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...moment Bruce Reed knew for sure that the health-care system was out of whack came in December 1991 when three men in dark suits paid him a visit. Reed, a little-known analyst working in a dimly lit Washington campaign office for dark-horse candidate Bill Clinton, listened politely as the three veteran lobbyists from a major pharmaceutical company pleaded with him to delete price controls from the health-care proposal that Clinton was soon to unveil. "If you guys can afford to send three high-priced lobbyists to buttonhole somebody like me," Reed told his visitors, "then...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bill and Hill Clinton: Behind Closed Doors | 9/20/1993 | See Source »

...over, even as he kept one eye on a golf tournament on television. Magaziner's numbers were appealing, but Wiener wouldn't budge. At that point, Clinton came alive not in anger but in frustration. "Goddammit," he said, "now I know why no President has ever fixed this problem." Reed, who had been listening quietly, finally suggested a third way. Everything on a chart listing budget changes, Reed noted, had to fall under a column labeled SAVINGS or a column marked INVESTMENTS. If Magaziner and Wiener couldn't decide whether health-care reform saved money or cost money...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bill and Hill Clinton: Behind Closed Doors | 9/20/1993 | See Source »

...Reed, a Princeton grad and Rhodes scholar from Idaho, was struggling to remake the ungainly and politically unworkable idea for health-care reform favored by most Democrats. Called "pay or play," the plan would have required employers to extend basic insurance to all their employees or contribute to a public trust that would provide the entitlement instead. Huddling with a brainy Rhode Island business consultant named Ira Magaziner, Reed spent several weeks souping up "pay or play" into a more ambitious- sounding plan that would use savings from cost controls and more efficient management to insure 37 million uninsured Americans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bill and Hill Clinton: Behind Closed Doors | 9/20/1993 | See Source »

...early January, Reed took the finished draft to Manchester, New Hampshire, where Clinton and his wife were campaigning. The three spent a Saturday night in the Clintons' cramped hotel room going over the plan. Dining on takeout Greek food, Clinton sat on a bed poring over Reed's draft while Hillary paced | the room suggesting changes. The session lasted several hours until the three were satisfied. The Clintons went to a late movie; Reed went to look for a printer. Two days later, Clinton released his "National Health Insurance Reform to Cut Costs and Cover Everybody." He claimed he could...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bill and Hill Clinton: Behind Closed Doors | 9/20/1993 | See Source »

...result, Clinton launched one more conference call with his top health-care advisers on June 22. From the Governor's mansion in Little Rock, he reached Magaziner at a miniature-golf course near his home in Providence, Rhode Island, where he was relaxing with his children. He located Bruce Reed at Georgetown University Hospital, where his own health-care bill was rising while his wife was undergoing tests for a stomach ailment. He found Joshua Wiener, a Brookings Institution fellow, clipping hedges at his home in Washington. Wiener grabbed some of his kids' purple-dinosaur scratch paper...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bill and Hill Clinton: Behind Closed Doors | 9/20/1993 | See Source »

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