Approval by President Eisenhower of the new
law providing additional medical care for some 2½ million people
65 and over, and a new medical care program for millions of others, is
an important step forward toward a new life in America.
As soon as the States take full advantage
of this measure, no older person will be deprived of medical care because
of lack of financial resources. This law puts those who have a deep concern
for the health problems of the aged in a position where they can demand
that mere talk be replaced by action. I hope that all State Governors will
move with the least possible delay to bring these programs into full effect.
This sensitive response of government to critical
human needs is in the tradition of our free system. A great merit of it
is that it directs Federal help where it is most needed - to unfortunates
on public assistance rolls and to the low-income elderly who are unable
to meet major medical expense.
But it is important for all of us to realize
that, helpful though this forward step is, it is only that - a forward
step. Beyond the reach of this measure are needs still unfulfilled. As
stated during the Senate's consideration of this legislation, it is not
enough to assist in this area only after disaster strikes.
Responsible government will see to it that
all older citizens are so positioned as to be able to protect themselves
in advance against the economic burden of serious illness - through their
own efforts and resources where possible, but supplemented as necessary
by government.
This need, still unmet, requires priority
attention by the next Congress. The program must be a voluntary one, avoiding
compulsory medical care as well as compulsory participation in medical
care programs. It would support rather than discourage private medical
insurance efforts. And it should make certain that Federal assistance is
joined with State and individual effort and is kept related to genuine
need.
By contrast, the program advanced by the opposition
is a compulsory program. It is a program operated by the Federal Government
instead of the States. It is a program that gives unneeded help to the
wealthy. It is a program that excludes at least 3 million people 65 and
over with incomes of $2,000 a year or less.
The August session of Congress demonstrated
very clearly that, even with a 2-to-1 majority, opposition leaders cannot
obtain approval of their extreme compulsory program. It is equally clear
from the August session that those leaders cannot persuade many in their
own party to support the compulsory approach. When, therefore, they hold
out to our senior citizens that a compulsory program would be preferable,
the proposal is not only a wrong one - it is also an empty one. It represents
words, not action.
Let us, therefore, build realistically, as
I have proposed, on the advance made by this new law just approved by the
President. This is the way for us to make real progress in dealing with
the human problems, the kind of progress which the whole world associates
with free America.