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Donald Trump
stated on October 22, 2020 in comments during the last presidential debate:
“They have 180 million people, families under what he wants to do, which will basically be socialized medicine — you won’t even have a choice — they want to terminate 180 million plans.”
true pants-fire
President Donald Trump, left, and Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden, right, during the second and final presidential debate on Oct. 22, 2020, at Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn. (AP) President Donald Trump, left, and Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden, right, during the second and final presidential debate on Oct. 22, 2020, at Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn. (AP)

President Donald Trump, left, and Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden, right, during the second and final presidential debate on Oct. 22, 2020, at Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn. (AP)

Victoria Knight
By Victoria Knight October 23, 2020

Did Trump confuse the public option with Medicare for All?

If Your Time is short

  • About 180 million people do have private health insurance, but there’s no evidence that under the health plan proposed by former Vice President Joe Biden all of those plans would be terminated. 
  • Biden supports creating a government-run public option that would exist alongside private health insurance plans. 
  • ​Estimates show that it is likely some Americans would move from private plans to the public option, but they would do so by choice, and that number is nowhere near 180 million.

During the final presidential debate, President Donald Trump claimed that 180 million people would lose their private health insurance to socialized medicine if Democratic presidential nominee, former Vice President Joe Biden, is elected president. 

"They have 180 million people, families under what he wants to do, which will basically be socialized medicine — you won’t even have a choice — they want to terminate 180 million plans," said Trump

Trump has repeated this claim throughout the week, and we thought the linkage of Biden’s proposed health care plan with socialism was something we needed to check out. Especially since Biden opposed Medicare for All, the proposal by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., that would have created a single-payer health system run completely by the federal government, and has long been attacked by Republicans as "socialist." 

The Trump campaign did not respond to our request asking where the evidence for this claim. Experts called it a distortion of Biden’s plan.

Where the number comes from

Experts agreed the number of individuals who have private health insurance either through an employer-sponsored plan or purchased on the Affordable Care Act’s health insurance marketplace is around 180 million people. 

The Kaiser Family Foundation, a non-partisan health policy organization, estimated in 2018 about 157 million Americans had health insurance through their employer, while almost 20 million had insurance they purchased for themselves.Together, that adds up to about 177 million with private health insurance. (KHN is an editorially independent program of KFF). 

What does Biden support? 

Biden supports expanding the ACA through several measures, including a public option. Under his plan, this public option would be a health insurance plan run by the federal government that would be offered alongside other private health insurance plans on the insurance marketplace. 

"The marketplace is made up of multiple insurers in areas," said Linda Blumberg, a health policy fellow at the Urban Institute. "Sometimes there are five or more (plans), sometimes there is only one. Biden is talking about adding a public option in the marketplace. You could pick between these private insurers or you could pick the public option." 

Getting rid of the so-called "employer firewall" is also part of Biden’s proposal. 

This firewall was implemented during the roll out of the ACA. It was designed to maintain balance in the insurance risk pools by preventing too many healthy people who have work-based coverage from opting instead to move to a marketplace plan. And it all came down to who qualified for the subsidies that made these plans more affordable.  

Currently, those who are offered a health insurance plan through their employer that meets certain minimum federal standards aren’t eligible to receive these subsidies, which come in the form of tax credits. But that leaves many low income workers with health care plans that aren’t as affordable or comprehensive as marketplace plans. 

Biden’s plan would eliminate that "firewall," meaning that anyone could choose to either get health insurance through their employer or through the marketplace. That’s where many Republicans argue that we could start to see leakage from private health insurance plans to the public option. 

"The problem is healthy people leaving employer plans," said Joseph Antos, a scholar in health care at the conservative-leaning American Enterprise Institute. That could mean the entire work-place plan’s premiums could go up. "You could easily imagine a plan where it spirals, the premiums go up, and then even more people start leaving the plans to go to the public option." 

Blumberg, though, said that because the marketplace would still include private health insurance plans alongside the public option, it doesn’t mean everyone who chooses to leave their employer plan would go straight to the public option. 

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She has done estimates based on a plan similar to the one Biden is proposing. She estimates that only about 10% to 12% of Americans would choose to leave their employer-sponsored plans, which translates to about 15 million to 18 million Americans. 

KFF also did an estimate and found that 12.3 million people with employer coverage could save money by buying on the exchange under the Biden plan. 

But, "it’s not clear all of those people would choose to leave their employer coverage, though, as there are other reasons besides costs that people might want to have job-based insurance," Cynthia Cox, vice president and director of the program on the ACA at KFF, wrote in an email. 

Either way, none of the estimates are anywhere close to the 180 million that Trump claimed. 

Is this type of public option socialism? 

Overall, experts said no, what Biden supports isn’t socialized medicine. 

"Socialized medicine means that the government runs hospitals and employs doctors, and that is not part of Biden’s plan," Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy at KFF, wrote in an email. "Under Biden’s plans, doctors and hospitals would remain in the private sector just like they are today." 

However, Antos said in his view that the definition of socialism can really vary when it comes to health care. 

"I would argue in one sense, we would already have socialized medicine. We have massive federal subsidies for everybody, so in that sense, we’re already there," said Antos. "But, if socialized medicine means the government is going to dictate how doctors practice or how health care is delivered, we are obviously not in that situation. I don’t think the Biden plan would lead you that way." 

And in the end, Antos said invoking socialism is a scare tactic that politicians have been doing for years. 

"It’s just a political slur," said Antos. "It’s meant to inflame the emotions of those who will vote for Trump and meant to annoy the people who will vote for Biden." 

Our ruling 

Trump said 180 million people would lose their private health insurance plans to socialized medicine under Biden. 

While about 180 million people do have private health insurance, there is no evidence that all of them would lose their private plans if Biden were elected president. 

Biden supports implementing a public option on the health insurance marketplace. It would exist alongside private health insurance plans, and Americans would have the option to buy either the private plan or the public plan. While estimates show that there are a number of Americans that would likely leave their employer-sponsored coverage for the public plan, they would be doing that by choice and the estimates are nowhere near Trump’s 180 million figure. 

Experts also agree that the public option is not socialized medicine, and it’s ridiculous to conflate Biden’s plan with Medicare for All. 

We rate this claim Pants on Fire.

This fact check is available at IFCN’s 2020 US Elections FactChat #Chatbot on WhatsApp. Click here, for more.

Our Sources

Email interview with Cynthia Cox, vice president and director for the Program on the ACA at KFF, Oct. 22, 2020

Email interview with Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy at KFF, Oct. 22, 2020

Email interview with Sabrina Corlette, co-director of the Center on Health Insurance Reforms at Georgetown University, Oct. 22, 2020

KFF, "Health Insurance Coverage of the Total Population," Accessed Oct. 22, 2020

KFF, "Affordability in the ACA Marketplace Under a Proposal Like Joe Biden's Health Plan," Sept. 28, 2020

Phone interview with Joseph Antos, Wilson H. Taylor resident scholar in health care and retirement policy at the American Enterprise Institute, Oct. 22, 2020

Phone interview with Linda Blumberg, institute fellow in the Health Policy Center at the Urban Institute, Oct. 22, 2020

Rev.com, "Donald Trump & Joe Biden Final Presidential Debate Transcript 2020," Accessed Oct. 23, 2020

Twitter, Donald Trump tweet, Oct. 21, 2020

Urban Institute, "The Healthy America Program, An Update and Additional Options," Sept. 2019

Urban Institute, "From Incremental to Comprehensive Health Insurance Reform: How Various Reform Options Compare on Coverage and Costs," Oct. 2019

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