Health care is top of mind once again in Washington, D.C., where our elected representatives have an opportunity to enact legislation that recognizes what more and more Americans see as a right rather than a privilege.

One major political party wants to degrade government-funded health care while the other one wants to save and improve it. We support the latter approach, which took a leap forward this week when Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders proposed a single-payer health care plan he likened to “Medicare for all.”

Under the legislation, , 鈥渆very family in America would receive comprehensive coverage, and middle-class families would save thousands of dollars a year by eliminating their private insurance costs as we move to a publicly funded program.鈥

, which would be phased in over four years, calls for eliminating co-pays and deductibles and adding benefits for dental and eye care.

U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders’ “Medicare for All” plan deserves our serious consideration. Flickr: DonkeyHotey

What the bill does not include is how to pay it. The cost of a single-payer plan that Sanders produced during his 2016 presidential campaign was estimated at $32 trillion over a decade, according to .

However, various options are outlined in , including making income tax rates and the estate tax more progressive 鈥 that is, people earning more would be taxed at a higher percentage of their income than lower wage earners. Other proposals call for limiting tax deductions for the wealthy and levying a new tax .

A call for more taxes would receive tremendous pushback from conservatives and businesses. But the white paper points out that our existing health care system requires that citizens shell out an annual average of $10,000 per person 鈥 鈥渇ar more on health care per capita and as a percentage of GDP than any other country on earth.鈥

While the proposal鈥檚 chances of approval from a Republican-controlled Congress and White House are not good 鈥 President Trump a “curse” on the United States and its people 鈥 it is attracting the support . They include several potential presidential contenders in 2020 (including Sanders) and members of Hawaii鈥檚 congressional delegation.

鈥淲e are all one diagnosis away from a major illness,鈥 said Sen. Mazie Hirono. 鈥淲hen that time comes, no one should have to worry about whether they can afford the care that might save their life.鈥

Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, a co-sponsor of the House version of Sanders鈥 legislation, said, 鈥淒espite the smears and false advertising of the pharmaceutical and insurance industries and their benefactors on Wall Street, the American people see the urgent need to extend health care to all. Twenty-eight million people went without any kind of protection last year鈥攖he time to act is now.鈥

Sen. Brian Schatz, meantime, has his own admirable ideas for health care, .

The Move Toward Reforming Health Care

Backing for major health care reform is also coming from , including some Republicans, who worry about the medical costs to their states.

Even politicians as diverse as and are coming to the realization that the system is broken and a single-payer replacement is the best option.

Just four years ago, Sanders鈥 plan attracted no supporters in Congress. But his 2016 presidential campaign elevated the profile of health care, and it is certain to be a major issue in the 2018 mid-term elections.

The immediate hurdles are the minority leaders in the U.S. House and Senate, Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer. Their preference is to shore up the Affordable Care Act.

That should be a priority, but a long-term solution is the ultimate goal. Unfortunately, Republicans in Congress are focused on taking another stab .

That effort has already failed many times, and the GOP alternatives would kick off insurance or shift Obamacare monies . And it comes as the Trump administration aggressively works to slash funding .

The number of Americans without health insurance 鈥渄ropped to a record low鈥 in the final year of the Obama presidency, It would be a moral failure to reverse that trend.

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