veterans receive the educational
benefits they have earned on time.
Implement
annual reporting to be led by the VA in partnership with the Department of
Education and promote interagency cooperation and data sharing to better
understand academic outcomes for all GI Bill users.
Develop
best-practice guidelines for supporting veterans in higher education to assist
higher education institutions to improve graduation rates among GI Bill
recipients and provide financial incentivizes for campuses that follow
guidelines and transparently report their outcomes.
Work
aggressively to close the 90/10 loophole on GI Bill and Tuition Assistance
dollars to keep for-profit bad actors from raiding the benefits service members
and veterans have earned.
Protect
undocumented members of our armed services, veterans, and their spouses from
deportation, because if you are willing to risk your life for this country, you
and your family have earned the chance to live safe, healthy, and productive
lives in America.
Work with DoD
and the Department of Homeland Security to provide timely naturalization for
those who have served honorably in our military, with an earned path to
citizenship prior to discharge or retirement.
Improving VA Management and Accountability
The agency charged with meeting the needs of our veterans–not only their
health care needs, but administering their full range of benefits and
overseeing the cemeteries that guard their honor in death–should not be
limited by outdated management tools and practices. Our veterans deserve the
best services available. As president, Biden will enhance the capacity of the
VA to serve our veterans as efficiently as possible by overseeing a
generational upgrade to clinical and management systems, by leveraging
commercial best-practices and modern technologies to meet the unique demands of
public sector mission.
A Biden Administration will:
Improve health
care access, quality, and customer experience by seamlessly augmenting direct care
with purchase care enabled under the Mission Act. Enhance the administrative,
financial, and operational systems that underpin the provision of care in the
network model by improving vital case management systems, quality oversight,
integrative health treatments and supporting administrative, financial and IT
systems. These reforms will help ensure access to high-quality care and a
first-rate customer experience that satisfies all veterans, regardless of where
they receive care.
Create
standards of health record interoperability that ensure a comprehensive health
record is provided by community care organizations back to the VA.
Invest in
improving human resource and management practices across the VA to strengthen
the customer experience for our veterans and deliver services more efficiently.
This will include a focus on workforce training and cultivating a culture
across the VA that places a premium on quality and service.
Leverage
options under the Mission Act to pilot alternative payment models and
prioritize care models that improve the quality of care, not just the volume of
services. Veterans should be able to access care in a way that works best
for them, not the way that is most convenient for the system, in particular
when it comes to meeting specific needs such as rehabilitation services, SUD,
and behavioral health.
Reduce delays
and errors in claims processing and in scheduling the medical exams necessary
for veterans to complete their disability claims. This has been a constant
source of frustration for veterans. The long delays in the system, and
rates of error — in both Regional Offices and the Board of Veterans’ Appeals —
are too long and too high, and unfairly delay adjudication of veterans
claims. A Biden VA will identify the sources of the problem and undertake
the investments in personnel and training needed to ensure that veterans
receive accurate decisions in a more timely manner.
Help more
veterans gain access to their own health data and medical records through
the Blue Button app. Blue Button has been downloaded by more than 2
million veterans and is increasingly being used by Medicare beneficiaries
and the private sector. By making Blue Button easier to use, the VA will
continue to lead the movement of patient-centered models of care.
Implement a
VA-hosted health record that can serve any and every American who wants one. We
can leverage Blue Button to access health information no matter where it is, to
allow veterans and citizens to manage and use it as they see fit. By putting
our veterans first, we can make the VA the nexus of the best care everywhere.
Create a
national health database for non-profit research scientists and the commercial
sector that would accelerate discovery of the best therapies against the
devastating diseases of our time: cancer, heart disease, and Alzheimer’s, and
dementia. Biden will direct the VA to support the database using its
infrastructure, making access available to all. Veterans will be able to
choose, on an individual basis, whether or not to contribute their data. This
national repository for longitudinal health data will enable us to use
technological innovations to see patterns that people don’t easily recognize
and make connections we don’t normally make for the U.S. population as a whole.
WASHINGTON – Senator Bernie Sanders on Veterans Day released his veterans agenda, called “Honoring Our Commitment to Veterans,” which will guarantee veterans the benefits and services they were promised, protect and expand disability benefits for veterans, guarantee justice for veterans and expand opportunities for veterans. The proposal comes as Americans around the country honor Veterans Day.
This is from the Sanders campaign:
“As a nation, we have a moral obligation to provide the best quality care to those who put their lives on the line to defend us,” Sanders, who served as Chairman of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee from 2013 to 2015, said. “Just as planes and tanks and guns are a cost of war, so is taking care of the men and women who we sent off to fight the wars. It includes caring for the spouses and children who have to rebuild their lives after the loss of a loved one. It includes caring for the hundreds of thousands of veterans with multiple amputations or loss of eyesight, post-traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury. It includes veterans who are having difficulty keeping jobs in order to pay their bills, and it includes the terrible tragedy of veterans committing suicide. As president, I will do everything that I can to make sure that every veteran gets the benefits that they are entitled to receive on time and without delay. Further, we will not dismantle or privatize the VA. We will expand and improve the VA.”
During Sanders’ time as Chairman of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, a series of reports revealed that the Veterans Health Administration was failing veterans, leaving many to wait too long for care and putting lives in danger. Sanders worked with Sen. John McCain to successfully negotiate and pass a bill that invested billions into the VA system. The landmark legislation authorized twenty-seven new medical facilities and provided $5 billion to hire more doctors and nurses to care for the surging number of veterans returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and those veterans from earlier eras in need of more complex care.
The Sanders campaign on Monday also released a new video, “Keeping Our Promise,” which highlights Sanders’ work on that landmark legislation.
Sanders’ plan will:
Fill
the nearly 50,000 vacancies at the VA during your first year in office. Under a
Bernie Sanders administration, the VA will hire the doctors, nurses and medical
professionals necessary to provide the care that veterans need when they need
it.
Provide at least $62 billion in new funding
to repair, modernize and rebuild the infrastructure at the VA in order to
provide the cutting-edge health care services our veterans have earned and
deserve.
Ensure that all those with prior military
service in every state and territory have access to the full complement of
health care services they need to stay healthy and well.
Improve and simplify the claims process so
veterans receive the compensation they have earned quickly, accurately, and
without bureaucratic red tape.
Reform harmful VA regulations that restrict
access to care and benefits based on character of discharge.
Ensure veterans can use the full complement
of benefits through the G.I. Bill without hassle or red tape.
Senator Elizabeth Warren released her plan to support and protect America’s veterans, service members and military families ahead of Veterans Day.
“All three of my
brothers served, so I know the responsibility we have to our service members,
military families, and veterans. As Commander-in-Chief, I will lead our Armed
Forces with awareness of the unique challenges service members and military
families face, and the difficulties veterans encounter as they navigate VA
during their transition to civilian life. I will honor our troops not only by
executing sound military strategy, but also by caring for our veterans after
they take off the uniform. And I will prioritize our most important strategic
asset – our people – as I reform Pentagon spending and address our most
pressing national security crises. The way I see it, this is not complicated.
It’s about a government that keeps its promises to those who served — it’s
about our values. “
This is from the
Warren campaign:
Charlestown, MA – As President, Senator Elizabeth Warren pledged to:
Raise service members’ pay at or above the Employment Cost
Index and protect earned benefits, ensuring that total compensation remains
competitive with the civilian sector and that it reflects the unique demands of
military life
Prioritize family readiness by addressing spouse employment,
housing, child care and education, and take care of military caregivers
Expand mental health services and work to end military
suicide by setting a goal of cutting veterans’ suicides in half within her
first term
Tackle sexual assault and prosecute sexual harassment as a
stand-alone crime under military law
Enforce equal treatment for all who serve, including women,
immigrants, and LGBTQ+ service members
Ease the transition for veterans by eliminating the benefits
backlog and establishing a “warm hand-off” between DOD and VA
Reject attempts to privatize the VA by investing in a VA
worthy of the veterans it serves — to provide the high-quality,
evidence-based, culturally competent programs that our veterans rely on for
years to come.
As a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee,
Elizabeth has worked to achieve pay raises for senior enlisted
personnel, fix repeated promotion delays for
our National Guard, and fought to protect military families from fraud and
abuse. Major provisions of her bill with Congresswoman Deb Haaland (D-N.M.) to
address unsafe and unsanitary housing conditions on military bases were
included as part of the Senate-passed FY2020 NDAA.
Keeping Our Promises to Our Service Members, Veterans,
and Military Families
This Veterans Day, Americans will gather in towns and cities
across our country to thank our military personnel past and present. With three
brothers who served, this day is especially meaningful to me.
Less than 1% of the U.S. population currently serves in
uniform. And while Americans rightly honor their service on November 11, too
often the day-to-day sacrifices of military families go unseen and unremarked.
Parades and salutes to the troops are important ways that Americans express
their gratitude, but they’re only platitudes if they’re not backed up with
meaningful action and policies that support our military both during and after
service — not just on Veterans Day, but every day.
For me, that starts with care in how we deploy our forces
abroad. Defense policy is veterans policy. For decades, we have been mired in a
series of wars that have sapped our strength and skewed our priorities. As a
member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, I have seen up close how 18
years of conflict have degraded equipment, eroded our forces’ readiness, and
postponed investment in critical military capabilities.
The burden of these wars has fallen primarily on our
military personnel, who have endured repeated deployments in dangerous places
around the globe year after year, and their families. 7,027 American
service members have lost their lives, almost 60,000 have been
injured, and countless more live every day with the invisible wounds of war.
I know our service members and their families are smart,
tough, and resourceful — they will accomplish any mission we ask of them,
whatever the cost. But it’s not fair to our men and women in uniform to ask
them to solve problems that don’t have a military solution. Nor is it fair to
them when we refuse to make the tough calls to change course when our
strategies aren’t working.
A strong military should act as a deterrent so that most of
the time, we won’t have to use it. We can honor our veterans by ending these
endless wars, reining in our bloated defense budget and reducing the influence of defense
contractors at the Pentagon, and bringing our troops home
responsibly — and then providing our veterans with the benefits they’ve
earned. That’s why today I’m introducing my plan to care for our nation’s
veterans, service members, military families, and survivors.
Protecting Earned Benefits for Those Who Serve
In prior generations, America experienced a tight
relationship between people in uniform and the rest of our nation. For a host
of reasons, however, our all-volunteer military is becoming more and more distant
from the population it serves. In recent years the military has sometimes
struggled to attract and retain sufficient personnel to meet recruitment
targets, in both raw numbers and increasingly technical skill sets. A majority of young
people are ineligible to serve, and low unemployment rates and declining propensity for
military service mean that even fewer apply to serve in today’s military. Many
who enlist do so because they have a family member who
served.
It is clear that the services must do more to compete with
21st century careers and employers to continue to attract and retain the best
for the All Volunteer Force. That means more flexible talent management systems
and improved quality of life for service members and their families — and it
also means preserving best-in-class benefits for our military personnel. But
it’s about more than recruitment and readiness. It’s about honoring the
commitment of those who choose to serve with commitments of our own.
Guaranteeing Pay and Benefits
In past years, Congress and the Pentagon have too often
sought to balance the budget on the backs of our service members through
proposals for lower pay raises, increased out-of-pocket costs, and cuts to
benefits like housing and commissaries. Proposals that undermine total
compensation are a betrayal of our obligation to our service members, and they
undermine our ability to recruit and retain the best possible All Volunteer
Force.
To ensure that compensation remains competitive with the
civilian sector and that it reflects the unique demands of military life, as
President I will propose pay raises at or above the Employment Cost Index. I’ll
ensure that benefits such as housing allowances keep pace with market rates in
base communities, and work to ensure that service members are educated and
empowered to make decisions about their retirement and savings choices in light
of new options for blended retirement.
Empowering Military Students
Over the past 70 years, the GI Bill has helped send millions
of veterans to college, easing their transition to civilian life, and
contributing to our economic growth. I am committed to ensuring these benefits
are guaranteed and protected in the future — for our veterans and their family
members. I’ve fought to expand eligibility for educational benefits, including
by working to provide Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits for Purple Heart recipients who
were not previously eligible, and expanding the Yellow Ribbon education program
to cover families of
fallen service members.
As benefits have increased — and increased in complexity —
as a result of GI Bill expansions, VA has scrambled at times to keep up,
leaving military students in the lurch. I’ve worked to ensure that delays at VA
don’t negatively impact student veterans, including by helping to pass a
bipartisan measure to protect student veterans’ access to education in
the event of delayed GI Bill disbursements.
Too often, the benefits provided to military and veteran
students have made them targets for predatory lenders and shady for-profit
schools. I’ve fought to protect students from these scams, including by
obtaining refunds for military borrowers cheated by loan servicers like
Navient. I also fought to restore GI benefits to
those cheated by fraudulent for-profit colleges like ITT Tech and Corinthian
Colleges.
But there is more to be done. My plan for affordable higher
education will make two- and four-year public college free, and
cancel student loan debt up to $50,000 for 42 million Americans — helping
thousands of military families burdened with higher education expenses beyond
what is covered by the GI Bill, and ensuring all of our veterans and their
families have the chance to get essential job training and degrees without
taking on a dime of student loan debt. My plan also completely cuts shady
for-profit colleges off from federal aid dollars, which will end their abuse of
veteran students for their GI Bill benefits once and for all.
Preventing Fraud and Abuse
When I set up the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, I
made protecting service members and veterans a priority. We established an
Office of Servicemember Affairs, and I recruited Holly Petraeus to run it.
Together, we met with active-duty service members and families to discuss
financial issues, including the base where two of my brothers completed their
basic training.
I saw firsthand that today’s military families face
difficult financial challenges as they try to make ends meet, balancing
multiple deployments with raising a family. Some even told me that they felt like
they were fighting two wars at once – one in a distant war zone and another
here at home against creditors. But I’m proud to say that since 2011, the
office we established has heard from over 90,000 service
members from all 50 states and saved them nearly $230 million, providing
some measure of relief for our military families.
I’ve made fighting for military families a similar priority
in the Senate. I fought to prevent predatory lenders from “loan churning,” or
repeatedly refinancing VA-backed mortgages to pocket hefty fees. I
successfully expanded financial protections for
Gold Star spouses, passing a bipartisan bill to allow a survivor to terminate a
residential lease within one year of a service member’s death. And I worked
with my Republican colleagues in Congress to pass my Veterans Care Financial
Protection Act to protect low-income and older veterans in assisted care from
scams targeting their pension benefits.
As President, I’ll work with Congress to give the CFPB new
tools and additional authority to enforce the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act.
And I’ll appoint individuals at the CFPB and DOJ who will use the full extent
of those authorities to aggressively go after scammers and protect our men and
women in uniform. Criminals and predators will keep coming up with new and
creative ways to target the military community. We must be vigilant — but
military families can feel confident that a Warren Administration will always
have their backs.
Prioritizing Family Readiness
Military families form the backbone of our armed forces.
Just like other middle-class families, they worry about making ends meet:
finding child care, giving their children a good education, retiring with
dignity. But military families — particularly dual military couples — also
face special challenges, like regular moves from assignment to assignment and
the anxiety of a loved one’s deployment. And too often, the unique needs of
military communities are overlooked by Washington.
A Warren Administration will continue and expand current policy of
weighing basing and force structure decisions to account for quality of life
factors in the surrounding communities, including safe living environments,
available child care, quality of public schools, and employment opportunities
and licensing reciprocity for military spouses. There’s also a lot more we can
do to support and uplift our military families.
Increasing Military Spouse Employment
A majority of
military families report two incomes as vital to their family’s well-being. But
employment opportunities for military spouses are hindered by a variety of
factors, including frequent moves and lack of available child care at some
posts. Last year 30% of military
spouses were unemployed, and 56% of working
spouses reported being underemployed. Spouses in fields that require professional
licenses face an additional challenge, as occupational licensing and
credentialing standards vary from state to state.
Reduced spousal employment isn’t just bad for military
families — it results in up to $1 billion annually
in lost income and associated costs. We need to make spousal employment a
priority.
The Obama Administration made real progress in encouraging
states to offer licensing and credentialing reciprocity for the military
community — now we need to finish those efforts to remove barriers to military
spouse employment.
We can start by making permanent the program to reimburse military spouses for
professional relicensing. I’ll also work with states to provide military
families with a one-stop shop where they can review licensing requirements
before a move.
I’ll also work with Congress to expand and better
communicate about special hiring preferences for on-base jobs for military
spouses and at American Job Centers. These preferences not only benefit
spouses, they help build communities on military installations.
We’ll expand educational opportunities like MyCAA for
military spouses, and provide targeted training for high-demand, high-growth
sectors and to help military spouses find careers that can move with
them.
Military spouses bring unique strengths to the workforce —
it’s time we leverage those strengths to benefit not only our military families
but our economy.
Ensuring High Quality Childcare and Education
As a young working mother, child care almost sank me —
until my Aunt Bee stepped in to help. But finding affordable and high-quality
child care has gotten even harder since my children were growing up, and not
everyone is lucky enough to have an Aunt Bee of their own.
That’s why I have a plan to provide universal child
care for every single one of our babies from birth to school
age. It will be free for millions of American families, and affordable for
everyone. The federal government will partner with local providers to create a
network of child care options that would be available to every family. These
options would be held to high federal standards, and we’ll pay child care and
preschool workers the wages they deserve. And rather than diverting funding from
military daycare programs for a needless wall, I’ll invest again in growing DOD
child care centers and modernizing schools on base.
We’ll move forward with efforts to
introduce more flexibility into the personnel system for families who want to
limit moves for assignments, while ensuring that option does not hamper the
service member’s ability to get promoted and advance their military career.
We’ll invest the resources necessary to ensure families (and their household
goods) are no longer subjected to chaos and mistakes that
can impact the experience of transitioning to a new assignment. And we’ll seek
to limit family moves during the academic year — when they must occur, we’ll
provide dedicated support to families as they navigate transferring educational
credits.
Every military family is unique, and some have unique needs.
I’ll work to improve oversight and standardize DOD’s
Exceptional Family Member Program to care for dependents with special needs. We
need to do more to empower military families to make informed decisions,
taking their individual circumstances into account during relocation and
providing dedicated case management to help military families identify
appropriate programs and interventions regardless of their location. Supporting
these families isn’t just the right thing to do, it’s also good for military
readiness.
Wounded Warriors and their Families
About 30% of
veterans between the ages of 21 and 64 have a disability. As president, I will
keep fighting for the rights of people with disabilities and to ensure their
full inclusion through policy reforms and enforcement priorities. This includes
prioritizing the unique challenges that face veterans with disabilities.
As part of my plan to empower American workers,
I have committed to substantially increasing funding for the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission to uphold the rights
of veterans with disabilities at work. I will also ensure that the Department
of Labor is enforcing the law to protect disabled
veterans againist work discrimination. I support the Raise the Wage Act to
guarantee workers with disabilities a minimum wage of $15 an hour, and I will
push to pass the Transformation to Competitive
Employment Act, which would provide grants and assistance to support
a transition towards competitive, integrated employment for people with
disabilities.
It is often family members who care for injured service
members and veterans — in some cases, putting aside careers and other
opportunities to provide assistance to our wounded warriors. According to a
2014 report, there were approximately 5.5 million military
caregivers in the United States — but the physical and emotional strain on
this population is understudied and overlooked.
Medicare for All will expand access to long-term home and
community-based care, offering critical support and relieving the financial
burden on veterans and their families. A Warren Administration will also
empower our nation’s military caregivers by fully implementing the recommendations of
the federal advisory panel on caregiving. We’ll create an office within VA
focused on the needs of caregivers, ensuring that their voices are heard in the
policymaking process and that VA is fully communicating available resources.
We’ll ensure that caregivers are formally designated in a patient’s medical
record, so that they can be consistently included in medical planning about the
course of care. We’ll collect better data on the caregiver population and their
needs, including the impact on military children. And we’ll make sure we’re
also caring for the caregivers, themselves, including respite care.
To recognize caregiving for the valuable work it is, my plan to expand Social Security creates
a new credit for caregiving for people who qualify for Social Security
benefits. This credit raises Social Security benefits for people who take time
out of the workforce to care for a family member at least 80 hours a month,
including designated “primary family caregivers” of eligible veterans in the
Caregiver Support Program. For every month of caregiving that meets these
requirements, the caregiver will be credited for Social Security purposes with
a month of income equal to the monthly average of that year’s median annual
wage.
Lastly, I support eliminating the so-called “Widow’s Tax” and efforts
to ensure that all families of veterans who died or became totally disabled
from a service-connected condition receive the Dependency and Indemnity
Compensation (DIC) benefits that they are entitled to.
Providing Safe and Affordable Housing
In the mid-1990s, the Department of Defense agreed to
privatize the majority of the 300,000 houses it owned and operated on base,
many of which were in need of renovation after
decades of neglect. It was a good deal for the private developers, but this
system has turned out to be a lousy bargain for military families. With their
focus on short-term payoffs, private developers failed to
invest in and maintain the properties with which they were entrusted. That’s
why earlier this year, I released my plan to improve military housing by
ensuring that every base has a housing office staffed with advocates for the
service member and establishing a “bill of rights” that all military tenants
will receive when they move in.
And for those families who choose to live off base, and for
veterans, my plan to increase affordable housing makes
a historic federal investment to increase affordable housing supply, lowering
rents around the country by 10%. And while cost is a major challenge to finding
safe and affordable housing, too many service members and veterans face
additional obstacles, including landlords who don’t understand the
housing benefits they receive for their service and those who turn away service
members and veterans because of discriminatory stereotypes. My affordable
housing plan extends protection against discrimination under the Fair Housing
Act to include veteran status, which would include those using HUD-VASH
vouchers. I have also pushed hard for more resources for programs to end
veterans’ homelessness, including the successful Tribal HUD-VASH program to
assist Native American veterans who are homeless or at risk of homelessness
find homes in Indian country.
Putting Service Members and Veterans First
Nearly two decades of combat has put significant stress on
the force, and this will continue to manifest itself long after combat
operations are over. Our first priority must be the care and safety of those
who serve or have served in uniform.
Eliminating Military Sexual Assault
For decades, the military has affirmed a “zero tolerance
policy” — and yet reports of sexual assault in the military have spiked. In
2018 alone, the Department of Defense estimated that more than 20,000 service
members experienced assault or unwanted sexual contact. These statistics are a
shameful breach of trust with those who serve. Annual promises from senior
military leaders to address the issue increasingly ring hollow — we owe it to
our service members to make real change.
Currently, skilled military prosecutors make an
evidence-based recommendation on whether or not a case should proceed to trial,
but then military commanders get to decide whether or not they want to listen.
That’s why I supported Senator Gillibrand’s effort to
remove cases of sexual assault from the chain of command and place trained
prosecutors in charge instead. It’s simple – if evidence of a crime warrants a
trial, then the case should go to trial. We need to reform the military justice
system so that the lawyers and judges trying cases have the necessary
experience and expertise, and so that every victim of a sexually-based crime
benefits from a competent, empowered advocate from the very first day they
report.
We need to change the culture. Sexual harassment and sexual
assault are correlated— and 24% of
military women and 6% of military men said they had been sexually harassed in
the past year. In the
Senate, I worked to make so-called “revenge pornography”
prosecutable under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. We should also
prosecute sexual harassment as a stand-alone crime under military law. We
should push to expose and prevent sexual harassment in the civilian workforce as
well, recognizing that our entire culture has work to do.
And we need to invest in survivors, helping them to get the
care they need so that they can recover, and so they can continue to serve.
Often, survivors worry that reporting a sexual assault may also bring to light
other misconduct, such as underage drinking or fraternization. Sometimes,
military commanders will distribute punishment for these offenses by survivors
while the sexual assault itself goes unaddressed. Even worse, more than 20% of
those who reported an assault also reported experiencing retaliation. If we
want to increase reporting and hold perpetrators of sexual assault accountable,
we need to exercise much wider discretion in the way we approach collateral
misconduct as part of instances of sexual assault. Until reporting an assault
is not perceived as a possible end to someone’s career, we will never fully
address this scourge.
Ending Veteran and Military Suicide
Our service members are resilient, but even the strongest
warriors need care. In 2017, 6,139 U.S. veterans
died by suicide, an average of nearly 17 each day, and 1.5 times the rate for
non-veteran adults. But only half of veterans
of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan who may need mental health services —
including many with diagnoses that increase the risk of suicide, like PTSD, traumatic brain injury, substance use disorders,
or depression —
actually access them.
Every single one of these deaths is a tragedy that could
have been prevented. As President, I will set a goal of cutting veteran
suicides in half within my first term — and pursue a suite of concrete
policies to make sure we get there.
To get there, we need to invest more in research into the
causes of suicide, with a specific focus on contributing factors that are
specific to the military experience and a concerted effort to collect the data
that will save lives. We should conduct research targeting subgroups of
veterans who may be at higher risk of suicide, and evaluate the efficacy of
suicide prevention pilot programs and invest in those that make a meaningful
difference.
Veterans account for one in five firearm
suicides. My plan to prevent gun violence includes
a waiting period before purchase and a federal extreme risk protection law,
both of which have been shown to reduce suicides by gun.
We also need to provide consistent, accessible, high-quality mental
health care for all of our service members and veterans. Under Medicare for All
every person will have this essential care covered. But we must also address
the shortfall of mental health providers at DOD and VA, and in the areas where
veterans live.
In the last Congress, I led the fight to prevent budget cuts
to the Mental Health Block Grant and secured an additional $160 million for the
program, and I urged appropriators to designate $1 billion to mental health
programs through the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration. I have
also proposed significant
expansions of Community Health Centers and the National Health Service Corps,
which would help increase the supply of primary care and mental health
providers in underserved areas. We need to make it easier for service members
and veterans to see a mental health professional, including by significantly increasing
the number of mental health specialists at DOD and VA, streamlining appointment
processes, and enhancing access to telehealth options for those who cannot come
to a VA facility.
We should also focus on preventive care — early and often
throughout a military career, including by incorporating annual mental health
exams for service members in the same way they receive annual physical exams.
We should clearly communicate benefits and eligibility, raising awareness about
available care. And we must continue to remove the stigma around warfighters
seeking help, and do more to support military families who lose someone to
suicide.
Treating the Opioid and Addiction Crisis
In 2017, over 70,000 people died
from a drug overdose — the highest year on record, with the majority due to opioids.
And the opioid crisis that has devastated so many American families has not
spared our military community. Stressors including deployment, combat exposure,
injury, and post-deployment reintegration have been shown to increase the risk
of substance abuse. Our military population has a higher risk of
substance use disorders, with 11% of veterans
from Afghanistan and Iraq treated by the VA being diagnosed with a substance use
disorder.
My CARE Act to end the
opioid crisis — introduced in partnership with my late friend Congressman
Elijah Cummings of Baltimore — is a comprehensive plan to provide the
resources needed to begin treating this epidemic like the public health crisis
that it is. It would provide $100 billion in federal funding to states and
communities over the next ten years, because that’s what’s needed to make sure
every single person gets the treatment they need.
Under my plan, VA facilities will be able to participate in
planning councils to address the opioid crisis in order to ensure that veterans
are prioritized in our response and organizations serving veterans have a voice
in how the funding is spent. We will expand the number of inpatient beds
available to veterans for treatment and recovery. We’ll fund community-based
organizations, including eligible veteran-serving nonprofits, working to help
prevent and treat addicted veterans. And we’ll provide vocational training for
people struggling with addiction, helping them to get back into the civilian
workforce after their military careers.
Addressing the “Invisible Wounds” of War
17% of post-9/11
military veterans experience some form of traumatic brain injury during their
military service. TBI is associated with higher rates of PTSD, depression, and
substance abuse. While our knowledge of these conditions has improved
dramatically, it is still incomplete. Moreover, too many veterans don’t receive
the treatment they so badly need. While TBI is often associated with blunt
physical injuries to the head, research has shown that the blast wave produced
by even minor explosions, such as firing heavy weapons,
can result in TBI — even if the individual does not exhibit outward physical
signs of head injury.
In the Senate, I worked with my Republican colleagues to
establish a longitudinal study at
DOD to track the impact of blast exposure and brain health over time, and to
push DOD to track service member blast exposure.
We’ll use this data to improve our understanding of blast exposure injuries,
improve protective equipment, and develop innovative new treatments. We’ll also
use it to inform the safety guidance provided to our troops, including by
limiting non-combat exposure during training exercises.
Many states have established veterans’ courts or other
diversion programs to provide treatment rather than incarceration for veterans
with behavioral issues as a result of trauma, and I support the expansion of
these programs. I also support legalizing marijuana. I’ve co-sponsored
legislation to study the use of medical cannabis to treat veterans as an
alternative to opioids, because we need to pursue all evidence-based
opportunities for treatment and response.
The prevalence of certain rare cancers has been increasing steadily among
military personnel and veterans who have served overseas. It took years for
Vietnam veterans to receive treatment for exposure to Agent Orange — and some,
including Blue Water Navy veterans,
are still fighting for healthcare and benefits. Some veterans of more recent
wars attribute their illness to exposure to toxic burn pits used
by the military to dispose of waste, and at least one veterans group has projected that
deaths from cancer and other illnesses could outpace suicide deaths in the
military population by 2020.
As President, I will ensure that DOD tracks and records
potential toxic exposure by integrating it into the post-deployment checklist.
We need to ensure that adequate funding is allocated to research diseases that
may be connected to certain kinds of exposure. And we must treat those affected
without delay — we cannot allow today’s veterans to wait for earned health
care.
Equal Treatment For All Who Serve
The diversity of our force is one of its unique strengths —
it allows us to incorporate different perspectives and experiences and to look
at problems in new ways. The data are clear: inclusive, diverse militaries
simply perform better. When we
discriminate or treat classes of service members as less worthy than their
peers, we fail to honor that diversity and we do enormous harm to our ability
to recruit a strong future force. Minority communities in the military —
particularly LGBTQ+, women, Black and Latinx service
members — are significantly under-represented in the leadership ranks. Here’s
what I’ll do to protect and honor everyone who volunteers to serve.
LGBTQ+ Service Members
The only thing that should matter when it comes to allowing
military personnel to serve is whether or not they can handle the job. Our
national security community is weaker when LGBTQ+ Americans are excluded. I
have opposed the Trump Administration’s shameful ban on transgender service
members from the start —
and I’ll reverse it on the first day of my presidency. In addition, advances
in care and treatment have
made it possible for individuals living with HIV to serve and deploy, and the
Pentagon’s policies should be updated to reflect these advances in medical
science.
I’ve also supported efforts to review and correct the
military records of service members discharged solely due to their sexual
orientation, both before and during the Don’t Ask Don’t Tell era. As
Commander-in-Chief, I’ll prioritize this effort, ensuring that we reflect their
honorable service and reinstate the benefits they earned.
I’ll include the LGBTQ+ population in the VA’s Center for
Minority Veterans, ensuring that they receive targeted outreach and equal care
and are treated with dignity and respect. A Warren VA will ensure that every
LGBTQ+ person can get the equitable, gender-affirming, and culturally-competent
health care they need. That means providing all medically necessary care related
to the health of transgender people, including transition-related surgery,
and allowing providers discretion to deem gender-affirming procedures as
medically necessary based on an individualized assessment. This care will also
be available under Medicare for All.
Professional medical associations recognize the need for transition-related
surgery. VA’s blanket exclusion policy of medically necessary treatment is not
grounded in medicine; it should be repealed.
Empowering Women Service Members
Women make up 17.5% of the total
force. But they can face unique professional and personal challenges over the
course of a military career, including higher rates of sexual harassment and assault, higher rates
of divorce, challenges
starting a family, and fewer opportunities for career advancement.
I supported then-Defense Secretary Carter’s decision
to open combat positions to women across
the services, because the only thing that should matter is an individual’s
ability to meet the standards. I’m proud of the women who have risen to that challenge.
Now we must do more to recruit women into service, and then ensure that they
are given equal opportunities to compete for command and promotions. We’ll
invest in research on appropriate gear and injury prevention for women — over one
hundred years after being allowed to enlist, women still perform their duties
wearing equipment that doesn’t fit them, and therefore doesn’t adequately
protect them. And both DOD and VA should enhance the quality of and access to
care for women service members, including for preventive and reproductive care
and mental health.
A 21st century VA must also adapt to the modern fabric of
our veteran population, ensuring that gender-specific care is the norm. There
are about 2 million women veterans today,
and women represent the fastest growing veteran subgroup — that’s why I
successfully fought to ensure VA
has sufficient resources and expertise in its peer counseling program for women
veterans. I’ll also ensure that VA provides full reproductive health care for
all veterans, in addition to the full reproductive health coverage they will
have under Medicare for All. This includes IVF, which is currently only available to
married veterans with service-connected infertility who don’t need donor sperm
or eggs — discriminating against
unmarried veterans, those who delayed pregnancy during their service, and
same-sex couples. It also includes contraception, for which VA continues to charge veterans
despite the fact that the Affordable Care Act made it available without cost to
their civilian counterparts. This also includes abortions. I’ve called to
repeal the Hyde Amendment, which
blocks federal funds from being used to pay for abortions except in cases of
rape, incest, or the life of the woman. VA’s restrictions go even further,
prohibiting coverage for all abortions and all abortion counseling with no
exemptions, an extreme policy I will eliminate.
Too often, women veterans experience sexually explicit
comments and other forms of harassment that
make them feel unsafe and unwelcome and cause them to delay seeking care at
their local VA or miss appointments altogether. This is shameful and it has to
stop. I’ll ensure that a Warren VA has a comprehensive policy to eliminate
sexual harassment and assault and hold perpetrators — VA personnel or anyone
else — accountable, so that women veterans do not have to feel unsafe at their
VA medical center when they seek the care they’ve earned.
Immigrant Service Members
Immigrants to our country have a proud history of honorable
military service and often become citizens. But the Trump Administration has
done everything it can to make these patriotic individuals who volunteer to
serve and defend the United States of America feel unwelcome in our ranks.
In recent years, ICE has deported noncitizen veterans in
violation of its own policies, which require additional review before
proceeding with a removal case against a veteran. The Trump Administration has
taken steps to withdraw deportation protections from military family members,
including family of service members deployed in combat overseas. And under
DOD’s current policies, immigrant troops are being denied citizenship at
a rate higher than their civilian counterparts, and applications for
naturalization as a result of military service dropped 72% between 2017
and 2018.
This is a disgrace. It also undermines military readiness.
It’s not reasonable to expect service members to be able to concentrate on
their jobs when their families are being deported, which is why I’ve used my
position as a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee to urge the Trump
Administration to maintain critical programs like Parole in Place and Deferred
Action for undocumented family members of service members. Further, many
noncitizen veterans come to the attention of immigration enforcement as a
result of PTSD or other trauma associated with their military service; others
fear seeking treatment for that reason. Everyone who serves our country
deserves equal treatment and benefits, regardless of their citizenship status.
A Warren Administration will make it clear that we will
protect veterans and family members of serving military personnel from
deportation, and we will review the cases of those who have been deported for
possible return to the United States. Consistent with our national security
interests, I’ll restart the
Military Accessions Vital to the National Interest (MAVNI) program, which
recruits non-citizens with specialized skills or language abilities, paired
with appropriate security and counterintelligence protections. I’ll also make
it easier for noncitizens who serve honorably in our military to naturalize and
become citizens. And we will heed the call of veterans to honor our commitment
to translators and
others who supported them in combat by re-launching the Direct Access Program
for these vulnerable refugees.
Easing the Transition for Veterans
Nearly 200,000 personnel
separate from military service every year. The initial transition away from
military service can be a challenging period, as veterans work to start school
or find a job, and readjust to family after time overseas. Many new veterans
struggle to find a sense of purpose or connection in new civilian careers and
communities. While DOD has improved its transition counseling in recent years,
we can do more to prepare service members to return to civilian life.
Ensuring a “Warm Hand-Off”
The key to an effective transition is a seamless connection
between DOD and the VA — but too often, veterans fall through the cracks. I’ll
direct DOD to require that service members pre-enroll and complete processing
at the VA before they leave active service. I’ll set a goal of completing
interoperable electronic records between DOD and VA by the end of my first
term. And I’ll direct VA to expand the vets.gov online
portal for veterans and provide veterans access to a VA-provided email, so that
the government can continue to communicate with them about their eligibility
even if they move physical addresses over time.
Eliminating the Benefits Backlog
While the VA has made progress in addressing its backlog of
benefits cases waiting for adjudication, today there are over 70,000 veterans
who have been waiting more than 125 days for a status determination. Moreover,
VA itself acknowledges it takes between 12-18 months to
review a new appeal, and 5-7 years to get a decision from a Veterans Law Judge.
As President, I’ll fully eliminate the initial claims and appeals backlog. And
in the interim, we’ll provide a presumption of eligibility for certain interim
benefits to all those waiting for a final status determination.
Our understanding of traumatic brain injury and other
complex injuries has improved dramatically in recent years, but VA’s disability
compensation process has not kept pace with those developments. I’ll task the
National Academy of Public Administration to review and overhaul the disability
ratings system to better accommodate “invisible” wounds like TBI. I’ll direct
them to take into account recommendations for best practices,
including training additional staff to evaluate cases and taking into account
symptoms that are closely-associated with undiagnosed TBI.
A key concern among veterans is that the benefits
adjudication process is byzantine and lacks transparency. I’ll make sure that
veterans automatically get full access to the results of their examinations and
put in place rigorous processes to ensure claims are granted consistently
nationwide. And to help veterans navigate the system and obtain the benefits
they deserve, I’ll also establish a grant program to fund additional
caseworkers at Veterans Service Organizations and other community-based
organizations.
Clearing “Bad Paper” Discharges
As the research into PTSD and traumatic brain injuries has
improved, we’ve come to learn that these often invisible injuries lie behind
many less-than-honorable discharges. Nearly 6% of post-9/11
discharges have been other-than-honorable — and one study estimated that 62% of service
members separated for misconduct had been diagnosed within the 2 years prior to
separation with PTSD, TBI, or related conditions. These so-called “bad paper”
discharges can have a lasting negative impact, preventing the most vulnerable
veterans from accessing benefits, obtaining employment, and other earned and
necessary services.
I’ll create a DOD appeals board for veterans seeking to upgrade
their discharges to give those denied by the services another opportunity for
review and to ensure consistency across the services. I’ll direct that board to
expand “liberal consideration”
and consider a broader array of potentially mitigating evidence. I’ll direct
the VA to provide certain interim benefits to individuals with
other-than-honorable discharges until their appeals are adjudicated. And I’ll
direct DOD to establish guidance for commanders to ensure that individuals
first receive care for underlying conditions that may be contributing to
behavioral problems, rather than merely processed for administrative discharge.
Providing Good Jobs
Service members gain valuable skills in the military, but
often don’t know how to translate their skills into civilian life or receive
appropriate “credit” for military service in a civilian context. And while
public-private partnerships and other efforts have broken down the stigma
around hiring veterans, we can do more to set veterans up for long-term
success.
It starts by making it easier for civilian employers to
identify military skill sets that most closely match their needs, and helping
veterans to describe their military experiences in language that resonates with
civilian employers. In the Senate, I’ve prioritized improving the employment
transition for retiring service members, for example by passing a bipartisan bill
that made it easier for service members to use their experience operating large
military vehicles to obtain a commercial driver’s license.
As President, I’ll direct DOD to expand resume and career
coaching opportunities for military personnel considering transition. To
encourage veteran entrepreneurship, I’m proposing a new program to allow
veterans to cash out their GI education benefits for a small business loan. And
we’ll invest in collaborative programs — like labor’s Helmets to Hardhats program
— to connect transitioning service members with federally-recognized
apprenticeship opportunities and good, union jobs.
Ending Veterans’ Homelessness
While the number of veterans experiencing homelessness has
dropped over the last decade, nearly 38,000 were still
homeless in January 2018. Veterans constituted nearly 9% of the total
adult homeless population. Even one homeless veteran is one too many. I’ll
restore SNAP benefits that the Trump administration seeks to cut that
support 1.4 million low-income
veterans, including those who are unemployed or with disabilities. SNAP is a
particularly critical support for young veterans and those recently who have
recently transitioned from active service. We’ll fully fund rapid re-housing
and permanent supportive housing through Supportive Services for Veteran
Families (SSVF) and HUD-VASH. And we’ll create a new competitive grant program
for communities to provide wrap-around services for veterans and their
families. We know that access to housing can be a barrier to many veterans –
and can enhance the scale of other challenges they face. By strengthening
and expanding programs like HUD-VASH, we can end veteran homelessness and allow
our veterans to focus on finding meaningful employment, receiving healthcare
for service-connected conditions, and building resilient lives.
Creating a 21st Century VA Health Care System
The Veterans Health Administration is America’s largest health care
system, providing care at over 1,200 health care facilities nationwide and
serving 9 million enrolled veterans each year.
In recent years, attacks on VA have intensified as
Republicans have pressed to privatize large chunks of VA service. My
Administration will be clear-eyed about leadership challenges at VA. We will
hold accountable leaders who fail to put veterans first or misuse resources,
and we will empower whistleblowers who report wrongdoing to address their
concerns and protect them from retaliation. But the truth is that care provided
by VA outperforms care at non-VA hospitals, as multiplestudies have shown.
And in a recent survey, 91% of veterans who
use VA care said they would recommend it to their fellow veterans. VA has
pioneered innovations in medical care and service delivery. It provides
world-class care for uniquely service-connected injuries, including treatment
for polytrauma, amputations, and spinal cord injuries.
While community care is appropriate where specialists are
unavailable or geographically inaccessible, let me be clear: a Warren
Administration will invest in the VA, not further dismantle it. We will not cut
the high-quality, evidence-based, culturally competent programs that our
veterans rely on. And under Medicare for All, veterans will all have
high-quality health coverage that gives them the option to seek care from
non-VA doctors and hospitals for no additional cost. If there isn’t a VA close
to where they live, Medicare for All will ensure that veterans still get the
care they need when they need it.
In the immediate-term, here’s what we can do to revitalize
our VA for the 21st century–
Work with Congress to implement more flexible hiring
authorities, with a goal of filling the nearly 49,000 staffing
vacancies, the vast majority of which are in the health administration.
Expand the number of physician recruiters and provide
additional financial incentives for physicians in hard-to-recruit specialties
and rural VA centers or those near tribal lands.
Reinvigorate VA’s training partnership program — nearly 70%
of U.S. doctors receive some training at a VA facility, but VA is hindered from
converting those into full-time positions because of the cumbersome hiring
processes.
Fully implement the VA MISSION Act — on-time, and in collaboration
with veteran’s groups, ensuring community providers are held to the same high
standards of care as VA providers and that the direct care system is not
weakened by siphoning away money into the private sector.
We’ll invest in modernizing aging infrastructure and
state-of-the-art medical equipment.
We’ll work to fill gaps in care, benefits, or other services
in underserved regions, including on tribal lands; and further integrating
federally-qualified health centers, DOD facilities, and the Indian Health
System as appropriate.
Read more about Warren’s plan for service members, veterans and military families here:
Former Vice
President Joe Biden, in a hotly contested race for President, attacked Donald
Trump for his failed foreign policy in the wake of yet another missile test by
North Korea. Foreign policy is Biden’s
greatest strength among the Democratic rivals for 2020. Here is his statement:
This morning, North Korea fired two missiles in a
deliberate attempt to provoke its neighbors and intimidate the United States —
again. It was the 12th such test the regime has conducted since May in
violation of UN resolutions, and which President Trump has down-played. After
the latest round of denuclearization talks collapsed almost immediately in
Stockholm earlier this month, these tests are a stark reminder that Donald
Trump — a self-proclaimed deal maker — has achieved nothing but a string of
spectacular diplomatic failures that are making the American people less safe.
His “love letters” to murderous dictator Kim Jong Un have delivered little more
than made-for-TV moments. North Korea today has more fissile material and more
capability than when talks began, and Trump has given away our leverage —
including suspending military exercises with our allies and granting Kim
co-equal status at two summits with the president of the United States of
America — for practically nothing in return. Now a more confident Kim is
ticking up the pace of his violations because he believes he can pressure Trump
to bend to his will. There is no deal, because there is no strategy and no
patience for the kind of tough, hard diplomacy that actually produces results.
It’s a pattern we see over and over again. Donald Trump talks a big game,
promises the greatest deal ever, then gives away America’s best negotiating
tools in exchange for a photo op for himself. He only cares about his own
self-aggrandizement and self-enrichment. And every single time, it’s the
American people who end up paying.
He pulled us out of the successful Iran nuclear deal, promising he’d get a
better one. He hasn’t. And now, Iran has taken its nuclear program out of the
deep-freeze and ramped up its aggressive acts across the region — and Trump has
no strategy to deal with these predictable responses.
He pulled us out of the Paris climate accord and dismisses climate change as a
hoax. In less than a week, we will officially notify our departure from Paris,
even as California is on fire and states throughout the Midwest are still
recovering from record flooding over the summer.
He scuttled negotiations with the Taliban that might have opened the door to a
peace settlement, reportedly because he didn’t get the Camp David moment of
glory he wanted. Meanwhile he’s significantly weakened our negotiating position
by imposing a possibly politically-motivated timeline for removing our troops
from Afghanistan, without extracting any concessions from the Taliban in
return.
His vaunted Middle East peace deal has yet to emerge. He gave away our
strongest asset to take on ISIS by precipitously withdrawing our troops from
Northeast Syria. He promised to get tough with China, saying trade wars
were “good and easy to win.” But at more than a year in, what do we have to
show for it? Nothing but pain for American farming and manufacturing, and vague
promises that would only restore trade levels with China back to where they
were before Trump’s irresponsible trade war.
The American people can’t afford four more years of Donald Trump’s art of no
deals.
Senator Elizabeth Warren, Democratic candidate for President, has released details of her most controversial proposal, Medicare for All, promising that it will cover every person in America with health care, including long-term care, vision and dental, without increasing taxes on middle class families. Warren focuses on an overall restructuring taxes and spending – going after the loopholes and tax cheats and reining in military spending as well as drug costs and cutting healthcare costs by removing the for-profit insurance companies (gatekeepers) as middlemen. What her plan misses, though, is the obvious: collect the Medicare tax (1.45%, plus an extra 0.9% on income over $200,000) on all income, not just wages, and, if necessary raise the surcharge for incomes over $250,000. Interestingly, while employers would no longer pick and choose the private health insurance they subsidize, employers would still subsidize their employees’ Medicare cost. Health care is considered the leading issue for voters in 2020. Here is the detailed plan, from the Warren campaign: –Karen Rubin/news-photos-features.com.
Charlestown, MA
– Today, Senator Elizabeth
Warren, candidate for President, released her plan to finance Medicare for All.
The coverage is identical to the coverage in the Medicare for All legislation
in the Senate and it will cover every single person in America with excellent,
high-quality health care, including long-term care and vision and dental.
Elizabeth will pay
for this plan without raising taxes one penny on middle class families. Instead, she will put about $11
trillion in the pockets of American families by eliminating what they would pay
in premiums, deductibles, co-pays, and other out-of-pocket costs over the next
ten years.
Her numbers add up and
are backed by experts including:
Simon Johnson, the
former Chief Economist at the International Monetary Fund and a professor at
MIT
Dr. Donald Berwick,
one of the nation’s top experts in health system management and improvement,
who ran the Medicare and Medicaid programs under President Barack Obama
Mark Zandi, Chief
Economist of Moody’s Analytics
Betsey Stevenson,
former Chief Economist for the Obama Labor Department
Elizabeth’s plan to
dramatically improve health care and cut family costs would cost the United
States less than our current broken system. It would require $20.5 trillion in
new revenue, nearly half of which comes simply from having employers pay
Medicare instead of private insurance companies.
Elizabeth will finance
the remainder of Medicare for All with targeted defense spending cuts, new
taxes on financial firms, giant corporations, and the richest 1% of Americans,
and by cracking down on tax evasion and fraud. The $11 trillion in household
insurance and out-of-pocket expenses projected under our current system goes
right back into the pockets of America’s working people — substantially larger than the
largest tax cut in American history — and no middle class tax increases.
My daddy’s heart attack nearly sent our family skidding over
a financial cliff. Today I think about all the kids this year who will face the
double blow of nearly losing a parent and then watching their lives turn upside
down as their families struggle to pay a growing stack of medical
bills.
I spent my career studying why so many hard-working middle
class families were going broke. For years, my research partners and I traveled
the country from bankruptcy courtroom to bankruptcy courtroom, talking directly
to people who’d seen their lives turned upside down. We interviewed lawyers,
judges, and families involved in bankruptcy cases. To save on printing costs,
we lugged around a Xerox machine (I nicknamed him “R2-D2”) to save money on
photocopying court records.
Eventually, we built the largest and most comprehensive
database of consumer bankruptcy data ever assembled. That first study surprised
us: we found that 90% of families went bankrupt because of job loss, medical
problems, and marital disruption. That finding was confirmed in 2007 by my
later research, which found that the number one reason
families were going broke was health care – and three quarters of
those who declared bankruptcy after an illness were people who already had
health insurance.
It’s been nearly thirty years since we published that first
groundbreaking study. And after all that time, here’s where we are: between
2013 and 2016, the number one reason families
went broke was still because of health care – even though 91.2% of Americans
had health insurance in 2016.
Families are getting crushed by health costs. Just look at
the numbers.
$12,378. That’s
how much an average family of four with employer-sponsored insurance personally
spent per year on employee premium contributions and out-of-pocket
costs in 2018. And this figure has increased each
year.
87 million. That’s
how many American adults in 2018 were uninsured or “underinsured” – meaning
either they have no insurance or their so-called health insurance is like a car
with the engine missing. It looks fine sitting on the lot, but inadequate if
they actually need to use it. Nearly one in every
two adults not currently on Medicare has no insurance or unreliable insurance.
37 millionAmerican
adults didn’t fill a prescription last year because of costs. 36 millionpeopleskipped
a recommended test, treatment, or follow-up because of costs. 40 millionpeople
didn’t go to a doctor to check out a health problem because of costs. 57 millionpeople
had trouble covering their medical bills.
Today, in 2019, in the United States of America, the
wealthiest nation in the history of the world, inadequate health coverage is
crushing the finances and ruining the lives of tens of millions of American
families.
I’m running for President based on a radical idea – calling
out what’s broken and speaking plainly about how to fix it.
All my plans start with our shared values. There are two
absolute non-negotiables when it comes to health care:
One: No American should ever, ever die or go bankrupt
because of health care costs. No more GoFundMe campaigns to pay for care. No
more rationing insulin. No more choosing between medicine and groceries.
Two: Every American should be able to see the doctors they
need and get their recommended treatments, without having to figure out who is
in-network. No for-profit insurance company should be able to stop anyone from
seeing the expert or getting the treatment they need.
Health care is a human right, and we need a system that
reflects our values. That system is Medicare for All.
Let’s be clear: America’s medical professionals are among
the best in the world. Health care in America is world-class. Medicare for All
isn’t about changing any of that.
It’s about fixing what is broken – how we pay for that care.
And when it comes to health care, what’s broken is obvious.
A fractured system that allows private interests to profiteer off the health
crises of the American people. A system that crushes our families with costs
they can’t possibly bear, forcing tens of millions to go without coverage or
to choose between basic
necessities like food, rent, and health – or bankruptcy.
We must fix this system. And over the long-term, the best
way to achieve that goal is to move from the system we have now to a system of
Medicare for All.
Medicare for All is about where doctors, hospitals, and care
providers send the bill – to a collection of private insurance companies who make billions off
denying people care or to the Medicare program for fair compensation. Under
Medicare for All, everyone gets the care they need, when they need it, and
nobody goes broke.
A key step in winning the public debate over Medicare for
All will be explaining what this plan costs – and how to pay for it. This task
is made a hundred times harder by powerful health insurance and drug companies
that makebillions of dollars
off the current bloated, inadequate system – and would be perfectly happy to
leave things exactly the way they are.
In 2017 alone, health industry players whose profiteering
would end under Medicare for All unleashed more than 2,500 lobbyists on
Washington. These industries will spendfreely on shady TV
ads and lobbying to convince people that a program that saves them massive
sums of money will somehow cost them money.
That being able to see the doctors and get the treatments they need regardless
of what their employer or
their insurance company thinks
is somehow actually a loss of choice. That a program that covers more services,
more people, and costs the American people less than what we
currently spend on health care is somehow too expensive.
Meanwhile, where are the 2,500 lobbyists for the people who
get sick and can’t pay their medical bills? Where are the hundreds of
millions being spent so that people who are trying to balance a budget around
rising health care premiums and growing deductibles and copays can make their
voices heard in Washington? Washington hears plenty from the giant health
insurance and giant drug industries, but not so much from families being
squeezed to the breaking point.
So let’s focus on families’ expenses and families’ health
care.
Start with the Medicare for All Act – which
I have cosponsored. The bill provides a detailed proposal for how to achieve
our end goal. But as economists and advocates have noted, the legislation
leaves open a number of key design decisions that will affect its overall cost,
and the bill does not directly incorporate specific revenue measures. While
much of this ambiguity results from the reasonable choice to delegate
significant implementation discretion to the Executive Branch, it has also
allowed opponents of
Medicare for All to make up their own price tags and try to scare middle class
families about the prospect of tax increases – despite the conclusions of expert after expert after expert that it is
possible to eventually move to a Medicare for All system that gives both high
quality coverage for everybody and dramatically lowers costs for middle class
families.
The best way to fight misinformation is with facts. That’s
why today, I’m filling in the details and releasing a plan that describes how I
would implement the long-term policy prescriptions of the Medicare for
All Act and how to pay for it.
Under my plan, Medicare for All will cover the full list of
benefits outlined in the Medicare for All Act, including long-term
care, audio, vision, and dental benefits. My plan will cover every single
person in the U.S., and includes common-sense payment reforms that make
Medicare for All possible without spending any more money overall than we spend
now.
My plan reflects careful, detailed analyses from key
national experts in health policy, tax policy, and economics. By filling in the
details, we can strip away all the misleading political attacks and make plain
the choice facing the American people:
Option 1: Maintain our current system, which will cost
the country $52 trillion over ten years. And under that current system
–
24 million people
won’t have coverage, and millions can’t get
long-term care.
63 million have
coverage gaps or substandard coverage that could break down if they actually
get sick. And millions who have
health insurance will end up going broke at least in part from medical costs
anyway.
Together, the American people will pay $11 trillion of
that bill themselves in the form of premiums, deductibles, copays,
out-of-network, and other expensive medical equipment and care they pay for
out-of-pocket – all while America’s wealthiest individuals and
biggest companies pay far
less in taxes than in other major countries.
Option 2: Switch to my approach to Medicare for All,
which would cost the country just under $52 trillion over ten
years. Under this new system –
Every person in America – all 331 million people
– will have full health coverage, and coverage for long-term care.
Everybody gets the doctors and the treatments they need,
when they need them. No more restrictive provider networks, no more insurance
companies denying coverage for prescribed treatments, and no more going broke
over medical bills.
The $11 trillion in
household insurance and out-of-pocket expenses projected under our current
system goes right back into the pockets of America’s working people. And we
make up the difference with targeted spending cuts, new taxes on giant corporations
and the richest 1% of Americans, and by cracking down on tax evasion and
fraud. Not one penny in middle-class tax increases.
That’s it. That’s the choice. A broken system that leaves
millions behind while costs keep going up and insurance companies keep sucking
billions of dollars in profits out of the system – or, for about the same
amount of money, a new system that drives down overall health costs and, on
average, relieves the typical middle class families of $12,400 in insurance
premiums and other related health care costs.
No middle class tax increases. $11 trillion in household
expenses back in the pockets of American families. That’s substantially larger than the
largest tax cut in American history.
Not every candidate for president supports moving to a
system of Medicare for All. Some who support Medicare for All will have
different ideas about how to finance and structure it. And everybody knows that
there must be a real transition. But you don’t get what you don’t fight for –
and my view is clear.
Every candidate who opposes my long-term goal of Medicare
for All should explain why the “choice” of private insurance plans is
more important than being able to choose the doctor that’s best for you without
worrying about whether they are in-network or not. Why it’s more important than
being able to choose the right prescription drug for you without worrying about
massive differences in copays. Why it’s more important than being able to
choose to start a small business or choose the job you want without worrying
about where your health care coverage will be coming from and how much it will
cost.
Every candidate who opposes my long-term goal of Medicare
for All should put forward their own plan to cover everyone, without costing
the country anything more in health care spending, and while putting $11
trillion back in the pockets of the American people by eliminating premiums and
virtually eliminating out-of-pocket costs. Or, if they are unwilling to do
that, they should concede that they think it’s more important to protect the
eye-popping profits of private insurers and drug companies and the immense
fortunes of the top 1% and giant corporations, rather than provide
transformative financial relief for hundreds of millions of American
families.
And every candidate who opposes my long-term goal of
Medicare for All should put forward their own plan to make sure every single
person in America can get high-quality health care and won’t go broke – and
fully explain how they intend to pay for it. Or, if they are unwilling to do
that, concede that their half-measures will leave millions behind.
And make no mistake – any candidate who opposes my long-term
goal of Medicare for All and refuses to answer these questions directly should
concede that they have no real strategy for helping the American people address
the crushing costs of health care in this country. We need plans, not
slogans.
THE COST OF MEDICARE FOR ALL
A serious conversation about how to pay for Medicare for All
requires, first, determining how much such a system would cost.
In recent years, several economists and think tanks have
attempted to estimate the cost of a single-payer system in the United States.
Those estimates consider how much our nation’s health care spending will change
over a ten year window, and range from a $12.5 trillion decrease
to a $7 trillion increase.
They also consider how much additional money the federal government would need
to fund this system, and those estimates range from a low of $13.5 trillion to a
high of $34 trillion over
ten years.
Because nobody can actually see the future, some of this
variation results from different assumptions about how parts of our health care
system might work differently under Medicare for All. But most of the
difference comes from policy choices. And while the Medicare for All
Act is clear about some of these choices – for example, generous
benefits, long-term care coverage, and virtually no out-of-pocket expenses – it
is silent on a number of really important ones. How much will we pay for
medical care and for prescription drugs? What do we do with the existing money
that states spend on Medicaid? How aggressively will we cut administrative
costs? Aggressive choices mean a lower total cost. Less aggressive choices
result in a higher total cost.
Serious candidates for president should speak plainly about
these issues and set out their plans for cost control – especially those who
are skeptical of Medicare for All. Because whether or not we make modest or
transformative changes to our health care system, cancer, diabetes, strokes,
Alzheimer’s, and Parkinson’s aren’t going to simply disappear. And without
leadership from the top, neither will the mushrooming cost of care in America
that’s bankrupting our families.
I’ve asked top experts to consider the long-term cost of my
plan to implement Medicare for All over ten years – Dr. Donald Berwick, one of
the nation’s top experts in health system improvement and who ran the Medicare
and Medicaid programs under President Obama; and Simon Johnson, the former
Chief Economist at the International Monetary Fund and a professor at MIT.
Their analysis begins with the assumptions of a recent study by the Urban
Institute and then examines how that cost estimate would change as certain new
key policy choices are applied. These experts conclude that my plan would slightly
reduce the projected amount of money that the United States would otherwise
spend on health care over the next 10 years, while covering everyone and giving
them vastly better coverage.
REDUCING INSURER ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS
The business model of private insurers is straightforward:
pay out less for medical care than they take in as premiums. This model is
located right in the center of our health care system, wasting huge amounts of
time and money documenting and arguing over who is owed what. Incredibly,
insurance companies spend a whopping $350 billion on
administration costs annually—and then, in turn, push huge additional
administrative costs onto hospitals, doctors, and millions of other health care
professionals in the from of complex billing—and then, in turn, drive up costs
incurred by employers as they attempt to navigate the complexity of providing
their employees with insurance.
Medicare for All will save money by bringing down the
staggering administrative costs for insurers in our current system. As the
experts I asked to evaluate my plan noted, private insurers had administrative
costs of 12% of premiums collected in 2017, while Medicare kept its
administrative costs down to 2.3%. My plan will ensure that Medicare for All
functions just as efficiently as traditional Medicare by setting net
administrative spending at 2.3%.
COMPREHENSIVE PAYMENT REFORM
In 2016, the United States spent nearly twice as
much on health care as ten high-income countries, and these costs have
been steadily rising for
decades, growing from 5.2%
of U.S. GDP in 1963 to 17.9% in 2017. But
instead of resulting in better health outcomes, Americans have the lowest
life expectancy of residents in high-income countries, the highest infant
mortality rate, and the highest obesity rates.
Why? As a group of health economists famously wrote, “It’s the prices,
stupid.”
Studieshave continued to
show that it’s not how much people use the health care system, often referred
to as “utilization,” but rather how much people pay that drives our high spending.
Compared to other high income countries, Americans simply pay more for health
care. We pay more for physicians and nurses. We pay more in administrative
costs. We pay more for prescription drugs.
A heart bypass surgery that costs nearly
$16,000 in the Netherlands costs an average of $75,000 in the United States. A
CT scan that costs $97 in Canada
costs an average of $896 here. And in the United States, hospitals can charge new parents
for holding their newborn after delivery.
Meanwhile, private equity firms fight bipartisan
legislation in Washington that might undermine the profitability of their
investments or prevent their hospitals from sending patients surprise bills.
And health care CEO salaries continue to soar. Between 2005 and 2015,
non-profit hospital CEO salaries increased by 93% to
an average of over $3 million, and last year, 62 health care CEOs raked in a
combined $1.1 billion – more
than the CDC spent on chronic disease prevention.
If we expect the American people to be able to afford health
care, we need to rein in these costs. Comprehensive payment reform, as part of
Medicare for All, will reduce this component of health care spending. Under my
approach, Medicare for All will sharply reduce administrative spending
and reimburse physicians and other non-hospital providers at current Medicare
rates. My plan will also rebalance rates in a budget neutral way that
increases reimbursements for primary care providers and lowers reimbursements
for overpaid specialties.
While private insurance companies pay higher rates, this system would be
expected to continue compensating providers at roughly the same overall rate
that they are currently receiving. Why? This is partially because providers
will now get paid Medicare rates for their Medicaid patients – a substantial
raise. But it’s also because providers spend an enormous amount of time on
billing and interacting with insurance companies that reduces their efficiency
and takes away from time with patients. Some estimate that hospitals will spend $210 billion on
average annually on these costs.
The nonpartisan Institute of Medicine estimates that
these wasted expenses account
for 13% of the revenue for physician practices, 8.5% for hospitals, and 10% for
other providers. Together, the improved efficiency will save doctors time and
money – helping significantly offset the revenue they will lose from
getting rid of higher private insurance rates.
Under my approach, Medicare for All will sharply
reduce administrative spending and reimburse hospitals at an average of 110% of
current Medicare rates, with appropriate adjustments for rural hospitals,
teaching hospitals, and other care providers with challenging cost structures.
In 2017, hospitals that treated Medicare patients were paid about 9.9% less than
what it cost to care for that patient. The increase I am proposing under
Medicare for All will cover hospitals’ current costs of care – but hospital
costs will also substantially decrease as a result of simpler administrative
processes, lower prescription drug prices, the end of bad debt from
uncompensated care, and more patients with insurance seeking care.
Of course, as Medicare currently recognizes,
not every provider situation is the same, and my Medicare for All program
maintains these base rate adjustments for geography and other factors. In
my plan for Rural
America, for example, I have committed to creating a new designation under
Medicare for rural hospitals due to the unique challenges health systems face
in rural communities. That’s why my plan allows for adjustments above the 110%
average rate for certain hospitals, like rural and teaching hospitals, and
below this amount for hospitals that are already doing fine with current
Medicare rates.Universal coverage will also have a
disproportionately positive effect on rural hospitals. Because people living in
rural counties are more likely to be
uninsured than people living in urban counties, these hospitals currently
provide a lot of uncompensated care. Medicare for All fixes that problem. And
I’ve previously laid out additional
investments to increase the number of Community Health Centers and grow our
health care workforce in rural and Native American communities, while cracking
down on anti-competitive mergers that lead to worse outcomes and higher costs
for rural communities.
We can also apply a number of common-sense, bipartisan
reforms that have been proposed for Medicare. Today, for example, insurers can
charge dramatically different prices for the exact same service based on where the service was
performed. Under Medicare for All, providers will receive the same
amount for the same procedure, saving hundreds of billions of dollars. We can
also make adjustments to things that we know Medicare currently pays too much
for – like post-acute care – by adjusting those payments down slightly while
accounting for the patient’s health status, bringing health care costs down
even more.
We will also shift payment rates so that we are paying for
better outcomes, instead of simply reimbursing for more services. We build on
the success of value-based reforms enabled by the Affordable Care Act,
including by instituting bundled payments for inpatient care and for 90 days of
post-acute care. Instead of paying providers for each individual service,
bundled payments reimburse providers for an entire “episode” of care and have
been shown to both improve outcomes and control costs. These
bundles help ensure that a patient’s different providers all communicate because
they are all tied to the same payment.
RESTORING HEALTH CARE COMPETITION
Health care consolidation has also contributed to
rising health care costs. One analysis found that over 90% of
metropolitan areas had health care provider markets that were either highly
concentrated or super concentrated in 2016. And despite the same kinds of empty
promises we see every time there’s industry consolidation – in this case, that
bigger hospitals would lead to better care – the data have not borne
this out. In fact, it’s theopposite: more
competition between providers creates incentives to improve care, and that
incentive will only increase under a
Medicare for All system where quality, not price, is the main differentiator in
the system.
Under Medicare for All, hospitals won’t be able to force
some patients to pay more because the hospital can’t agree with their insurance
company. Instead, because everyone has good insurance, providers will have to
compete on better care and reduced wait times in order to attract more
patients.
That’s why I will appoint aggressive antitrust enforcers to
the Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission and allow hospitals to
voluntarily divest holdings to restore competition to hospital markets. I’ve
also previously committed to
strengthening FTC oversight over health care organizations, including
non-profit hospitals, to crack down on anti-competitive behavior. And I will
direct my FTC to block all future hospital mergers unless the merging companies
can prove that the newly-merged entity will maintain or improve care.
REINING IN OUT-OF-CONTROL PRESCRIPTION DRUG COSTS
Americans pay more for prescription drugs than anyone in the
world – $333 billion in
2017 alone. Americans spent $1,220 per person on
average for prescription drugs, while the next highest spending country,
Switzerland, spent $963 per person. That’s not because Americans use more
prescription medication – it’s because lax laws have allowed pharmaceutical
companies to charge insurance companies and patients exorbitant rates. In a
now-infamous example, when Turing Pharmaceuticals purchased the rights to the
HIV medication Daraprim, the company raised the price of
this life-saving drug from $13.50 per pill to a stunning $750 per tablet overnight.
The price of insulin has skyrocketed, forcing
people to risk their lives by rationing. And as prices continue to rise, more
Americans are turning to Canada in
search of affordable prices.
Reining in prescription drug costs should be a top priority
for any President – and there’s no better way to do it than through Medicare
for All. My administration will use a suite of aggressive policy tools to set a
net savings target that will bring down Medicare prices for brand name
prescription drugs by 70% and prices for generics by 30%, with an initial focus
on more expensive drugs.
Under Medicare for All, the federal government would have
real bargaining power to negotiate lower prices for patients. I will adopt an
altered version of the mechanism outlined in the Lower Prescription
Drug Costs Now Act which leverages excise taxes to bring manufacturers
to the table to negotiate prices for both branded and generic drugs, with no
drug exceeding 110% of the average international market price, but removes the
limit of the number of drugs Medicare can negotiate for and eliminates the
“target price” so Medicare could potentially negotiate prices lower than other
countries.
If negotiations fail, I will use two tools – compulsory
licensing and public manufacturing – to allow my administration to ensure
patient access to medicines by either overriding the patent, as modeled in
the Medicare Negotiation and Competitive Licensing Act, or by
providing public funds to support manufacturing of these drugs, as modeled in
my Affordable Drug Manufacturing Act. Medicare for All will also
incentivize pharmaceutical companies to develop the drugs we need – like
antibiotics, cancer cures, and vaccines. And it’s not just about driving down
drug prices. Making sure patients get important drug therapies up front that
keep them healthy and cost a fraction compared to more severe treatment down
the line can save money overall. Insurers, who may only cover individuals for a
few years of their lives, see those investments in long-term health as a cost
they’ll never recoup – so they have a financial incentive to deny patients these
treatments. But Medicare for All covers each patient for their entire lifespan.
There’s no perverse incentive to deny the prescriptions they need today because
the long-term benefits to their health won’t benefit their current private
insurance company.
STEMMING THE GROWTH OF MEDICAL COSTS
Year after year, U.S. health spending has grown at rates
above GDP growth, reaching a whopping 17.9% of GDP in
2017. Experts believe the changes to prescription drug spending and value-based
payment systems that I’ve already outlined will bring growth rates in line with
U.S. GDP, which CBO projects to be an average of 3.9% for
the next decade. And if growth rates exceed this rate, I will use available
policy tools, which include global budgets, population-based budgets, and
automatic rate reductions, to bring it back into line.
REDIRECTING TAXPAYER-FUNDED HEALTH SPENDING
Through Medicaid and public health plans for state
employees, state and local governments play a significant role in financing
health care coverage in America. Under my approach to Medicare for All, we will
redirect $6 trillion in existing state and local government insurance spending
into the Medicare for All system. This is similar to the mechanism that the
George W. Bush Administration used to redirect Medicaid spending to the federal
government under the Medicare prescription drug program.Under this
maintenance-of-effort requirement, state and local governments will redirect
$3.3 trillion of what they currently spend to support Medicaid and the
Children’s Health Insurance Program and $2.7 trillion of what they currently
spend on employer contributions to private insurance premiums for their
employees into Medicare for All. Because we bring down the growth rate of
overall health spending, states will pay less than they would have without
Medicare for All. They’ll also have far more predictable budgets, resulting in
improved long-term planning for state and community priorities.
Together, these policy choices represent significant
reductions in health care spending over current levels. Compared to the
estimate by the Urban Institute, they will save over $7 trillion over ten
years, bringing the expected share of additional federal revenue to just over
$26 trillion for that period. After incorporating the $6 trillion we will
redirect from states to help fund Medicare, the experts conclude that total
new federal spending required to enact Medicare for All will be $20.5 trillion.
PAYING FOR MEDICARE FOR ALL
Medicare for All puts all health care spending on the
government’s books. But Medicare for All is about the same price as our current
path – and cheaper over time. That means the debate isn’t really about
whether the United States should pay more or less. It’s about who should
pay.
Right now, America’s total bill for health care is projected
to be $52 trillion for the next ten years. That money will come from four
places: the federal government, state governments, employers, and individuals
who need care. Under my approach to Medicare for All, most of these funding
sources will remain the same, too.
Existing federal spending on Medicare and Medicaid will help
fund Medicare for All.
Existing state spending on health insurance will continue in
the form of payments to Medicare – but states would be better off because
they’d have more long-term predictability, and they’d pay less over time
because these costs will grow more slowly than they do today.
Existing total private sector employer contributions to
health insurance will continue in the form of contributions to Medicare – but
employers would be better off because under the design of my plan, they’d pay
less than they would have otherwise.
Here’s the main difference: Individual health care
spending.
Over the next ten years, individuals will spend $11 trillion
on health care in the form of premiums, deductibles, copays, and out-of-pocket
costs. Under my Medicare for All plan, that amount will drop from $11
trillion to practically zero.
I asked top experts – Mark Zandi, the Chief Economist of
Moody’s Analytics; Betsey Stevenson, the former Chief Economist for the Obama
Labor Department; and Simon Johnson – to examine options for how we can make up
that $11 trillion difference. They conclude that it
can be done largely with new taxes on financial firms, giant corporations, and
the top 1% – and making sure the rich stop evading the taxes we already have.
That’s right: We don’t need to raise taxes on the
middle class by one penny to finance Medicare for All.
Here’s how it would work.
REPLACING EMPLOYER HEALTH SPENDING WITH A NEW EMPLOYER
MEDICARE CONTRIBUTION
Let’s start with a basic fact: American companies are
already paying a lot for health care for their employees. They are projected to
pay nearly $9 trillion over the next ten years, mostly on employer
contributions for employee health insurance and on health-related expenses for
employees under workers’ compensation and long-term disability. My idea is that
instead of these companies sending those payments to private insurance
companies, they would send payments to the federal government for Medicare in
the form of an Employer Medicare Contribution.
In fact, it’ll be a better deal than what they have
now: companies will pay less than they otherwise would have, saving
$200 billion over the next ten years.
To calculate their new Employer Medicare Contribution,
employers would determine what they spent on health care over the last few
years and divide that by the number of employees of the company in those years
to arrive at an average health care cost per employee at the company.
(Companies would count part-time employees towards the total based on the
number of hours they worked during a year.) Under the first year of Medicare
for All, employers would then take that average cost, adjust it upwards to
account for the overall increase in national health care spending, and multiply
it by their total number of employees that year. Their Employer Medicare
Contribution would be 98% of that amount – ensuring that every company
paying for health care today will pay less than they would have if they were
still offering their employees comparable private insurance.
A similar calculation would apply to pass-through entities,
like law firms or private equity funds, even though many of the people that
work there technically aren’t employees. People who are self-employed would be
exempt from making Employer Medicare Contributions unless they exceed an income
threshold.
Small businesses – companies with under 50 employees – would
be exempt from this requirement too if they aren’t paying for employee health
care today. When either new or existing firms exceed this employee threshold,
we would phase in a requirement that companies make Employer Medicare Contributions
equal to the national average cost of health care per employee for every
employee at that company. Merging firms would pay the weighted average cost of
health care per employee of the two firms that are merging.
Employers currently offering health benefits under a
collective bargaining agreement will be able to reduce their Employer Medicare
Contribution if they pass along those savings to workers in the form of
increased wages, pensions, or other collectively-bargained benefits. New
companies or existing companies who enter into a collective bargaining
agreement with their employees after the enactment of Medicare for All will be
able to reduce their Employer Medicare Contributions in the same way. Employers
can reduce their contribution requirements all the way down to the national
average health care cost per employee.
That way, my plan helps unions that have bargained
for good health care already, and creates a significant new incentive for
unionization generally by making collective bargaining appealing for both
workers and employers as a way of potentially reducing the employer’s Employer
Medicare Contributions.
Over time, an employer’s health care cost-per-employee would
be gradually shifted to converge at the average health care cost-per-employee
nationally. That helps make sure the system is fair but also gives
employers and employees time to adapt to the new system.
If we’re falling short of the $8.8 trillion revenue target
for the next ten years, we will make up lost revenue with a Supplemental
Employer Medicare Contribution requirement for big companies with extremely
high executive compensation and stock buyback rates.
There are a variety of ways to structure an employer
contribution to Medicare for All. This particular approach has the benefit of
helping American employers in a few ways:
Employers would collectively save $200 billion over the next
ten years.
Employers receive far more certainty about how their health
care costs will vary over time and affect their finances.
Small businesses – who often suffer when competing for
employees because they can’t afford to
offer health care coverage – would no longer be at a competitive disadvantage
against bigger businesses.
Employers can reduce their Employer Medicare Contribution by
supporting unionization efforts and negotiating with workers to provide better
wages and benefits – reducing costs and promoting collective bargaining at the
same time.
Because my plan holds health care cost growth to GDP levels,
businesses will have stable balance sheets that grow with the economy instead
of crowding out other priorities.
By asking employers to pay a little less than what they
are already projected to pay for health care, we can get almost halfway to
where we need to go to cover the cost of my Medicare for All plan.
Automatic Increases in Take-Home Pay
Medicare for All puts a whole lot of money back in the
American people’s pockets. One way it does that is by taking the share of
premiums employees are responsible for paying through employer-sponsored
insurance – that line on pay stubs each week or month that says “health
insurance” – and returning it to working people. Congratulations on the
raise!
And higher take-home pay for workers also means additional
tax revenue just from applying our existing taxes – approximately $1.15
trillion if we apply average effective tax rates.
Medicare for All saves people money in other ways too. With
Medicare for All, nobody would need to put money in Health Savings Accounts or
medical savings accounts to try and protect themselves against the unthinkable.
And because individual spending on premiums, deductibles, copays, and
out-of-pocket costs will basically disappear, the tax break for medical
expenses in excess of 10% of Adjusted Gross Income becomes irrelevant.
Together, those changes would generate another
$250 billion in revenue.
All told, another $1.4 trillion in funding for Medicare for
All is generated automatically through existing taxes on the enormous amount of
money that will now be returned to individuals’ pockets from moving to a
Medicare for All system with virtually no individual spending on health
care.
Here’s what that means: we can generate almost half
of what we need to cover Medicare for All just by asking employers to pay
slightly less than what they are projected to pay today, and through existing
taxes.
So where does the rest of the money come from that allows us
to eliminate premiums, deductibles, copays, and most out-of-pocket spending for
every American? Four sources: (1) better enforcement of our existing tax laws
so we stop letting people evade their tax obligations; (2) targeted taxes on
the financial sector, large corporations, and the top 1% of individuals; (3) my
approach to immigration; and (4) shutting down a slush fund for defense
spending.
CRACKING DOWN ON TAX EVASION AND FRAUD
The federal government has a nearly 15% “tax gap”
between what it collects in taxes what is actually owed because of systematic
under-enforcement of our tax laws, tax evasion, and fraud. If that 15% gap
persists for the next ten years, we will collect a whopping $7.7 trillion less in
federal taxes than the law requires. By investing in stronger
enforcement and adopting best practices on tax reporting, withholding, and
filing, experts predict that we can close the tax gap by a third – generating
about $2.3 trillion in additional federal revenue without a single new
tax.
A big part of our current tax gap problem is that we’re letting
wealthier taxpayers get away with paying less than what they owe. Studies show that the
wealthiest 5% of taxpayers misrepresent their income more frequently than the
bottom 90%.
The wealthy and their allies in Washington have worked
to slash the IRS
budget, leaving it without the resources it needs. The agency today has about the
same number of revenue agents as it did when the economy was one-seventh its
current size in the 1950s. And the IRS insists on targeting low-income
taxpayers rather than wealthy ones, even though the amount of revenue we can
recover from wealthy taxpayers is far more.
We know how to fix this problem. We can draw lessons from
what works in other countries with much lower tax gaps and rely on the
recommendations of tax experts. Here’s a game plan:
Substantially increase funding for the IRS, including the
Criminal Investigation Division. The Treasury Department estimated in its
Fiscal Year 2017 budget request that every $1 invested in IRS enforcement
brings in nearly $6 in additional revenue – not even including an indirect
deterrence effect three times that amount.
Expand third-party reporting and withholding requirements.
Research shows that third-party reporting and withholding cuts down on the
tax misreporting rate substantially.
Strengthen enforcement of the Foreign Account Tax Compliance
Act (FATCA). FATCA requires foreign financial institutions to report the
holdings and income of U.S. taxpayers, but the IRS is generally not systematically matching these
reports to individual tax returns. We also don’t hold foreign financial firms
truly accountable for ignoring their reporting obligations. Automatically
matching FATCA reports to tax returns and instituting sanctions for
non-compliant foreign financial institutions would help narrow the tax gap.
Simplify tax filing obligations in line with other
comparable countries with lower tax gaps, including by adopting my Tax Filing Simplification Act and
using “smart returns” to
improve honest reporting.
Redirect enforcement resources away from low-income taxpayers towards
high-income taxpayers.
Increase the nonfiler compliance program, strengthen
reporting requirements for international income, use existing currency
transaction reports to enforce cash income compliance, and increase reporting
requirements for virtual- or crypto-currencies, as suggested by the
Treasury Department’s Inspector General.
Allow employees who
disclose tax evasion and abuse to use the protections of the False Claims Act
and other whistleblower protections.
The experts who reviewed these ideas estimated that if we
implemented them, we could close the tax gap by one-third from 15% to 10%,
bringing us closer to the tax gap in countries like the United Kingdom (5.6%). That will
produce another $2.3 trillion in net federal revenue – without imposing a
single new tax.
TARGETED TAXES ON THE FINANCIAL SECTOR, LARGE
CORPORATIONS, AND THE TOP 1%
We can generate a whole lot of the remaining revenue we need
for Medicare for All just by eliminating bad incentives in our current tax
system and asking those who have done really well in the last few decades to
pay their fair share.
Let’s start with the financial sector. It’s been more than
ten years since the 2008 financial crisis, and while a lot of families
are still dealing with
the aftereffects, the financial sector is making record, eye-popping profits.
Meanwhile, the risk of another financial crisis remains unacceptably high. By
imposing targeted taxes and fees on financial firms, we can generate needed
revenue and also make our financial system safer and more secure.
For example, a small tax on financial transactions –
one-tenth of one percent on the sale of bonds, stocks, or derivatives – would
generate about $800 billion in
revenue over the next ten years. The tax would be assessed on and
collected from financial firms, and would likely have little to no effect on
most investors. Instead, according to experts, the tax could
help decrease what Americans pay in fees for their investments and reduce the
size of relatively unproductive parts of the financial sector.
We can also impose a fee on big banks that encourages them
to take on fewer liabilities and reduce the risk they pose to the financial
system. A small fee that applies only to the forty or so largest banks in the
country would generate an additional $100 billion over
the next ten years – while making our financial system more safe and
resilient.
Next, we can make some basic changes to ensure that large
corporations pay their fair share and to fix some fundamental problems with our
current approach that actually encourage companies to shift jobs and investment
overseas. These changes will generate an estimated $2.9 trillion over
the next ten years.
For instance, our current tax system lets companies deduct
the cost of certain investments they make in assets faster than those assets
actually lose value. That means that if a company buys a machine for a million
dollars, it gets to deduct a million dollars from its taxes that same year –
even if the machine only loses $100,000 in value a year. Letting the company
write off the extra $900,000 all at once is like giving them an interest-free loan from
the government.
That might be worth it if the company responded to this tax
break by investing more and building out their businesses. But the datasuggest this isn’t
happening because companies don’t actually value these tax deferrals as much as
policymakers assume. Companies are mostly making the same investments they
would’ve made anyways – sometimes with small changes in timing – and getting a
write-off in exchange. Some experts even suggest that
accelerated expensing could induce less domestic investment,
not more.
That’s why I’m proposing to get rid of this loophole. Under
my plan, businesses will still write off the depreciation of their assets –
they’ll just do it in a way that more accurately reflects the actual loss in
value. This would generate $1.25 trillion over
ten years.
We can also stop giant multinational corporations from
calling themselves American companies while sheltering their profits in foreign
tax havens to avoid paying their share for American investments.
Currently, a U.S. multinational corporation can make
billions in profits and attribute it to a company it set up in a tax haven like
the Cayman Islands, which has no corporate taxes. The Trump tax bill claimed to
address that problem by creating a global minimum tax rate for corporations,
but that minimum tax – the result of heavy lobbying by
multinationals – is too low and easily gamed. While Trump and congressional
Republicans claimed their
minimum tax would keep companies from shifting profits to tax havens and limit
offshoring, the opposite is happening. The current
approach bothencourages companies
to shift their profits to tax havens and actually incentivizes American
companies to outsource their operations overseas.
That’s why I’m proposing to institute a country-by-country minimum
tax on foreign earnings of 35% – equal to a restored top corporate tax rate for
U.S. firms – without permitting corporations to defer those payments. Under
my plan, corporations would have to pay the difference between the minimum tax
and the rate in the countries where they book their profits. For example, an
American corporation booking a billion dollars in profits in the Cayman
Islands, taxed at 0% there, would need to pay the federal government a 35% tax
rate – the difference between the new minimum rate (35%) and the foreign rate
(0%) – on the billion dollars in profits.
My plan would also collect America’s fair share of profits
that foreign companies make by selling their products to Americans. Today, we
have a “global tax deficit”: companies that sell their goods abroad don’t have
to pay the extra taxes that they would have to pay if they were subject to a
minimum effective tax rate in each country they operated in. Making U.S. firms
pay a country-by-country minimum tax effectively collects their whole global
tax deficit – but foreign companies should have to pay their fair share, too.
That’s why I’m proposing that the U.S. collect the fraction of this global tax
deficit that corresponds to the percentage of that company’s sales in the U.S.
In other words, if a foreign company should owe an additional $1 billion in
taxes if it were subject to a country-by-country minimum tax, the U.S. would
collect a fraction of that $1 billion based on the amount of sales that company
made in the United States.
Together, the country-by-country minimum tax and the
taxation of foreign firms based on their domestic sales would result in an
additional $1.65 trillion in
revenue.
Finally, we can raise another $3 trillion over ten years by
asking the top 1% of households in America to pay a little more.
The tax burden on ultra-millionaires and billionaires is
less than half that of working families in the United States. In 2019, the
bottom 99% of families will pay 7.2% of their wealth
in taxes, while the top 0.1% of households will pay just 3.2%. My Ultra-Millionaire Tax, a
2-cent tax on the wealth of fortunes above $50 million, tackles this head on.
Under this tax, the top 0.1% – the wealthiest 75,000 Americans – would have to
pitch in two cents for every dollar of net worth above $50 million and three
cents for every dollar on net worth over $1 billion. With this version of the
Ultra-Millionaire Tax in place, the tax burden on the wealthiest households
would increase from 3.2% to 4.3% of total
wealth – better, but still below the 7.2% that the bottom 99% are projected to
pay.
Today, I’m going one step further. By asking
billionaires to pitch in six cents on each dollar of net worth above $1
billion, we can raise an additional $1 trillion in revenue and further close
the gap between what middle-class families pay as a percentage of their wealth
and what the top one-tenth of one percent pay.
Yes, billionaires will have to pay a little more, but they
will still likely pay less than what they would earn just from putting their
assets into an index fund and doing nothing. The average annual rate of return
of the S&P 500 has regularly topped 10%. And billionaires
have access to the kinds of fancy investment opportunities that can generate
even higher returns on average. Put it this way – should we ask billionaires to
pitch in an extra three cents on every dollar above $1 billion, or force
middle-class families to bear another $1 trillion in health care costs?
We can also change the way the government taxes investment
income for the top 1%. Today, taxes are only assessed on capital gains when securities are sold.
That means wealthy investors can put their money in the stock market, see it
grow, and not pay a dime in
taxes on those earnings unless or until it is taken out of the market. Under
the current system, they can then pass along those shares to their heirs when
they die and their heirs will be able to pay even less when
they choose to sell.
I’ve already proposed closing that loophole for how capital
gains are treated when shares are passed on to heirs. But we can go a step
further. Under a “mark-to-market” system for
the wealthiest 1% of households, we will tax capital gains income (excluding
retirement accounts) annually, rather than at the time of sale, and raise the
rates on capital gains to match the tax rates for labor income. Individuals
would still only pay taxes on gains and could use current losses to offset
future taxes.
Under this system, investment income will no longer be
treated differently than labor income for the top 1% of households.
Ultra-millionaires and billionaires won’t be able to earn income on giant
fortunes year after year without paying a penny in taxes. Andwe
can raise another $2 trillion over
ten years to pay for my Medicare for All plan.
IMMIGRATION REFORM
I support immigration reform that’s consistent with our
values, including a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants and
expanded legal immigration consistent with my principles. That’s not only the
right thing to do – it also increases federal revenue we can dedicate to
Medicare for All as new people come into the system and pay taxes. Based on
CBO’s analysis of the 2013 comprehensive immigration reform bill, experts
project that immigration reform would generate an additional $400 billion in
direct federal revenue.
REINING IN DEFENSE SPENDING
Since the attacks of 9/11, the United States has
appropriated $2 trillion to fund
combat and counterterrorism operations around the world via the Overseas
Contingency Operations fund, or OCO. On average this spending has amounted
to $116 billion per
year – and in total, an amount equivalent to nearly 10 percent of all
federal discretionary spending over that same time period.
Republicans –
including the President’s current Chief of Staff – and Democrats alike
agree that OCO is a budget gimmick that masks the true impact of war spending.
The emergency supplemental funding mechanism was never intended to fund the
costs of long-scale, long-term operations outside of the normal appropriations
process. And in recent years, OCO has also been used to fund so-called “base”
requirements unrelated to the wars, outside of the Budget Control Act caps – in
effect acting as a slush fund for increased Pentagon spending. And as
everything from more F-35s to massive bombs never
used in combat have migrated into the OCO account, the Department of Defense
has been spared from having to prioritize or live
within its means. It’s not just bad budgetary practice – it’s wasteful
spending.
I’ve called out this
slush fund for what it is. I’ve also called for an end to endless
combat engagements in places like Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria, and to
responsibly bring our combat troops home from these nations. These open-ended
commitments are not necessary to advance American foreign policy or
counterterrorism interests, their human cost has been staggering, and their
financial cost has created a drag on our economy by diverting money better
invested in critical domestic priorities.
I’ve also called to reduce defense spending overall.
The Pentagon budget will cost more this year than
everything else in the discretionary budget put together. That’s wrong, and
it’s unsustainable. We need to identify which programs actually benefit American
security in the 21st century, and which programs merely line the pockets of
defense contractors – then pull out a sharp knife and make some cuts.
As I have said repeatedly, under my Medicare for All plan,
costs will go up for the very wealthy and big corporations, and costs will go
down for middle-class families. I will not sign a bill that violates these
commitments. And as my plan to pay for Medicare for All makes clear, we can
meet these commitments without a tax increase on the middle class – and, in
fact, without any increase in income taxes at all.
America’s middle class is facing a crisis. For a generation,
wages have remained largely flat while family costs have exploded. I’ve spent
decades sounding the alarm about it. I’m running for President to fix it. That
means doing whatever we can to reduce the overall strain on family budgets.
Medicare for All can be a huge part of the solution. When
fully implemented, my approach to Medicare for All would mark one of the
greatest federal expansions of middle class wealth in our history. And
if Medicare for All can be financed without any new taxes on the middle class,
and instead by asking giant corporations, the wealthy, and the well-connected
to pay their fair share, that’s exactly what we should do.
ACHIEVING MEDICARE FOR ALL
Of course, moving to this kind of system will not be easy and
will not happen overnight. This is why every serious proposal for Medicare for
All contemplates a significant transition period.
In the weeks ahead, I will propose a transition plan that
will specifically address how I would use this time to begin providing
immediate financial relief to struggling families, rein in out-of-control
health care costs, increase coverage, and save lives. My transition plan will
take seriously and address substantively the concerns of unions, individuals
with private insurance, hospitals, people who work for private health insurers,
and medical professionals who worry about what a new system will mean for them.
It will also grapple directly with the entrenched political and economic
interests that would spend freely, as they havethroughout modern
American history, to influence politicians and
try to frighten the
American people into rejecting a plan that would save them thousands of dollars a year on
premiums and deductibles while making sure they can always see the health care
providers they need with false claims and scare tactics.
But there’s a reason former President Barack Obama has called Medicare for
All a good idea. There’s a reason the American people support it. It’s
because when it comes to the cost of health care, we are in the middle of a
full-blown crisis.
We are paying twice as much as
any other major nation for care – even as tens of millions lack
coverage, and even as family after family sees its finances destroyed by a
health issue. And the American people know that in the
long-term, a simple system that covers everybody, provides the care they need
when they need it, puts $11 trillion back in their pockets and uses all of the
public’s leverage to keep costs as low as possible is the best option for their
family budgets and for the health of their loved ones.
As President, I’ll fight to get it done.
Read the plan here
Read expert letter on cost estimate of Medicare for All here
Read expert letter on financing Medicare for All here
Calculator here
Vice President Joe Biden, candidate for the 2020 candidate
for President, issued a statement criticizing Trump’s “lack of strategy to
secure our nation against terrorist threats.”
The
successful operation to take Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi off the battlefield was a win
for American national security. And it’s an important reminder of the skill and
commitment of our military, intelligence, and national security professionals.
They are beyond compare.
I’m glad President Trump ordered the mission. But as more details of the raid
emerge, it’s clear that this victory was not due to Donald Trump’s leadership.
It happened despite his ineptitude as Commander-in-Chief.
It’s been reported that Trump’s reckless decision to withdraw our troops from
northern Syria forced the planning for the mission to be accelerated and the
timeline compressed. His erratic behavior made it harder and more dangerous for
the special forces carrying it out. And they had to fly through territory that
is now hostile to the U.S., taking fire along the way—including territory we
controlled just weeks ago.
Trump has also made it less likely we will be able to successfully replicate a
mission like this in the future. The operation leveraged a limited presence of
U.S. counterterrorism capabilities in the region, which he keeps trying to
dismantle. It was made possible by the work of intelligence professionals, who
he has relentlessly attacked. It relied on allies he has belittled, undermined,
and in some cases betrayed and abandoned.
Trump’s total disregard for our alliances and partnerships endanger any future
intelligence sharing or cooperation. In fact, the first people he saw fit to
thank after our brave troops were the Russians and the Iranian-backed Syrian
government. All this makes us less safe and less prepared for whatever
terrorist leader emerges next.
And make no mistake, the threat is not gone. One man does not constitute an
organization, and Trump has opened a path for ISIS to reconstitute itself under
new leadership by withdrawing troops from the region. In doing so, he has given
up our best asset to keep the pressure on ISIS during a dangerous period of
organizational chaos. His fixation on keeping troops in the region to defend
the oil fields betrays his true priorities—profit seeking—and will surely serve
as a tool for future terrorist recruitment. And with his decision to slash
humanitarian assistance to the region, it’s more likely that ISIS will be able
to insinuate itself back into areas where we had successfully rooted it
out.
There is a difference between deploying hundreds of thousands of U.S. troops to
the Middle East indefinitely, and keeping small numbers of special operations
and intelligence assets in place to maintain local partnerships and keep
pressure on terrorists. That’s the smart, strong, and sustainable strategy we
pioneered during the Obama-Biden Administration. That’s the effective policy we
put in place, which laid the groundwork to end ISIS’s territorial caliphate.
That’s the way we built the very relationships that ultimately delivered this
victory.
Now, Trump wants to tear it all down and walk away.
He has no strategy for securing our nation against terrorist threats. He has no
strategy for anything. Every day that Donald Trump directs American national
security is a dangerous day for the United States.
The vigorous contest of
Democrats seeking the 2020 presidential nomination has produced excellent
policy proposals to address major issues. Senator Bernie Sanders, long a
crusader to end corporate influence and corruption in the political system,
unveiled his “Money Out of Politics” Plan. He has expanded upon it to
detail how he would end corporate greed and corruption, ensure corporations pay
their fair share of taxes and give workers an ownership stake in companies
where they work, end corrupt corporate mergers and break up monopolies. This is
from the Sanders campaign:
WASHINGTON – Sen. Bernie Sanders unveiled a plan to end corporate greed and corruption, ensure corporations pay their fair share of taxes, give workers an ownership stake in the companies where they work, end corrupt corporate mergers and break up monopolies.
“For more than 40 years, the largest and most profitable corporations in America have rigged the tax code and our economy to redistribute wealth and income to the richest and most powerful people in this country,” said Sen. Sanders. “The American people are saying enough is enough. They are sick and tired of companies like Amazon, General Motors and Chevron making billions in profits, but paying nothing in federal income taxes. Under this plan, we will demand that profitable corporations pay their fair share of taxes. We will give workers an ownership stake in the companies they work for. And we will start breaking up some of the largest and most powerful companies in America to lower prices for consumers, help small business and make markets competitive.”
Bernie’s plan, the boldest and most comprehensive corporate accountability plan in modern presidential history, would bring an end to the era of unchecked corporate greed and return power to American workers.
As President Bernie would:
Give
Workers an Ownership Stake in Corporate America and End Corporate Greed
Give
workers 20 percent of shares in their companies and 45 percent of the seats on
their corporate boards.
Ensure
all workers and savers have the right to vote the shares they own.
Give
workers the right to purchase factories or offices they are employed in from
companies that decide to put them up for sale or shut them down.
Establish
a U.S. Employee Ownership Bank to provide low-cost financing to employees who
want to start their own businesses.
Make
large-scale stock buybacks illegal.
Require
companies to provide shares of stock to workers who lose their jobs as a result
of outsourcing or automation.
Break Up
Monopolies and Make Markets Competitive
Review
all Trump administration mergers and undo improper mergers.
Reinvigorate
the Federal Trade Commission to break up conglomerates and monopolies and
institute clear, strong merger guidelines.
Establish
caps for vertical mergers, horizontal mergers, and total market share.
Ban
mandatory arbitration clauses and non-compete clauses that trap workers in
low-wage jobs and strip them of their legal rights.
Make
Large Corporations Pay Their Fair Share of Taxes
Repeal
all of Trump’s corporate tax breaks
Restore
the corporate tax rate to 35% from 21%.
Ensure
that corporations pay 35% by eliminating virtually all corporate tax breaks and
loopholes.
Eliminate
the use of offshore tax havens by:
Requiring
corporations with revenues over $25 million to publicly disclose significant
portions of their tax returns and country by country financial information
including earnings, financial accounts, and tax payments in other
countries.
Eliminating
the 20% deduction on pass-through business income and requiring large
pass-through businesses to be subject to corporate taxes.
If this plan had been in effect last
year, instead of paying nothing in federal income taxes:
Amazon
would have paid up to $3.8 billion in taxes.
Delta
would have paid up to $1.8 billion in taxes.
Chevron
would have paid up to $1.6 billion in taxes.
GM would
have paid up to $1.5 billion in taxes.
The top ten percent of Americans today
own an estimated 97 percent of all capital income, including capital
gains, corporate dividends, and interest payments. Since the 2008 Wall Street
crash, 49 percent of all new income generated in America has gone to the top
one percent. The three wealthiest people in our country now own more wealth
than the bottom 160 million Americans. And the richest family in America
– the Walton family, which inherited about half of Walmart’s stock – is worth
$200 billion and owns more wealth than the bottom 42 percent of the American
people.
With Attorney General
William Barr facing criticism for his direct involvement in extorting Ukraine
to engage in a bogus investigation intended to harm Democratic candidate for
2020 Vice President Joe Biden and opening a criminal investigation into the
intelligence officers in the CIA and FBI who initially investigated and exposed
Russian meddling in the 2016 Election and contacts with the Trump campaign,
Senator Elizabeth Warren’s proposals unveiled earlier this month to restore
trust in the federal judiciary are particularly noteworthy in light of
widespread concern that the judiciary has been politicized. This is from the
Warren campaign:
Charlestown, MA – Senator Elizabeth Warren
detailed how she will strengthen the ethical integrity and impartiality of the
federal judiciary. Her plan will ensure that judges do not hear cases where
they have conflicts of interests, strengthen our nation’s ethics rules for
judges, and ensure accountability for judges who violate these rules.
Under her plan, investigations into judicial misconduct
could continue even when a judge resigns from office or is elevated to the Supreme
Court. This provision would allow the judiciary to reopen the investigations
into Alex Kozinski, Maryanne Trump Barry, Brett Kavanaugh, and any other judge
who benefited from this loophole.
In December 2017, more than 15 female law clerks alleged that Ninth Circuit Judge Alex Kozinski committed sexual misconduct and created a “hostile, demeaning and persistently sexualized environment” for employees. According to their accounts, Kozinski inappropriately touched female clerks and showed them pornography in his chambers.
It wasn’t the first time he
was accused of misconduct. But what did Judge Kozinski do when the judiciary
started to investigate? He retired.
And because of inadequate ethics laws, the investigation
ended immediately. Meanwhile, Kozinski continues to collect his
taxpayer-funded pension for life.
The Kozinski case is just one example of the broader problem
of accountability in the federal judiciary.
Justices Clarence Thomas and Antonin Scalia did not recuse themselves
from Citizens United v. FEC, the case that opened an avalanche of money in
politics to the benefit of people like the Koch brothers, who invited the pair to multiple
all-expenses paid retreats.
The basic premise of our legal system is that every person
is treated equally in the eyes of the law – including judges. Our judiciary
only functions properly when it lives up to this promise, and it risks eroding
its legitimacy when the American people lose faith that
judges are ethical and fair-minded.
That’s why today I’m announcing my plan to strengthen the
ethical integrity and impartiality of the federal judiciary. It’s time to
ensure that judges do not hear cases where they have conflicts of interests,
strengthen our nation’s ethics rules for judges, and ensure accountability for
judges who violate these rules.
Recusing Judges and Supreme Court Justices with Conflicts
of Interest.
In 2011, Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals Judge James
Hill ruled in favor of Johnson &
Johnson in a case brought by a woman who suffered from a
malfunctioning medical implant. He did so while owning as much as $100,000 in
the company’s stock. The same judge ruled on three other cases involving
companies in which he owned stock – and ruled in favor of the company each
time. Judge Hill, unfortunately, is not alone: one study identified 24 cases in
which judges owned stock in a company that appeared before them in court.
A basic principle of our federal judicial system is that
judges make decisions as disinterested, impartial observers – stepping aside
when they may not be able to decide cases objectively. This principle should
also bar judges from being the final arbiter of whether they can be objective
in the first place.
It’s time for fundamental reform:
Prohibit judges from deciding for themselves whether they
should recuse from a case due to a conflict. When a litigant believes
that a judge cannot consider a case in an unbiased manner, the litigant may
file a recusal motion asking for another judge to decide the case instead. But
our current system gives judges enormous discretion to decide for themselves whether
to grant recusal motions where their objectivity is challenged. My plan will
instead empower the Chief Judges within regional circuits to establish a
binding recusal process. It will also require courts to publish its reasons any
time judges are disqualified from a case without a recusal motion, including
when judges voluntarily recuse or when an automated conflict-checking
software disqualifies them.
Ban judges from owning or trading individual
stocks. It’s not enough for judges like James Hill to recuse in cases
with conflicts of interest – my plan would eliminate the appearance of
impropriety by banning federal judges from owning or trading individual stocks,
while allowing them to instead invest in conflict-free mutual funds or open new
investment accounts managed by the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board.
Law firms follow rules like these to avoid the appearance of financial
conflicts with the interests of their clients. Judges should certainly be held
to the same standard.
Require Supreme Court Justices to provide written
explanations of recusal decisions when a litigant challenges for recusal. If
a Supreme Court Justice has a conflict of interest, they are ethically
obligated to recuse themselves from considering a case, but the law allows them
to deny recusal motions without even providing an
explanation. Under my plan, when a party asks for a Justice to
recuse, the Judicial Conference will issue a non-binding, public advisory
opinion with its recommendation – and the challenged Justice will publicly
explain their final recusal decision in writing. Because all recusal decisions
will be a matter of public record, future litigants will understand these
conflicts and know when to bring recusal decisions of their own.
Strengthening Ethics Rules for All Judges.
Every lawyer in America is subject to ethics rules. Federal
judges are generally subject to a Code of Conduct that
applies the most basic of these principles to members of the judiciary.
That means that Supreme Court Justices can go on trips with litigants,
like Justice Scalia did when he heard a case involving Vice President
Cheney after going hunting with him –
without an independent ruling on whether it was proper to do so. It means
Justices can receive large speaking fees and all-expenses paid trips to fancy
conferences, like Justice Thomas did when the Federalist Society, an extremist
right-wing legal group, flew him to Palm Springs and
paid for meals and transportation for four days. And it means that someone
like Brett Kavanaugh can
face accusations of lying to Congress – without a full and fair
investigation by the judiciary. These actions could violate
the Judicial Code of Conduct,
but because unlike all other federal judges these Justices are not bound by a
code of ethics, they are immune from any judicial investigations into
misconduct.
We must act now to fix this – and that means strengthening
the Code of Conduct for all judges.
Here’s where I would start:
Extend the Code of Conduct to Supreme Court Justices. When
Judge Kavanaugh was elevated to the Supreme Court, 83 ethics complaints that had been
lodged against him were dismissed – and because the Supreme
Court is not covered by a Code of Conduct, no procedure exists to file new
complaints. Questions are oftenraised about the
behavior of Supreme Court Justices, such as Justice Thomas’s 13 years of
financial disclosures that failed to list $690,000
in payments to his wife from the Heritage Foundation, a right-wing judicial
activist group – but these actions are beyond the scope of current rules.
Enough. My plan applies the Code of Conduct for United States
Judges to Supreme Court Justices – and places the Judicial
Conference in charge of violations. My plan also allows individuals to file
complaints against Supreme Court Justices, just like they can against all other federal judges.
Strengthen the Code of Conduct to ensure a fair and
impartial judiciary. When judges accept gifts or financial
contributions from interested parties, public trust in a fair-minded judiciary
erodes. My plan strengthens the Code of Conduct so that judges generally cannot
receive paid speaking fees or
all-expenses-paid trips from outside organizations. To ensure that
judges continue to interact with the public without the appearance of
impropriety, my plan also establishes a modest fund to help cover reasonable
expenses.
Real Enforcement for Judicial Misconduct.
When a lawyer violates the ethics rules, their state’s
judiciary can investigate their behavior and impose disciplinary punishment,
including stripping their licence to practice law.
But the panels of judges
that investigate judicial conduct complaints have limited disciplinary power beyond
asking the judge to voluntarily resign or asking the House of Representatives
to consider impeachment proceedings – a request the House is free to
ignore.
It’s time for real accountability for judges. Here’s how
we’ll start:
Continue investigations into judicial misconduct even
when a judge resigns from office or is elevated to the Supreme Court.
In 2016, Federal District Court Judge Walter Smith faced a judicial
investigation into allegations of sexual harassment of
court employees and drinking on the
bench while presiding over cases. Judge Smith resigned, and the complaints
filed against him were dismissed.
My plan extends the authority of the Judicial Conference to former judges so
that individuals under investigation cannot simply resign from the bench to
avoid accountability. This provision would allow the judiciary to reopen the
investigations into Alex Kozinski, Maryanne Trump-Barry, Brett Kavanaugh, and any
other judge who benefited from this loophole.
Provide strong disciplinary authority to judicial ethics
watchdogs, including the ability to strip non-vested taxpayer-funded pensions
from judges.
Under today’s rules, even if retired judges could be investigated, the Judicial
Conference has no meaningful tools to discipline them. American taxpayers are
paying for the more than $180,000-per-year retirement pay of Judge Smith, Judge
Kozinski, Judge Trump-Barry, and several other judges who left office during
investigations into their behavior. We need to restore real accountability
within our judiciary.
That’s why my plan provides disciplinary tools to the Judicial Councils and
their parent organization, the Judicial Conference, including the ability to
strip sitting or retired judges of their non-vested pension benefits by making
retirement pay for new judges explicitly contingent on the absence of serious
misconduct. In addition to strengthening these disciplinary tools, my
administration will also work to prevent judicial misconduct against employees
and law clerks by supporting strong climate surveys,
questionnaires to court employees about the work environment in our federal
courts, to help the judiciary understand how to improve the culture within our
courts.
Create a new, fast-track impeachment process for federal
judges who commit impeachable offenses.
The Constitution reserves the impeachment of judges for only the most egregious offenses. But
when a judge commits a serious offense or ethical violation, we need to make
sure that there is a prompt investigation – and that Congress takes action.
It’s time to fast-track the process for judges who commit impeachable offenses.
My plan would strengthen the process to certify
that a judge may have committed an impeachable offense, and would ensure that
any impeachment referrals will trigger a series of automatic rules under which
the House Judiciary Committee will conduct a thorough investigation and vote
without unnecessary delay. These reforms will ensure that judges who commit
serious, impeachable offenses will more likely be promptly removed from office.
These changes will not only allow us to ensure
accountability for bad actors, including reopening inquiries into the conduct
of offenders like Brett Kavanaugh. They will also hold the vast majority of
judges who act in good faith to the highest ethical standards, and in the
process, begin to restore accountability and trust in a fair and impartial
federal judiciary.
The vigorous contest of Democrats seeking the 2020 presidential
nomination has produced excellent policy proposals to address major issues. Senator
Bernie Sanders, long a crusader to end corporate influence and corruption in
the political system, unveiled his “Money
Out of Politics” Plan. This is from the Sanders campaign:
WASHINGTON – Sen. Bernie Sanders unveiled his Money Out of Politics Plan, a comprehensive proposal to end all corporate influence and corruption in the political system.
“Our grassroots-funded campaign is proving every single day that you don’t need billionaires and private fundraisers to run for president,” Sanders said. “We’ve received more contributions from more individual contributors than any campaign in the history of American politics because we understand the basic reality that you can’t take on a corrupt system if you take its money. Working people all over the country are responding to that message and demanding a political revolution through their small dollar donations. When we win the Democratic nomination and defeat Donald Trump, we will transform our political system by rejecting the influence of big corporate money.”
Sanders’ plan will end the greed-fueled, corrupt corporate influence over elections, national party convention, and presidential inaugurations.
In
2016, seventeen donors gave three-quarters of the Democratic National
Convention funding, with large corporations like Comcast, Bank of America and
Facebook donating millions. At the 2013 Presidential inauguration, corporate
donors including, AT&T, Microsoft, and Chevron donated millions.
As
the Democratic nominee, Sanders would ban all corporate contributions to the
Democratic Party Convention and all related committees, and as President he
would be ban all corporate donations for inaugural events and cap individual
donations at $500.
Additionally,
Sanders’ plan would abolish the now-worthless FEC and replace it with the
Federal Election Administration, a true law enforcement agency originally
proposed by former Senators John McCain and Russ Feingold.
Other
key elements Sanders’ Money Out of Politics Plan include:
Enacting mandatory public financing laws for all federal
elections.
Updating
and strengthen the Federal Election Campaign Act to return to a system of
mandatory public funding for National Party Conventions.
Passing
a Constitutional Amendment that makes clear that money is not speech and
corporations are not people.
Ending
the influence of corporations at the DNC.
Banning
donations from federal lobbyists and corporations.
Institute
a lifetime lobbying ban for National Party Chairs and Co-Chairs
Banning
Chairs and Co-Chairs from working for entities with federal contract, that are
seeking government approval for projects or mergers, or can reasonably be
expected to have business before Congress in the future.
Banning
advertising during presidential primary debates.
Instituting
a lifetime lobbying ban for former members of Congress and senior
staffers.