It
seems every time the veil has been lifted, there is another underneath.
Ever
since the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act became law in March 2010, essentially every debate and
action by lawmakers at both the Federal and State levels relating to that law has
had nothing to do with health care in America. Whether it was attacking the law
or defending it, it has only been a turf war, a pissing contest, Texas Hold‘em,
or mud wrestling…nothing more. The goal quickly transcended from Health Care to
political ascendancy.
The
Law did, in fact, address the untenable state of health care in America, which was
(and is) quite simply comprised of two issues; lack of access to health care (Patient Protection) and extreme cost (Affordable Care). It successfully addressed only the former
(lack of access) and was therefore seriously flawed. There is some irony that
in short cutting the title of the act we were left with the Affordable Care Act (ACA), highlighting
the part that was a failure. Who thought of that? What if all this time we had been calling it
the Patient Protection Act?
Within
eleven days of Republicans obtaining a majority in the House in 2011 they began passing
legislation to eliminate in whole or in part the ACA. It would repeat itself dozens
of times. This started even before the law began its implementation, which was
scheduled to take years.
They
(Republicans) also changed the popular name of the bill to Obamacare, a successful renaming that was readily adopted by the
Media and eventually by the Democrats as well. This was important and without precedent. There is no Rooseveltcare (Social Security),
Johnsoncare (Medicare), or even Romneycare prior to the 2012 election cycle. This
new name for the ACA became its rallying cry for Republicans, Tea Party
activists, and Conservatives in general, and it was entirely political. Health
care played no role. The vast majority of individuals opposed to "Obamacare" have virtually no idea how it works.
Here
it is important to point out (as I have pointed out several times before in
Pennyfound) the nature of the health care law which Republican/Conservatives
have been so opposed to.
The
origin of Obamacare, without regard to its funding sources, was adopted almost
word for word from a Republican Conservative proposal outlined in publications
of the Heritage Foundation in the
mid-1990s. With minor criticism from some Republicans it was generally well
received by Conservatives as the proper answer to single payer proposals coming
out of the Clinton Administration.
However, neither without the Presidency or the Senate, nor with any
willingness on the part of a Gingrich led House to find funding, it withered on
the vine.
It
wasn’t until 2006 that Conservative governor Mitt Romney, with a bipartisan state
legislature enacted the same law for Massachusetts. It proved successful, at least on the “Patient
Protection” side of the ledger. It was that test case that Obama and the
Democrats decided to use, adding one important amendment: the inclusion of a Public Option. This would have given patients
the ability to buy into a government insurance program if they didn’t find a
better private insurance option available. But wait, Conservatives ask, does
the Federal Government have such an insurance program? Ahh…yes, they are called
Medicare, Medicaid, and Tricare, the
biggest health insurance providers in the Nation.
Obama
and the Democrats dropped that critical ball allowing the Public Option to be scratched
and leaving the Republicans their ideal health care law: a law that (by
necessity) forced all citizens to participate but still administered
entirely by private (political donating) insurers, pharmaceutical companies,
and medical providers.
So
why in heavens name have Republican Conservatives so vehemently opposed this
law? It can be summed up in one word: Obamacare.
Republicans
have used this law as a political football for 8 years. It was the reason for
the name Obamacare. Smarted by the multiple
failures of the Bush Administration and virtually despising Obama for his rapid
ascendancy as a Liberally chosen black man, their only goal (as actually stated
by Mitch McConnell) was to make Obama a one-term President. Making the ACA the boogieman
and labeling it Obamacare fit the
bill perfectly.
As
a result, Democrats and Obama himself dug themselves into a defensive position
unable to admit their errors in the Law’s enactment and address the ACA’s serious
flaws. Health care be damned.
If
the media would ever lift up all the veils that have covered this issue they
would see why the Republicans can find no way to successfully replace this law.
It is actually a Republican law and what the Republicans are trying so
desperately to do is to simply eliminate the name…they created. They do not
want the name Obama lingering into
the future and their reasoning is political.
Again
I ask; if the name of this law was only the Patient
Protection Act, would any of the circus we’re seeing be taking place? I think not.
If the Republicans want to repeal and replace,
they only need to repeal and replace the name. They’d have their law, the
Democrats would have their foundation to push toward making it affordable, and
no one would be calling it Trumpcare.
2 comments:
In this era of the War Between the Parties, both sides seem too dug in for reasonableness such as you suggest. A shame. Working so hard to repeal the ACA without having a replacement in hand was/is both arrogant and shortsighted. The resulting, idiotic quagmire is like an alternative history nightmare. If only we could wake up.
Well put! Couldn't have said it better, literally. Couldn't have said it as well, or even close, as I have not examined the history of the issue as closely as you have. Thanks. It makes it that much more fun watching them try to punch their way out of their own paper bag.
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