To
understand why that description is wrong, it helps to recall some
history. Democratic attempts to cover the uninsured stretch back almost a
century. But opposition to universal government-provided insurance was
always too strong. Even Lyndon Johnson, with big congressional
majorities, could pass programs only for the elderly and the poor — over
intense opposition that equated Medicare with the
death of capitalism.
So
Democrats slowly moved their proposals to the right, relying more on
private insurance rather than government programs. As they shifted,
though, Republicans shifted even farther right. Bill Clinton’s plan was
quite moderate but still couldn’t pass.
When
Barack Obama ran for president, he faced a choice. He could continue
moving the party to the center or tack back to the left. The second
option would have focused on government programs, like expanding
Medicare to start at age 55. But Obama and his team thought a plan that
mixed government and markets — farther to the right of Clinton’s — could
cover millions of people and had a realistic chance of passing.
They embarked on a bipartisan approach. They borrowed from Mitt Romney’s plan in Massachusetts,
gave a big role
to a bipartisan Senate working group, incorporated conservative ideas
and won initial support from some Republicans. The bill also won over
groups that had long blocked reform, like the American Medical
Association.
But
congressional Republicans ultimately decided that opposing any bill,
regardless of its substance, was in their political interest. The
consultant Frank Luntz wrote
an influential memo
in 2009 advising Republicans to talk positively about “reform” while
also opposing actual solutions. McConnell, the Senate leader,
persuaded his colleagues that they could make Obama look bad by denying him bipartisan cover.
At
that point, Obama faced a second choice – between forging ahead with a
substantively bipartisan bill and forgetting about covering the
uninsured. The kumbaya plan for which pundits now wax nostalgic was not
an option.
The reason is simple enough: Obamacare
is
the bipartisan version of health reform. It accomplishes a liberal end
through conservative means and is much closer to the plan conservatives
favored a few decades ago than the one liberals did. “It was the
ultimate troll,” as Michael Anne Kyle of Harvard Business School
put it, “for Obama to pass Republican health reform.”
Today’s
Republican Party has moved so far to the right that it no longer
supports any plan that covers the uninsured. Of course, Republican
leaders are not willing to say as much, because they know how unpopular
that position is. Having run out of political ground, Ryan, McConnell
and Trump have had to invent the notion of a socialistic Obamacare that
they will repeal and replace with … something great! This morning they
were also left to pretend that the Budget Office report was something
less than a disaster.
Their
approach to Obamacare has worked quite nicely for them, until now.
Lying can be an effective political tactic. Believing your own
alternative facts, however, is usually not so smart.
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