Billionaire businessman and potential presidential candidate Michael Bloomberg slammed Medicare for All on Tuesday, suggesting that “you could never afford it” and that it would cost the country “trillions.”
Bloomberg traveled to Manchester, New Hampshire, this week as he continues to mull whether to run for president in 2020. During his trip, he was asked if he would support eliminating private health insurance and replacing it with a single-payer, government-run health care program otherwise known as “Medicare for All.”
Bloomberg nixed the idea of Medicare for All, saying, “You could never afford that, you’re talking about trillions of dollars.”
Several studies have pinned the potential cost of Medicare for All somewhere between $32 to $38 trillion over the next years.
The billionaire’s comment arises as 2020 presidential candidate and Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) called for eliminating all private insurance and replacing it with Medicare for All.
“It is inhumane to make people go through a system where they cannot literally receive the benefit of what medical science can offer,” Harris said on Monday night. “Because some insurance company has decided it doesn’t meet their bottom line in terms of their profit motivation.”
Potential presidential candidate and former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz discounted the idea of Medicare for All, suggesting the idea is “not American.”
“That’s not correct. That’s not American,” Schultz said in reference to Medicare for All. “What’s next? What industry are we going to abolish next? The coffee industry?”
“The Republicans want to get rid of the Affordable Care Act. I don’t agree with that,” Schultz added. “The Affordable Care Act should stay and should be refined. But to think to get rid of the insurance industry, this is the situation; it’s far too extreme from both sides.”
Democrats have struggled to explain how to pay for Medicare for All.
In November 2018, Democrat National Committee (DNC) CEO Seema Nanda admitted that she does not know how to pay for Medicare for All.
“I don’t know how we’re going to get there, but these are all big conversations that we need to be engaged in,” Nanda said.
Republicans such as Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) have suggested that adding half of the country’s population to Medicare’s rolls will not help its solvency.
“My point is Medicare for All is Medicare for none,” Cassidy told Breitbart News last October. “Medicare is actually going bankrupt in eight years, and now Bernie Sanders wants to put 150 million more people into a system going bankrupt in eight years?”