Obamacare: The Battle
Intensifies
November 8, 2012 at
4:51 pm
Obamacare is not
here to stay. Despite the 2012 election, the assumption that the health care
law will stay on course is another example of the left’s wishful thinking.
Of course, efforts
for a complete repeal will likely face the same fate as efforts in the last
Congress did. But there are ample reasons, as well as opportunities, to
change the course of this law.
Public opinion has
not changed. Exit polls show that more Americans still
want the law repealed in full or in part. Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
(D–CA) was absolutely right when she famously remarked in 2010 that “we have
to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it.” With continuing
revelations of increasing costs, higher taxes, and a flood of directives from
Washington bureaucrats, the polls have since shown that the American people
still do not like the law.
There is still so
much more to know—and not like. Americans know that this law was enacted in
haste and that critical details are still to be decided and enforced. What is
a qualified health plan? What will be in the essential benefit package? How
will the employer and individual mandate be implemented? The list goes on.
The law is already
becoming a managerial nightmare, as Administration officials have missed
deadline after deadline, failing to provide crucial information—doubtlessly
to avoid further political fallout from exposing their controversial plans,
such as the contraception mandate undermining religious freedom, or because
overhauling one-sixth of the economy is riddled with innumerable unintended
consequences that are nearly impossible to avoid.
As these regulatory
details emerge, they will generate even more public controversy and create
even more practical obstacles for implementation. Naturally, these instances
will provide ample opportunities for legislative remedial action.
Bipartisan
opposition to the law will continue. While the House vote earlier this year pressured five
Democrats to support full repeal, more significant were the various piecemeal
repeal bills that gained bipartisan support. Most notable, repeal of the Independent Payment Advisory Board
(IPAB), the unelected group of experts in charge of cutting future Medicare
payments, passed the House and had more than 234 cosponsors—Republicans and
Democrats. These efforts will likely gain more attention in the future, as will
efforts to weaken other elements of the law. House majority leader Eric
Cantor (R–VA) has already vowed a vote on the IPAB repeal again.
The states can and
will have their say. Two of the largest elements of the health care law—the
massive Medicaid expansion and the costly subsidies scheme funneled through
government exchanges—are heavily dependent on state compliance. But the June Supreme Court decision reaffirmed
that states are not at the mercy of the federal government.
Many state officials
realize that there is little upside to joining forces with Washington in
implementing this disastrous endeavor, thus further eroding the long-term
viability of Obamacare.
Looming deficits
bring health care back to the forefront. Entitlements are the major drivers in the country’s mounting
fiscal crisis, and health care entitlements top that list. The most obvious
place to start is with Obamacare. Since its core benefits are not yet in
place, it is the easiest of all the federal entitlements to change. Moreover,
reforming Medicare and Medicaid will be a true sign of whether Congress and
the Administration are serious about fixing our fiscal future.
Major lawsuits are
moving ahead. The recent Supreme
Court decision was not the only lawsuit against Obamacare. There are a number
of lawsuits making their way through the federal courts. The anti-conscience
mandate requiring virtually all employers to finance abortion-inducing drugs,
sterilization and contraception undercuts religious freedom. Today, there
are already 40 suits representing more than 100 plaintiffs against it. An Oklahoma lawsuit raises a new legal question
on the employer and individual penalties. More suits will certainly follow as
more of the law is exposed.
Finally, there is an
excellent opportunity to beat back Obamacare by advancing a more desirable
alternative. Patient-centered, market-based reforms are the best antidote to
Obamacare’s top-down, government-run scheme. The Heritage Foundation’s Saving the American Dream
plan offers such a path.
If the election had
turned out differently, it would have been easier to repeal Obamacare. But
that does not mean that Obamacare is here to stay. To the contrary, the
dismantling of Obamacare has just begun. The only difference is that this
dismantling will now be a more protracted and messy process.
Tags: 2012
Election, ACA, anti-conscience mandate, fiscal
crisis, Health Care, Independent Payment Advisory Board, individual mandate, Medicaid expansion, nancy
pelosi, religious freedom, Repeal Obamacare, Saving the American Dream
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Bobbie
When I heard the
President say "I don't want my daughters punished with a baby" said
to me he has no respect for the female reproductive system, sending a message
to the female gender and the male gender that the reproductive system is
punishment with absolutely no mention, no consideration to the responsibility
of the person that impregnates. Exactly what the men behind sharia law believe.
Whatever happens to the woman is the woman's fault with further punishment. I
don't like this kind of talk coming out of the mouths of people who have
authority, creating what those in authority call "health care."
Reproductive rights defined by Obama's government controlled care puts full
control in government hands. Open your eyes, ladies!!!! If you want to make
your own choices stay far away from government influence, manipulation,
dependency and hands. Read history books and see how women and or the
reproductive systems are treated by government in control! Republicans
respect the right to decide for ourselves without mention because it's a no
brainer that shouldn't be made into political issues. But it took a democrat
man and other men to address the world to tell you you have a right to make
your own choices keeping the responsibility factor out totally! Stop giving
attention to the ones that want to control you.
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1 comment:
Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D–CA) was absolutely right when she famously remarked in 2010 that “we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it.”
That should be inscribed on her headstone.
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