Saturday, November 2, 2013
34 Obama Words That May Live in Infamy
“If you like your health care plan,
you can keep your health care plan. Period. No one can take it away from you.
No one can take it away from you. No
matter what.”
President Obama, in 2009 Campaign
speech, and on 24 other occasions
“No matter
what” has arrived with a vengeance. When the history of ObamaCare is
written, these 34 words may reflect the
President’s legacy and the fate of ObamaCare.
His
statement was straightforward, unequivocal, and direct.
It left no wiggle room. Period.
But as of
now, 2 million Americans, estimated soon to be as many as 10 to 15 million in individual markets, are receiving health
plan cancellation notices. Potentially. 93 million more are said to be on the health plan chopping
block. Americans are angry. Many think are have been lied to. Republicans are emboldened. They see these words, with graphic video
evidence of how when they are uttered, as a potent campaign weapon for the 2014
and 2016 elections.
Behind the
scenes in 2009, White House aides
debated merits of the pledge, now under attack as “a lie.” Ezekial Emanuel, Obama’s chief medical
advisor at the time, comments, “We thought we could fulfill the promise with
this grandfather clause.” Others said
the promise was too broad. Jon Favreau,
Obama’s chief speech writer, says,
“Simplification and ease of explanation were a premium.” The political point of view prevailed, a
simpler, flat-out- statement won the day.
President
Obama is now recalibrating this vow by saying consumers will be able to buy
better coverage on the new federal exchanges.
The can replace those “shoddy” and “substandard” policies peddled by
insurer “bad apples “ with more comprehensive and “better” products. Many health insurers, however, are responding
by sending out cancelation notices. Insurance executives reason that these
policies, many written in 2010, would
have died out anyway.
What will be
the consequences of this cancellation
flap? Does the controversy imperil
ObamaCare? It is too early to tell, but
I think these consequences may ensue
·
Adverse selection, that insurance concept that says, in
essence, that the young and health are less likely to sign on, and older and sicker patients will enroll in
substantial numbers. This could
trigger a “death spiral” in insurance markets with highe premiums and
deductibles and a collapse of ObamaCare.
·
Negative public reaction, with a deepening and broadening political
opposition to ObamaCare. The health law
has been unpopular from the start. A Real Clear Politics average of 8 major
national polls now indicates 424% are for/favor the law and 50.1% are
against/oppose it.
·
Loss of Credibility and Confidence and Trust in Government
- The latest NBC/WSJ poll shows Americans in a “sour
mood, “ with Obama approval at an all time low, anti-incumbency running high,
and two-thirds saying America is in decline. RCP poll averages indicate 51.7%
disapprove of Obama job performance, 70.6% says country is on wrong track, and
84.4% disapprove of Congressional performance.
Tweet: Obama’s vow, “If you
like your health care plan, you can keep your health care plan,” may come back to haunt him and may imperil
ObamaCare.
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2 comments:
I've put together a shorter version of an Obamacratic oath than yours that I feel better matches the vacuity of the day:
"First, admit no harm"
In accordance with principles of the current administration, there is no further guideline.
Thank you for your well considered earlier efforts, but they seem more restrictive that the practice as observed. How can you be wrong if you never admit fault?
Good point. You can never be wrong, if you think you are always right.
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