Events » Why is the Healthcare Debate So Nasty? by James Morone

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Nov
20

Fri

Nov 20, 2009 7:30 PM PST (10:30 PM EST)

Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA)
250 South Grand Ave
Los Angeles CA 90012

Zócalo Public Square Presents:
There are few subjects in political life that rival healthcare for provoking vicious public debate. Not even the launch of war and the bailout of Wall Street incited ferocious town halls, fierce attack ads, name-calling among elected officials, and all-around vehemence. What is it about healthcare that moves us so? Every president since Franklin Roosevelt has struggled with universal healthcare; the last major victory toward it came over 40 years ago, when Lyndon Johnson created Medicare and Medicaid. Since then, presidents’ efforts either made small advances — like George W. Bush’s expansion of retiree benefits — or suffered overwhelming defeat, as Bill Clinton did. This year, Barack Obama has been haunted by past failures and hampered by the rancor of public debate. James A. Morone, co-author of “The Heart of Power: Health and Politics in the Oval Office,” visits Zócalo to explain universal healthcare reform past and present, and why it so incenses Americans.

This event is made possible by the California HealthCare Foundation

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Event Hosts (1)

341t258589

Kara Carlisle
Los Angeles CA

Attendees (1)

341t258589

Kara Carlisle
Los Angeles CA