In a civilised country universal healthcare should be a right just as emergency healthcare already is. I'll ignore the obvious anti-American insult and drive directly into the issue of "right".
Rights, in America, are granted to the individual as a restriction on the State's power. How can "health care" possibly fall into the category of a right? I can understand the idea that the State shall make no restriction upon the individual to receive health care. Which I would be all for, btw, as it would make intra-state insurance restrictions and tax code differences unconstitutional. But how can you provide health care and call it a right? It's counter-intuitive. In addition, health care is nothing more than goods and services. If the State guarantees "health care" to an individual then the State has supplanted itself as the boss of all of the health care industry. What of the rights of those business and individuals currently in the industry?
Wine is sunlight, held together by water - Galileo Galilei
Un jour sans vin est comme un jour sans soleil - Louis Pasteur
Water separates the people of the world; wine unites them - anonymous
Wine is the most civilized thing in the world - Ernest Hemingway
Wine makes daily living easier, less hurried, with fewer tensions and more tolerance - Benjamin Franklin