Lt. Gov. Newsom Pushes Single-Payer in First Gov. Debate

image
Author: Jeff Powers
Created: 24 Oct, 2017
Updated: 21 Nov, 2022
1 min read

The first official debate between the top four Democrats running for California governor took place in Anaheim over the weekend.

The event was hosted by the National Union of Healthcare Workers and fittingly, the only issue the candidates had significant disagreements on, was healthcare.

John Chiang, Anthonio Villaraigosa, Delaine Eastin and Gavin Newsom debated affordable housing, immigration and Washington D.C., among other issues.

VILLARAIGOSA "NO PIE IN THE SKY"

Antonio Villaraigosa, the former Mayor of Los Angeles, said he supports the concept of a state single-payer system, but probably not at the current cost that healthcare paradigm brings.

The estimated costs for single-payer are anywhere between $330 billion and $450 billion annually.

Villaraigosa said, “You can’t just say I want pie in the sky, because that doesn’t put food on people’s tables.”

NEWSOM "SINGLE-PAYER IS THE WAY"

Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom dismissed Villaraigosa and his budget concerns.

IVP Donate

Newsom cited a UCLA study that found Californians already pay roughly $367.5 billion for healthcare through private insurance and public programs.

Newsom said, "The fact is the money exists in the system. The money is not being well invested. A single-payer system provides the ability to provide more efficiency and more cost controls … I’m not going to wait around for the debate to unfold in Washington, D.C.”

EASTIN AND CHIANG FAVOR DIFFERENT APPROACHES

Former state schools chief Delanie Eastin noted she supports single-payer but couldn't clearly define how taxpayers would pay for it. Eastin said, “I’m not sure exactly. But it’s doable."

State Treasurer John Chiang also favors universal healthcare, but suggests a slower approach would be the responsible path. Chiang said, "We don’t have to go all in and provide all the services at once.”

According to those who attended the debate, Newsom and Eastin fared the best.

 

Latest articles

Boston
Boston City Council Backs Ranked Choice Voting Home Rule Petition in 8–4 Vote
On May 14, the Boston City Council voted 8–4 in favor of a Home Rule Petition allowing voters to rank candidates in order of preference, a shift that could change how Bostonians elect their leaders....
14 May, 2025
-
3 min read
Man in suit sitting at desk writing on a document with a stethoscope on the desk and a map of California in the background.
AB 955 Revisited: How to Expand Cross-Border Care Without Sacrificing Patient Protections
IVN recently examined AB 955, by Assemblymember David Alvarez. The bill seeks to expand a healthcare service program I created in 1998 as the author of SB1658....
14 May, 2025
-
4 min read
A pharmacist handing a customer prescription medication.
Gov. Newsom Targets Prescription Drug Middlemen in New Reform Proposal
California Gov. Gavin Newsom is reviving efforts to regulate the powerful and often opaque intermediaries at the center of the prescription drug supply chain. In a proposal unveiled as part of his revised May budget, Newsom calls for stringent oversight of pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), companies he says are driving up patient costs....
14 May, 2025
-
2 min read