Thursday, November 17, 2011

RomneyCare architect: Of course it’s the same as ObamaCare


RomneyCare architect: Of course it’s the same as ObamaCare
posted at 3:05 pm on November 17, 2011 by Ed Morrissey

Well, Jonathan Gruber would know, wouldn’t he? After all, he advised both Mitt Romney and Barack Obama on health-care reform. In an interview yesterday with Capital New York, Gruber vented his frustration with Romney, claiming that he’s lying about the differences between RomneyCare and ObamaCare:

He credited Mitt Romney for not totally disavowing the Massachusetts bill during his presidential campaign, but said Romney’s attempt to distinguish between Obama’s bill and his own is disingenuous.

“The problem is there is no way to say that,” Gruber said. “Because they’re the same [expletive] bill. He just can’t have his cake and eat it too. Basically, you know, it’s the same bill. He can try to draw distinctions and stuff, but he’s just lying. The only big difference is he didn’t have to pay for his. Because the federal government paid for it. Where at the federal level, we have to pay for it, so we have to raise taxes.”


Not that Gruber is much happier with Newt Gingrich, either. He claims that Gingrich backed the same kind of system in the past, as did the Heritage Foundation, only to abandon it for political reasons:

Gruber said Republicans were actually less opposed to the mandate, which is going to be under scrutiny by the court, than they were to other provisions of the health care bill, given that the mandate was an essentially conservative idea that had currency with conservative intellectuals in the early 1990s. I asked about the difference between this plan and the kind that was espoused by former House speaker Newt Gingrich back then (and, briefly, in May of this year).

“Zero difference,” he said. “This is, to my mind, the most blatantly obvious case of politics trumping policy I’ve ever seen in my life. Because this is an idea, that four or five years ago, Republicans were touting. A guy from the Heritage Foundation spoke at the bill signing in Massachusetts about how good this bill was.”


What “politics” does Gruber see at play? He thinks that ObamaCare (and RomneyCare, for that matter) might be the “most important social policy” since Medicare in the 1960s, and that its success would make Barack Obama the next FDR. But that assumes that the model will succeed; if RomneyCare is the test case, then we can almost assuredly say that it won’t. Insurance premiums have skyrocketed, and the Massachusetts program runs deep into the red. Democratic governor Deval Patrick demanded that the state legislature address the program’s exploding costs just four weeks ago.

Gruber also tells Capital NY that ObamaCare represents the last, best hope for a free-market solution to the uninsured, but ObamaCare is anything but a free-market solution. The best hope for a free-market solution would be to get insurance companies out of the way of routine care altogether. The problem of escalating costs comes in large part from consumers being shielded from price signals. Insurance should cover the possibility of large losses, not routine wellness and maintenance procedures. Getting to a retail climate would stimulate competition, encourage new providers to emerge, and allow for more innovation and improvement, just as it has in the areas that insurers won’t cover — elective plastic surgery and Lasik treatments. Insurers could then price catastrophic coverage much more reasonably to get the uninsured by choice covered, and safety-net programs for the poor could deal with the truly needy.
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America: The Feds Don't Have Authority to Force Health Insurance Purchase
Katie Pavlich
11-17-11

Americans still despise ObamaCare. With the Supreme Court deciding this week it would put the ObamaCare case on the docket for a ruling next summer, the government take-over of healthcare is back front and center. A new Rasmussen Report shows 69 percent of Americans do not believe the federal government has the authority to require individuals to purchase health insurance.

As the Supreme Court considers the constitutionality of the health care law, American voters overwhelming reject the notion that the federal government has the authority to force anyone to buy health insurance. The so-called Individual Mandate is at the center of the legal controversy. Most voters continue to see the federal government as a threat to individual liberties rather than a protector of such rights.

Just 21% of voters believe the federal government has the right to force individuals to buy health insurance. A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that 69% disagree and say that the government has no right to impose a requirement for buying health insurance. Republicans and unaffiliated voters overwhelmingly reject the notion that the government has such authority. Democrats are fairly evenly divided on the question.

Regardless of the constitutionality, most voters continue to favor repeal of the health care law passed last year by Congress.

So there you have it. Americans don't appreciate liberty sweeping pieces of legislation dictating what they have to buy, especially when it comes to personal health.

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