Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
In Final Debate, Clinton Accuses Trump Of Using 'Scare Rhetoric' On Abortion
The two candidates also tangled over abortion rights. After initially declining to flatly say whether he would support overturning Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion, Mr. Trump conceded that the justices he would appoint to the court would do just that. 鈥淚f we put another two or perhaps three justices on, that鈥檚 really what will happen,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檒l happen automatically in my opinion.鈥 (Healy and Martin, 10/19)
Mr. Trump promised he would appoint justices who would overturn the Roe v. Wade abortion decision and protect gun rights. 鈥淭hey will have a conservative bent,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 will be appointing pro-life judges.鈥 Mrs. Clinton said she would choose justices who would protect abortion rights, same-sex marriage and overturn Citizens United, which removed limits on corporate and union spending in elections. 鈥淭he Supreme Court needs to stand on the side of the American people, not on the side of the powerful corporations and the wealthy,鈥 she said. (Meckler, Bender and Nicholas, 10/20)
Trump went on to describe late-term abortion procedures in graphic language, suggesting that many women end their pregnancies in the final one to four days. 鈥淵ou can take the baby and rip the baby out of the womb,鈥 he said. Clinton used the moment to make a gender-based argument, telling Trump: 鈥淵ou should meet with some of the women I鈥檝e met with, women I鈥檝e known over the course of my life. This is one of the worst possible choices that any woman and her family could possibly make. .鈥.鈥. The government has no business in the decisions that women make with their families.鈥 (Tumulty and Rucker, 10/19)
Meanwhile, the candidates also took questions on Medicare聽鈥
Chris Wallace鈥檚 questions did assume that entitlements needed to be cut. He asked Trump if would 鈥渕ake a deal to save Medicare and Social Security that included both tax increases and benefit cuts, in effect, a grand bargain on entitlements,鈥 and asked Clinton if she would back 鈥渁 deal that includes both tax increases and benefit cuts.鈥 But neither candidate accepted the premise. Trump insisted, tautologically, that his tax cuts would spur the economy 鈥渢o grow at a record rate of growth,鈥 solving any problem with entitlement spending. Clinton said she would raise taxes on the rich to expand benefits; 鈥渢hat will come from either raising the cap and/or finding other ways to get more money into it,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 will not cut benefits. I want to enhance benefits for low-income workers and for women who have been disadvantaged by the current Social Security system.鈥 (Weigel, 10/20)
And media outlets聽fact check some of the debate's health care claims聽鈥
Clinton is basically on target, but Medicare's funding problems are more complicated than she implies. The 2010 health care law was partly financed with cuts in future payments to hospitals, insurers and other Medicare service providers. According to projections at the time, that extended the solvency of the Medicare trust fund to 2029. (Otherwise Medicare would have been unable to fully pay its bills in 2017.) Republican budgets since then have kept Obama's Medicare cuts. But the health care law did not solve Medicare's financial problems. (10/20)
Premiums are going up, and by double digits in many states, but to say it's over 100 percent is pure hyperbole. The full impact of next year's premium increases is going to take time to sort out and vary across the country. Full information will be available Nov. 1 when the HealthCare.gov market goes live. (10/20)
Republican nominee Donald Trump's claim that premiums in the healthcare plans in the Affordable Care Act exchanges are increasing by as much as 100% is an exaggeration, but the candidates spent little time digging into the matter. In the waning moments of the final presidential debate Wednesday, the candidates used a question about entitlements to restate their positions on the ACA. Trump again vowed to 鈥渞epeal and replace鈥 the law and that he was glad premiums had gone up, presumably to make his point that President Barack Obama's signature healthcare reform law was 鈥渄estroying our country.鈥 (Muchmore, 10/19)
KHN offers clips from when the candidates talked about health care聽鈥
In the third and final presidential debate Wednesday, candidates Donald Trump, the Republican, and Hillary Clinton, the Democrat, had their most extended exchanges聽on health care issues to date. Here are the video excerpts of those two discussions聽from the debate, which was held at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. (10/20)