Table of Contents
- Fueling the Fight for Net Neutrality
- Embracing Ranked-Choice Voting as a Pathway to Pluralism
- Measuring U.S. Drone Use and Misuse
- Fulfilling the Promise of Child Savings Accounts
- Linking the Individual Mandate and Social Responsibility
- Tracking Terrorism in the United States
- Early Education Doesn't End at Pre-K
- Making Higher Education Outcomes Transparent
- Redefining Care Policy
- Using TV "White Spaces" to Create Equitable Internet Access
- Investing in America's Future Thinkers
- Proposing the Public Option
- Creating a Public Interest Technology Sector
- Building a New Practice of Public Problem-Solving
- Expanding Access to High School-Age Youth for High-Quality Apprenticeship Opportunities
- Engaging North Korea
- A Universal 401(k) Plan
- Measuring the Internet for Everyone
- Rethinking Economic Policy
- Documenting the Long Wars
- Ranking Digital Rights
- Future Tense
- Using Fiction to Make Policy More…Realistic
- Pop-Up Magazine
- Developing an MA in Global Security
- Helping Communities Deploy Mesh Networks
- Partnering with Universities
Proposing the Public Option
Idea
Recognizing that any move toward introducing universal health coverage required bridging exceedingly difficult political and administrative gaps, Jacob Hacker developed the so-called "public option" while an inaugural New America fellow in 2001. His idea of a public insurance pool based on the Medicare model gave political candidates a proposal that brought America a crucial step closer to achieving universal coverage.
Incubation
Hacker released his idea in a 2001 paper and continued to develop and distribute it. He was aided by Roger Hickey of the Campaign for America's Future, who, along with Hacker, introduced the idea to leading presidential candidates. By 2008, it was part of all three major Democratic candidates' platforms and was a component of then-President Barack Obama's original health care reform legislation.
Impact
The public option didn’t survive 2008, but it remains a key component of continued efforts to update the Affordable Care Act. It can also be credited with making universal health care more popular among voters, as it polled better than other proposals in advance of the 2008 presidential election