Los Angeles Times

Health insurance companies are useless. Get rid of them

The most perplexing aspect of our current debate over healthcare and health coverage is the notion that Americans love their health insurance companies.

This bizarre idea surfaced most recently in the hand-wringing over proposals to do away with private coverage advocated by some of the candidates for the Democratic nomination for president. Oddly, this position has been treated as a vote-loser.

During the first round of televised debates on July 30 and 31, only four of the 20 candidates raised their hands when asked if they would ban private insurers as part of their proposals for universal coverage: Sens. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Kamala Harris of California, and New York Mayor Bill de Blasio. Harris later backed away, releasing a "Medicare for all" proposal that would accommodate private insurers at least for the first 10 years.

She should have stood her ground. The truth is that private

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times3 min read
San Diego Is Now The Top Border Region For Migrant Arrivals
LOS ANGELES — For the first time in decades, San Diego has become the top region along the southern border for migrant arrivals. Migrant arrests in San Diego reached 8,989 for the week ending April 16, according to figures the agency posted on X. Mea
Los Angeles Times7 min read
At USC, Arrests. At UCLA, Hands Off. Why Pro-Palestinian Protests Have Not Blown Up On UC Campuses
LOS ANGELES — At the University of Southern California, Los Angeles police officers in riot gear swarmed the campus, arresting 93 pro-Palestinian protesters and clearing their tent encampment. Across town at the University of California, Los Angeles,
Los Angeles Times2 min read
Caleb Williams Breaks Caitlin Clark’s Draft-night Record For Jersey Sales
Fans of the Chicago Bears seem pretty excited to have former USC quarterback and Heisman Trophy winner Caleb Williams on the team. How excited are they? Based on draft-night jersey sales data, possibly more excited than any fan base of any sports tea

Related Books & Audiobooks