Politics
of ObamaCare Delay
By
delaying, he preserved the state.
Cicero
(106BC to 43BC)
The ObamaCare administration is engaged in a campaign to delay, even to defray, the
Affordable Care Act until after the midterm elections and even until 2017, when
a new president will have to wrestle with its consequences.
The delays include:
·
Delay of premium payment deadlines
·
Delay of high-risk insurance pool cancellations
·
Delay of equal coverage that force employers to
drop coverage for high executives
·
Delay of “meaningful
use” criteria mandates for physicians
·
Delay of employer mandate
·
Delay of health plan cancellations
·
Delay of requirement that all companies with 50
or more employees cover them or pay a $2000 penalty
·
Delay law until 34 states who decided not to set
up exchanges change their mind
·
Delay of enrollment periods so more can sign up
for exchanges.
What delays come next, nobody knows. The speculation is that the Administration
may seize the ObamaCare Bull by the horns and delay its key provision, the individual mandate for a year or
two. The rationale for this
delay, called the “Big Punt” by one
critic, might be that the underfunded IRS is not ready to enforce ObamaCare penalties. This would shift responsibility to the
cold-blooded heartless GOP who must fund
the President’s budget.
The delays have not gone unnoticed by the national media. Today Google lists 14 articles
on the subject of delays. Nor have the
delays escaped the attention of the nation’s unions, which are growing
increasingly uneasy about ObamaCare. To
preserve the Democratic health agenda,
President Obama needs the unions, for they are the biggest
contributor to the coffers of the Democratic party.
A report by UniteHere,
a hospitality industry union with 300,000 members in the US and Canada, exemplifies the ObamaCare dilemma, how to pacify the unions while implementing
the law.
In its
report, entitled “ The Irony of ObamaCare, Making Inequality Worse,”
UniteHere concludes:
1)
ObamaCare transfers a trillion dollars in wealth
to commercial insurance companies, doubling their stock prices, and rewarding their
executives with a half billion dollars in cash and stock options.
2)
ObamaCare strangles fair competition by blocking
non-profit health funds from competing for the law’s trillion dollars in
subsidies.
3)
ObamaCare
forces employers to move workers to part-time work of 30 hours or less
to avoid penalties imposed on firms with 50 or more workers.
4)
ObamaCare cuts people’s pay by forcing workers
onto the exchanges and making these works spend $2, $3, even $5 an hour to buy
similar plans.
To UniteHere – ObamaCare is achieving the opposite of what was intended – more equality for workers, lower health costs, and increased access to care.
Government health care reform appears to be full of ironies like these.
But, not to worry, a
delay a day helps to keep the political wolf away.
Tweet: The
Obama administration is proposing a series of delays in its health care law in
order to preserve the Democratic party
agenda in the midterm election and to solidify its political base.
Your quote is pseudepigraphic.
ReplyDeleteIt is referenced in Cicero's De Senectute, Book IV, but Quintus Ennius (c. 239 BC – c. 169 BC) gets the first-place ribbon