Thursday, October 11, 2012
Notable and Quotable: The Stark Choice Between ObamaCare and
RomneyCare
“When Americans go to the polls next
month, they will cast a vote not just for president but for one of two
profoundly different visions for the future of the country’s health care
system. With an Obama victory on Nov. 6, the president’s signature health
care law — including the contentious
requirement that most Americans obtain health
insurance or pay a tax penalty — will almost
certainly come into full force, becoming the largest expansion of the safety
net since President Lyndon B. Johnson pushed through his Great Society programs
almost half a century ago.”
“If Mr. Romney wins and Republicans
capture the Senate, much of the law could be repealed — or its financing cut
back — and the president’s goal of achieving near-universal coverage could take
a back seat to Mr. Romney’s top priority, controlling medical costs.”
“ ‘Given the starkness of the
choice, historians and policy makers believe this election could be the most
significant referendum on a piece of social legislation since 1936, when the
Republican Alf M. Landon ran against Franklin D. Roosevelt and his New Deal
programs. (Nearly eight decades have passed, but the debate sounds strikingly
familiar: Landon described the Social Security Act, passed in 1935, as “the
largest tax bill in history; and called for its repeal.)‘It is very rare for a
political party to pass a social program of this magnitude and then to face the
possibility of a rollback or repeal in a presidential election,’ “ said James
A. Morone, a professor of political science at Brown University who has studied
the history of health policy.”
“For Medicare and Medicaid, the
government health programs for older Americans, low-income people and the
disabled, the candidates have sharply different visions as well. Mr. Romney’s
proposals call for fundamental changes in the structure of the programs,
placing more emphasis on private-sector solutions and much less on government
regulation. “
“Mr. Obama would expand Medicaid to
cover millions more people; Mr. Romney would effectively shrink it, giving each
state a fixed amount of federal money to cover its disadvantaged population
with more control over eligibility and benefits. Mr. Romney would eventually
give each Medicare beneficiary a fixed amount of federal money to pay premiums
for either the traditional Medicare program or private insurance. Mr. Obama
would preserve the structure of Medicare but try to rein in costs, in part by
trimming payments to health care providers. “
Abby Goodendough and Robert Pear, “This
Election: Stark Choice in Health Care, : New
York Times, October 11, 2012
Tweet: The
stark choice; expand coverage under
Obama: control costs under Romney.
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