'Hell No': Trump Allies' Plan to Privatize Medicare Draws Alarm and Outrage
JAKE JOHNSON for Common Dreams
A right-wing coalition that's been laying the policy groundwork for another Trump presidency has developed a plan to further privatize Medicare by making fraud-riddled Medicare Advantage "the default enrollment option" for newly eligible beneficiaries.
The plan, highlighted Monday
by Rolling Stone's Andrew Perez, is outlined about halfway through
Project 2025's 920-page playbook for
the first six months of a conservative presidency.
Republican administrations and right-wing groups have long advocated funneling people who are newly eligible for Medicare into Medicare Advantage plans, which are funded by the federal government and run by for-profit insurers.
During his first White House term, former President Donald
Trump took steps to actively encourage seniors
to choose Medicare Advantage plans over traditional Medicare and expanded the
benefits that the privately run plans are allowed to offer.
Those efforts have had an impact. As Perez noted,
"Last year, for the first time ever, a majority of Americans eligible for
Medicare were on privatized Medicare Advantage plans."
"If Republicans win the presidential race this
year," he wrote, "the push to fully privatize Medicare, the
government health insurance program for seniors and people with disabilities,
will only intensify."
Every year, new and existing Medicare recipients have an opportunity to enroll in Medicare Advantage plans, which engage in aggressive and often highly deceptive advertising practices to lure seniors who are often seeking out benefits not currently offered by traditional Medicare, such as vision and dental care.
Once enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans—which offer
limited networks of doctors and overbill the government to the tune of $140 billion a
year—patients often feel trapped and
are subjected to care denials and
other deep flaws in the program that have drawn growing attention from lawmakers in
recent years.
If Project 2025, which is led by the right-wing Heritage
Foundation, gets its way, Medicare Advantage providers would be given even
greater power over the critical government insurance program. The Trump
administration embraced many of
the Heritage Foundation's policy recommendations during its first year in
power.
"Donald Trump and his MAGA Republican cronies plan
to totally privatize Medicare if they win in November's election," the
progressive advocacy group Social Security Works wrote in response to Rolling
Stone's reporting. "Hell no. Hands off our earned benefits."
Philip Verhoef, president of Physicians for a National
Health Program, told Rolling Stone that Project 2025's plan to
make Medicare Advantage the default enrollment option would be
"disastrous."
"To do so would be really just a clear handout to
the private insurance industry," Verhoef said.
Project 2025 has said that it doesn't "speak for any
presidential candidate," but Trump's reelection campaign has relied on
parts of the coalition's proposed agenda for second-term planning.
Trump's team has faced backlash over some of Project
2025's work, including draft executive orders that
would use the Insurrection Act to deploy the U.S. military against
demonstrators. As The Washington Post reported in
December, Trump campaign senior adviser Susie Wiles complained privately to
Project 2025's director and asked the coalition to "stop promoting its
work to reporters."
Seth Schuster, a spokesperson for President Joe Biden's
reelection campaign, warned in a statement Monday that "if Donald Trump
wins this November, he and Republicans will continue their push to end Medicare
as we know it for millions of Americans."
"Trump will leave millions of seniors with fewer
benefits and less access to doctors—all to benefit his big insurance
donors," said Schuster. "In Trump's America, the special interests
win and seniors and working families lose. Worse care, broken promises, and
higher costs—that's Trump's plan for seniors and working families."
In addition to making Medicare Advantage the default
enrollment option for Medicare, Project 2025 is calling for the revival of the
Global and Professional Direct Contracting Model, a Medicare privatization
scheme that the Biden administration rebranded as ACO
REACH and slightly modified—to the dismay of physicians, healthcare
campaigners, and progressive lawmakers who called for the repeal of the Trump-era pilot program.