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How the Republican Assault on Health Care Could Backfire On Them

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When it comes to health care, Republicans should be careful what they wish for.

 

Their upcoming vote to repeal the health-care law will be largely symbolic — they don’t have the votes to override President Obama’s certain veto. The real thing happens later, when they try to strip the Department of Health and Human Services of money needed to implement the law’s requirement that all Americans buy health insurance. This could easily precipitate a showdown with the White House—and a government shutdown later this year.

 

On  its face it’s a smart strategy for the GOP. The individual mandate is the lynchpin of the heath-care law because it spreads the risks. Without the participation of younger or healthier people, private insurers won’t be able to take on older or sicker customers with pre-existing medical conditions, or maintain coverage indefinitely for people who become seriously ill. The result would be to unravel the health-care law, which presumably is what many Republicans seek.

 

At the same time, the mandate is the least popular aspect of the law. According to a December 9-12 ABC/Washington Post survey, 60% of the public opposes the individual mandate. While they want help with their health-care bills, and over 60% want to prevent insurers from dropping coverage when customers become seriously ill, most Americans simply don’t like the idea of government requiring them to buy something. It not only offends libertarian sensibilities, but it also worries some moderates and liberals who fear private insurers will charge too much because of insufficient competition in the industry.

 

The individual mandate is also most susceptible to legal challenge. Twenty states, led by Florida, have joined together in a lawsuit to argue that the mandate oversteps federal authority. Virginia and some interest groups are also challenging the mandate’s constitutionality in federal court. In the first major ruling, on December 13, Judge Henry E. Hudson of the federal district court in Richmond called the mandate an “unbridled exercise of federal police powers” and an overreach of the Constitution’s Commerce Clause. The U.S. government is now appealing that decision.

 

You might argue government mandates to buy insurance aren’t unusual. After all, most states require people to purchase auto insurance in order to drive a car, and most lenders (including those underwritten by Fannie May or Freddie Mac)  require potential homeowners to buy home insurance. But the analogy doesn’t quite hold. These requirements come from states or from banks—not directly from the federal government. More importantly, they rest on basic act of volition. No one has to buy a car or a house. Not so with health insurance under the new law.

 

Nonetheless, there’s a great irony in the Republican assault — and a hidden danger for Republicans.

 

The federal government wouldn’t be nearly as vulnerable to these political and legal obstacles had the health-care law been built upon the framework of Social Security or Medicare—public insurance financed by payroll taxes—as many Democrats had initially urged. Not only are these programs enormously popular (“Don’t take away my Medicare!” was a rallying cry among some conservative populists during the debates over the health-care law) but they also rest on a more widely accepted relationship between the individual, the government and the market.

 

Americans are accustomed to paying for public insurance through their payroll taxes. Such payments aren’t viewed as federal mandates that encroach upon individual freedoms, or as payoffs to private companies likely to make even more money from mandatory purchases of their products, but as well-deserved entitlements. Indeed, the biggest problem with Social Security and Medicare is they’re so popular that politicians have had a hard time trimming their benefits to match payroll tax revenues. Had health care been added as another public insurance program financed by payroll taxes, the challenge might be even greater — which may help explain the fierce resistance of Republicans to using Social Security and Medicare as templates for the new health-care law.

 

For 60 years, the battle over health-care reform has been waged over these two ways of spreading costs and risks: either through payroll taxes and public insurance, or mandated purchases from private insurers. For most of those six decades, Democrats advocated the former. Harry Truman’s initial plan for adding health insurance to Social Security was defeated, but Lyndon Johnson’s Medicare succeeded.

 

Apart from George W. Bush’s drug benefit, which was also based on this Democratic framework, Republicans have been on the side of mandated purchases from private insurers. In 1974, Richard Nixon’s proposed Comprehensive Health Insurance Plan would have required private employers to provide their employees with comprehensive health insurance coverage purchased from private insurers. (An employer mandate is tantamount to an individual mandate in that employees are forced to pay it indirectly, via lower wages.) Ted Kennedy simultaneously proposed universal coverage financed through Social Security taxes, essentially copying Medicare. Neither plan succeeded, but Nixon’s framework redefined idea of national health insurance from then onward.

 

President Obama and a majority of Democrats in the last Congress opted for the Republican model even though many Democrats would have preferred Medicare for all, or at the very least a public option. Most polls showed that the public favored such an option. But the White House hoped for Republican support and wanted to ward off opposition from health insurers and pharmaceutical companies by promising them some 30 million additional customers.

 

Set against this background, the current Republican attack on mandatory coverage is curious because it begs the essential question of how society would otherwise spread health-care risks. If successful—either in Congress or in the courts—a Republican victory could turn into a Phyrric one by opening the way to the alternative model, based on the system Americans seem to prefer: payroll taxes and public insurance.

 

Robert Reich
Email: [email protected]

Site: http://robertreich.org

Feed: http://robertreich.org/rss

Location: Berkley, CA

Additional Text: This is from Robert Reich’s blog, www.robertreich.org. He is professor of public policy at Berkeley, former U.S. Secretary of Labor, and author of 13 books, the most recent of which is “Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future.”

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    Total 10 comments
    • Anonymous

      But if it passed the senate, that would be huge… Obama would have to go against the wishes of the people, the house, and the senate…

      It would make him look REALLY bad.

      But it wont happen and is a huge waste of time.Senate wont repeal it because they all got paid or were given favors to vote for it.

    • Anonymous

      John Boehner wants to raise YOUR retirement age to 70.
      Not a WORD about raising CONGRESS’S retirement age.
      Congress cut off COLA for Social Security Seniors for the last two years, claiming “THERE IS NO INFLATION”.
      Congress got THEIR COLA ….. “DUE TO INFLATION.”

      I TRULY become incensed when I hear some blowhard Politician state that Universal Healthcare would be “SOCIALIST”. Michigan legislators get FREE, LIFETIME, healthcare after just SIX years…… members of Congress enjoy “cradle to grave” SOCIALIST medical and retirement benefits that outstrip those of the old Soviet Central Committee members. Salary and benefits [edit] Salaries As of January 2010, the annual salary of each Representative is $174,000.[13] The Speaker of the House and the Majority and Minority Leaders earn more: $223,500 for the Speaker and $193,400 for their party leaders (the same as Senate leaders). A cost-of-living-adjustment (COLA) increase takes effect annually unless Congress votes to not accept it. Congress sets members’ salaries; however, the Twenty-seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution prohibits a change in salary (but not COLA[14]) from taking effect until after the next general election. Representatives are eligible for lifetime benefits after serving for five years, including a pension, health benefits, and social security benefits.[15]
      MEANWHILE – FEDERAL WORKERS: Earning double their private counterparts
      Federal salaries have grown robustly in recent years, according to a USA TODAY analysis of Office of Personnel Management data. Key findings:
      Government-wide raises. Top-paid staff have increased in every department and agency. The Defense Department had nine civilians earning $170,000 or more in 2005, 214 when Obama took office and 994 in June.
      Long-time workers thrive. The biggest pay hikes have gone to employees who have been with the government for 15 to 24 years. Since 2005, average salaries for this group climbed 25% compared with a 9% inflation rate.
      Federal workers earning $150,000 or more make up 3.9% of the workforce, up from 0.4% in 2005.
      Since 2000, federal pay and benefits have increased 3% annually above inflation compared with 0.8% for private workers, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
      “CNBC: Despite a long and deep recession, the collective personal wealth of congressional members increased by more than 16 percent between 2008 and 2009, according to a study released Wednesday by the Center for Responsive Politics.”
      Cut ALL government pay AND pensions 50% ….. if they don’t LIKE IT, they can QUIT and go work in PRIVATE INDUSTRY.
      60 percent of the federal government workforce is represented by LABOR UNIONS…… WHY?

      For ALL Politicians, Federal, and State workers.
      1) Make all politician’s pay a percentage of the AVERAGE pay of their constituents. That would give them INCENTIVE to get jobs back from China.
      2) Make all politician’s retirement plans a percentage of the AVERAGE retirement plan of their constituents, that provides INCENTIVE to work for the PEOPLE.
      3) Make all politicians dissolve their fancy, overpaid retirement plans. That will provide INCENTIVE to fix Social Security that THEY BROKE.
      4) Make all politician’s medical benefits a percentage of the AVERAGE benefits of their constituents, that provides INCENTIVE to work for the PEOPLE .
      5) Make all politician’s pensions dependent on the security of their constituent’s pensions. If the People are losing their pensions due to economic distresses then the politicians should also.
      6) ALL government workers and politicians will collect benefits at the same age as the AVERAGE, PRIVATE CITIZEN.
      NOTE: “Average” here INCLUDES the “unemployed”. That creates incentive for job creation.
      COPY AND PASS ON
      Social Security is NOT an “entitlement” …….. for those who PAID FOR IT.
      Social Security is a PROPERTY RIGHT ……. for those who PAID FOR IT.

    • Dr. Tickles

      I don’t think anyone will disagree with your position on our politicians and federal employees. But while we continue to complain about such discrepancies, I think we should find ways to circumvent the waste and the corruption in government. We do that at the voting booth. I know there are many who would like to take matters into their own hands but that would prove fruitless. The best way to turn this abomination into a plus is vote the liberal politicians out of office and start amending the Constitution so they can never use their positions as positions of power and corruption again. I mean vote all of those who are liberal or leaning that way out of office. eliminate the threat and go after the entitlements and eliminate them.
      Ron
      This is a no-brainer.

    • vtdelacy

      In fact, nearly 3/4 of “We the People” made it abundantly clear as that exercise in Socialism labeled a “health care bill” was being debated in the first place that we wanted them to KILL THE BILL, yet deals were made behind closed doors and the electorate was virtually ignored in the matter while Obama got his dictatorial way. Ten million pink slips sent to the House/Senate, untold millions marching in T.E.A. Parties to protest across America and a sharp shift to the Republican side in the House this past November and you would think they would be learning to practice a greater degree of respect for the will of the voters by now. Our economy is struggling for survival and cannot take this bill, either. A bill that forces taxpayers to subsidize abortion and forces the elderly age 65 years and above before death panels every 5 years is NOT what voters want enacted. I pray we find it overturned by the Supreme Court justices – they are the last hope to saving the best health care system in the world from that threat.

    • Anonymous

      Where is all the money for the communist/socialist HELLthcare coming from? All these so-called “entitlement” programs are simply cover-ups for more ways for lying and thieving politicians and bureaucrats to steal more money for themselves. No one wants communism and socialism more than the servants of Satan, the international bankster gangsters, who use it to tax, plunder and destroy the American economy and impoverish and enslave the people. Does anyone ever question, “Where does all that allotted tax money actually go for all the entitlements and pork programs?” How much do the people get and how much gets pocketed by the lying, thieving politicians and bureaucrats? Stop being gullible and STOP TRUSTING BIG BROTHER CORRUPT GOVERNMENT! What happened to all the social security money that was stolen out of everyone’s paychecks? What happened to all the medicare funds? How many trillions are “missing” from the pentagon? When are the gullible American people going to wake up and stand free and independent of corrupt governmental politicians and bureaucrats who are fleecing and impoverishing the American workers? STOP THIS INSANITY OF UNCONSTITUTIONAL TAXING AND SPENDING!

    • Dr. Tickles

      All our complaining means nothing unless we take them to the voting booth. 2012 isn’t that far away. Kick them out of office.
      Ron

    • Anonymous

      The health package is unconstitutional. The gov’t can’t force anyone to purchase it’s lousy health plan. Fuk these bastards up the ass!

    • vtdelacy

      Conservatism Upper Division Studies is correct – all that needs to happen is for “We the People” to determine to head to the polls this coming November to take back the Senate in the same way as we took back the House last November. The message doesn’t get anymore loud and clear than that!

    • Anonymous

      Robert Reich gives real meaning to the term mental midgetry. What an embarrassment.

    • Hughze

      I DO NOT want to purchase insurance that will do me no good because of the waiting periods and preexisting conditions clauses that the new health care reform bill failed to make illegal. Furthermore, forcing people to make a purchase of anything is illegal and unconstitutional.

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