August 9, 2008
Posted: 09:00 AM ET

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Democrats shaped a set of principles Saturday that commits the party to guaranteed health care for all, heading off a potentially divisive debate and edging the party closer to the position of Barack Obama's defeated rival, Hillary Clinton.

Obama, soon to be the Democratic nominee, has stopped short of proposing to mandate health coverage for all. He aims to achieve something close to universal coverage by making insurance more affordable and helping struggling families pay for it.

Advisers to Obama and Clinton both told the party's platform meeting they were happy with the compromise, adopted without opposition or without explanation as to how health care would be
guaranteed.

In return for the guarantee, activists dropped a tougher platform amendment seeking a government-run, single-payer system and another amendment explicitly holding out Clinton's plan as the one to follow.

The party now declares itself "united behind a commitment that every American man, woman and child be guaranteed to have affordable, comprehensive health care."

Under any system in play, most people would still put out money for health insurance as they do now, but they would get help when needed.

That was a common feature of the plans put forward by Obama and Clinton in the primaries. But she would have required everyone to get insurance while his plan makes it mandatory only for children.

Democratic Party Chairman Howard Dean praised "the spirit of this compromise." Judith McHale, a Clinton supporter who helped to lead the platform meeting, said Obama and Clinton advisers worked
collegially throughout the process.

For the 186-member platform committee, one imperative Saturday was to satisfy Clinton loyalists still sore from the often acrimonious primary fight while keeping policy firmly in synch with Obama's campaign.

There was little dissent, or room for it.

Democrats made mostly cosmetic changes to a platform draft prepared for the meeting, a process designed to showcase unity more than to air differences in the party at large on hot-button issues
such as the Iraq war, abortion and health care.

Party platforms are a statement of principles that are not binding on the candidates or the next president and they are typically given little attention after they are adopted.

Even so, the party's decision to embrace guaranteed health care is bound to become a leading yardstick by which Obama's presidency will be measured if he wins in November.

The platform was to be approved by the committee later Saturday, then submitted to the national convention in Denver later this month.

On Iraq, the platform states that Democrats "expect to complete redeployment within 16 months," reflecting Obama's time frame but not the tone of certainty he brought to it when he was running in
the primaries.

The 51-page platform draft showed the influence of Clinton's supporters not only in the extensive section on health care but in its assertions about the treatment of women. Some of her backers
believed sexism dogged her campaign for the nomination.

An extensive section on women's rights is included and the votes she received in the primaries are described as "18 million cracks in the highest glass ceiling."

Even so, the platform is thoroughly tuned to Obama's proposals.

It reasserts his promise of energy rebates to struggling families, pension subsidies, a crackdown on predatory lenders, higher taxes for families earning over $250,000, tax breaks for others, billions for economic stimulus and "direct high-level diplomacy, without preconditions," in the case of Iran.

On trade, it promises a multilateral approach to improving the North American Free Trade Agreement, without saying specifically what those changes should be. Obama criticized NAFTA when
campaigning in states that felt disadvantaged by it, but the platform offers no suggestion he would take unilateral action against the deal.

Instead, it says: "We will work with Canada and Mexico to amend the North American Free Trade Agreement so that it works better for all three North American countries."

Democrats typically have a strong plank in favor of abortion rights; this year's version is stronger than usual. "The Democratic Party strongly and unequivocally supports Roe v. Wade and a woman's right to choose a safe and legal abortion, regardless of ability to pay, and we oppose any and all efforts to weaken or undermine that right," it says.

Gone is the phrase from the past that abortions should be safe, legal and "rare."

The party also pledges to ensure access to adoption programs, prenatal and postnatal care and income support programs for expectant mothers who need the help.

The party also:
– Promises "tough, practical, and humane immigration reform in the first year of the next administration."
– Favors restoration of the ban on assault-type weapons and other "reasonable regulation" that recognizes the constitutional right to own and use firearms.
– Favors helping religious groups provide social services as long as "public funds are not used to proselytize or discriminate."
– Promises to close the Guantanamo detention center.
– Promises to double the Peace Corps.

Filed under: AP • Barack Obama • Democrats • Hillary Clinton


17 year old future politician   August 10th, 2008 1:31 am ET

Sounds great…unity can't be stopped

PUMA 4 HILL   August 9th, 2008 1:50 pm ET

Dean and Pelosi make me want to puke.

They need to get out!!!

Repulsive thugs sure taught the Obama cult followers about bullying and lying, cheating. You know, the only blind sided way to get your way.

We'll remember in November.

Reality Check Richmond Virginia   August 9th, 2008 1:34 pm ET

sounds good to me.

Raymond Duke   August 9th, 2008 1:27 pm ET

Howard Dean what a joke this man and the democrat leadership committee are. They screwed Hillary Clinton and her supporters and now act like they want to make the democrat platform right. Moral stewardship forget that ( morals all ready showed in Obama fix over Clinton). Sacrificing , that is a joke that means if you work you will be supporting more slugs that will now get more at your expense. Gun regulations, that definitely gives my vote to McCain. Heck enough said after reading this thing they call their platform I can not even bring myself to vote for any democrat except a blue dog conservative democrat. All my other votes will go for the republicans.

Bill   August 9th, 2008 1:18 pm ET

Well, Howard Dean and the rest of the Hillary haters need to word it just right so that it leaves enough loopholes for Obama to crawl thru and prevents Hillary from signing up on it. Good job, you cool aid drinkers on the DNC. Hopefully we can kick Hillary to the curb (and her husband) and promote the rock star to the highest office in the land.
I was a Democrat for 45 years until a few months ago. Now I have no party, and I have no candidate to vote for in the presidential race. Congratulations you morons.
It's not Politics, it's personal.

obama is the most dangerous man alive   August 9th, 2008 1:14 pm ET

Promises, promises. You know deep down in the bottom of your heart that obama is the most dangerous man in this country. That he should never be allowed to get his hands on any power in this country.
The most powerful job in the world is not for obama.He is simply unfit.

SaveTheDramaFoObamasMama   August 9th, 2008 1:02 pm ET

The DNC are bunch of idiots.

This democrat is voting republican for the first time. And am proud of it!

NotFallingInLine.org   August 9th, 2008 12:47 pm ET

Haggling over the wording of a platform of principles that "doesn’t drift from the nominee's own positions" in this case would be a total waste of time, as the nominee is a selectee who has no principles and whose positions are nothing more than rhetorical nonsense crafted to gain political advantage.

The leaders of the Democratic Party have failed us all.

Knoxville NFIL

Clinton/McCain   August 9th, 2008 12:41 pm ET

You lost my support, Dean, when you didn't treat Hillary fairly. I now support the Republicans. Thanks.

Garrett   August 9th, 2008 12:37 pm ET

This is BS

Hillary shoul dbe the nominee and these things would already be on her agenda in this order and exactly how every democrat would want them!

Good work   August 9th, 2008 12:34 pm ET

"We will pledge to return to core moral principles like stewardship, service to others, personal responsibility, shared sacrifice and shared opportunity for everybody."
Can you add good fiscal responsibility.

Tammie from Cleveland,Ohio   August 9th, 2008 12:22 pm ET

Obama is a piece of crap, I could care less who he has on his platform, he is never going to win. SO SAD for the democrats,
this was their one chance.

jimmy   August 9th, 2008 12:12 pm ET

TYPO ERRORS:PEOPLE , FROM . DOES IT NOT SEEM TO US THAT
WITH THE DEMOCRATIC MAJORITY THAT AMERICA HAD VOTED FOR , THE LEAST THEY CAN DO IS GO TO WORK FOR US.
OR IS IT THE SAME OLD POLITICANS …DOING THE SAME THINGS
FOR THEMSELVES: SPEND THEIR TIME TRYING TO GET RE-ELECTED

jimmy   August 9th, 2008 12:09 pm ET

WHAT ARE THE DEMOCRATS SEARCHING FOR ? PARTY PLATFORM , ISSUES .ETC.ETC.
WHY DONT THEY JUST DO THE WORK THAT THEY ARE SUPPOSED TO BE DOING? PELOSI GAVELED THEM INTO A NICE SUMMER VACATION WITHOUT DOING ANYTHING FOR THE AMERCAN PEOPPLE WHO ARE SUFFERING FORM SO MANY ECONOMIC PROBLEMS NOT THE LEAST OF WHICH IS AN ENERGY BILL .

pam Eugene OR   August 9th, 2008 11:47 am ET

Why bother to have a platform if you aren't going to honor it?

ao   August 9th, 2008 11:45 am ET

i want to hear from Obama adopting a clear policy position and committing to the true universal health care plan that requires everyone to be insured, lowering the economic risk and cost by mitigating the free rider problem. This is a deal breaker for me in regard to his candidacy. I will look past other problems if he clearly states it.

jimmy   August 9th, 2008 11:38 am ET

LET HIM WHO IS WITHOUT SIN CAST THE FIRST STONE. THAT IS QUOTE FROM THE BIBLE.

jimmy   August 9th, 2008 11:37 am ET

LET HIM WHO IS WITHOUT SIN CAST THE FIRST STONE.

ray   August 9th, 2008 11:26 am ET

what about the party's aim to require states to ban the use of caucuses in national elections? This should be a core value of the Democratic Party because it reflects one of the tenents of the Bill of Rights-equal treatment of all under the law. Today, under the caucus process, the disabled, seniors, women with children, shift workers, some religious groups… are not treated equally under the caucus process and this is precisely why Senator Clinton lost this nomination. No more caucuses-they prevent too many from participating in the electoral process. All the voter registration drives in the world don't allow these people to participate in caucuses. We need a national movement to ban the caucus process, and it is not going to come from Senator Obama's people because that is how he will win this nomination.

Charlotte   August 9th, 2008 11:24 am ET

DNC =Dumb Nuts Committee! I received a request for donations from the DNC and sent it back with a notation: No money, No vote because of the actions of Kennedy and Kerry who showed total disregard for their constituents in supporting Obama when the voters supported Hillary. Dean and Pelosi for their bias toward Hillary. I will write my choice of Hillary Clinton on my ballot in November. I will never vote for their choice. Obama has no resume to speak of and is not qualified to be POTUS. He has spent more time campaigning then serving his constituents. The audacity of the DNC to anoint him the nominee is a dumb decision. I hope they go broke, I sent my donation to Hillary to help retire her debt. I wish she would run as an Independent, but alas, she is more of a true Democrat then I…

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