An Interesting Health Care Proposal

October 27th, 2008 By: Michael van der Galien | Tags:

George Will’s latest column for Real Clear Politics is about quite an interesting subject: Arizona voters can vote for a bill that would amend the state’s constitution. The bill is entitled “The Freedom of Choice in Health Care Act.”

It (partially) reads: “Because all people should have the right to make decisions about their health care, no law shall be passed that restricts a person’s freedom of choice of private health care systems or private plans of any type. No law shall interfere with a person’s or entity’s right to pay directly for lawful medical services, nor shall any law impose a penalty or fine, of any type, for choosing to obtain or decline health care coverage or for participation in any particular health care system or plan.”

Will explains:

Proposition 101 would prevent employer or individual mandates of the sort imposed in Massachusetts. That is, it would prevent “pay or play” systems, under which employers must either pay for employees’ health insurance or pay into a state pool that finances insurance for them…

Proposition 101 would protect Arizonans not only against abridgements of their liberties by their state government, but also perhaps against comparable actions by the federal government. Clint Bolick, director of the Goldwater Institute’s Center for Constitutional Litigation, believes that if Washington were to enact a national health insurance program of prescriptive regulations, Proposition 101 would trigger an epochal constitutional clash “between state sovereignty and national power.”

It’s an interesting initiative, a conservative backlash, if you will, against some of the grand plans proposed by liberals.

My question to you is: what do you think of Proposition 101?

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