Brad Sallows
Army.ca Legend
- Reaction score
- 8,739
- Points
- 1,040
Before Romneycare existed, there were preconceptions about how well it would work. After the fact, most people - including Romney - know more about the unforeseen consequences. Obama can thrash all he wants - he's the one defending unpopular legislation, and the act has already been weakened in increments as various pieces have turned out to be piss-poor ideas.
Apparently the proposals on Romney's table include:
- increase competition across state lines
- devolve more authority to states
- widen the tax credits for buying health insurance
- encourage creation of subsidized high-risk pools
- change Medicaid to a block grant system
- other unspecified Medicaid/Medicare reform
- allow HSA funds to be used for insurance premiums
The merits of any particular point are debatable; the fact that concrete proposals exist and are aimed more at controlling costs than spreading coverage is not.
The Court decision was not a massive win for Obama and will not help Democrats.
Democrats assumed the act would be upheld on the basis of the Commerce Clause. That would have been a "win". Failing that, they looked to the Necessary and Proper Cause. That would have been a "modest win".
That the act was upheld on neither clause, and had to be upheld on a contorted interpretation of taxation powers despite the many references explicit in the act to "penalty" and the repeated denials of its authors and supporters that it was a tax, makes it a "weak win". Furthermore, the Medicaid expansion stick was whittled away.
The dissenting opinion is strong, and reveals just how weak a straw Roberts was forced to clutch (and refabricate) in order to throw the problem back at the legislators.
Although outright repeal of the act is still a long shot (Senate filibuster), gutting the act by removing the tax is not. Longer term, the deficit/debt math kills the act - and a lot of other mandatory spending - anyways.
Democratic candidates are, and have been, running like scalded dogs to distance themselves from the act for months, and that has not changed. Apparently they do not think it will help their chances of re-election. Obama, too, would rather talk about other things.
We can all spin as much as we like, but the silence, excuses, and evasions of the acts authors and proponents tells the story quite plainly.
Apparently the proposals on Romney's table include:
- increase competition across state lines
- devolve more authority to states
- widen the tax credits for buying health insurance
- encourage creation of subsidized high-risk pools
- change Medicaid to a block grant system
- other unspecified Medicaid/Medicare reform
- allow HSA funds to be used for insurance premiums
The merits of any particular point are debatable; the fact that concrete proposals exist and are aimed more at controlling costs than spreading coverage is not.
The Court decision was not a massive win for Obama and will not help Democrats.
Democrats assumed the act would be upheld on the basis of the Commerce Clause. That would have been a "win". Failing that, they looked to the Necessary and Proper Cause. That would have been a "modest win".
That the act was upheld on neither clause, and had to be upheld on a contorted interpretation of taxation powers despite the many references explicit in the act to "penalty" and the repeated denials of its authors and supporters that it was a tax, makes it a "weak win". Furthermore, the Medicaid expansion stick was whittled away.
The dissenting opinion is strong, and reveals just how weak a straw Roberts was forced to clutch (and refabricate) in order to throw the problem back at the legislators.
Although outright repeal of the act is still a long shot (Senate filibuster), gutting the act by removing the tax is not. Longer term, the deficit/debt math kills the act - and a lot of other mandatory spending - anyways.
Democratic candidates are, and have been, running like scalded dogs to distance themselves from the act for months, and that has not changed. Apparently they do not think it will help their chances of re-election. Obama, too, would rather talk about other things.
We can all spin as much as we like, but the silence, excuses, and evasions of the acts authors and proponents tells the story quite plainly.