Sanctuary cities see themselves as taking a stand for compassion and fairness. Advocates say the policy also lowers crime by building trust between Latinos and law enforcement. Some California officials are looking at what the evidence says.
Sen. Bernie Sanders鈥檚 proposal for a single-payer (i.e., US-government funded) health-care system isn鈥檛 going anywhere in this Congress.
But as Monitor editors discussed today, what makes this 鈥淢edicare for all鈥 bill noteworthy is that it highlights a shift: There鈥檚 growing support for it, especially among Democratic leaders, and the American public.
Sixty percent of Americans back government-sponsored health care. That鈥檚 up 19 percentage points among Democrats in three years,聽
Our politics editor says that鈥檚 because "Obamacare" was effectively a half step to a single-payer system. Voters with a diagnosed preexisting condition don鈥檛 want to lose access to affordable insurance. Once people get a government benefit, as the Republican repeal effort found, it鈥檚 really hard to take it away.
Senator Sanders frames health care as a universal human right. Most Americans agree. In 2015,聽a said a system that ensures sick people get the care they need is a moral issue.
Yes, but for most Republicans, putting health care completely under the government is not the morally 鈥 or fiscally 鈥 correct way to deliver that care. And half of Americans polled also said that government-funded health care would cost too much.
While the Sanders plan isn鈥檛 likely to get traction at the federal level, we wouldn鈥檛 be surprised to see some states pushing the frontier of universal health care.
Now our five stories today, illustrating unity, reconciliation, and bridge building in the news.