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Dr. Romney Goes National - A Republican health-care plan.
National Review Online ^ | August 27, 2007 | An NRO Symposium

Posted on 08/27/2007 5:30:27 PM PDT by neverdem







Dr. Romney Goes National
A Republican health-care plan.

An NRO Symposium

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney laid out his health-care plan on Friday in Florida. The former Massachusetts governor has earned both contentious criticism and accolades for working with Democrats to reform health-care there while governor. National Review Online asked a group of health-care experts to take a look at what he had to offer Friday. Here are their reactions.


Michael F. Cannon

Mitt Romney just discarded two of the most counterproductive components of his Massachusetts health-care reforms.

Romney’s law is known for (1) its requirement that all individuals purchase health insurance and (2) the “Commonwealth Connector,” a government bureaucracy much like that was championed by First Lady Hillary Clinton in 1993 and rejected by Congress in 1994.

Romney appears to have traded those big-government ideas in for full tax deductibility of out-of-pocket medical expenses and health premiums. Romney’s tax reforms would not do as much to increase affordability or individual ownership as Rudy Giuliani’s would. Nevertheless, they are a dramatic improvement over Romney’s recent past.

Unfortunately, Romney still supports some reforms that would expand government.

Though he advocates block-granting Medicaid, he wants states to use the added flexibility to make more Americans dependent on government for their health care.

He wants to deregulate health insurance, but by having Congress strong-arm the states, rather than by letting Americans purchase health insurance from out-of-state. That’s one free-market reform that neither Romney nor Giuliani have fully endorsed.

Nevertheless, Romney’s abandonment of two major components of his Massachusetts law may signal the decline of big-government conservatism in health care.

Michael F. Cannon is director of health-policy studies at the libertarian Cato Institute and coauthor of Healthy Competition: What’s Holding Back Health Care and How to Free It, 2nd edition (forthcoming).


Robert Goldberg
RomneyCare — like GuilianiCare or proposals being advanced by Senators Burr and Coburn — can win the national debate on health-care reform.

RomneyCare gives people cash and lets them choose the coverage that’s right for them. In Massachusetts, it signed up more people faster than SCHIP signed up in a decade. The difference? Private companies competed for consumers instead of government trying to enroll recipients.

Under RomneyCare people could shop nationwide for the best insurance product for them at the best price. The Democrats would shove everyone into something like the Veterans’ Administration or Medicaid.

Under RomneyCare people could keep the insurance they have or get something else. Under Hillary/Obama/EdwardsCare one would have to pay higher taxes, give up one's current coverage, and have one's choices decided by government. While our soldiers returning from Iraq were waiting six months to see a doctor, Hillary told John Stossel that the VA was an example of government success. Under the Clintons, the lifespan of people treated in Medicaid-funded mental-health agencies declined by ten years. Let the Democrats defend Medicaid and the VA. Romney should campaign for health-care choices at lower prices and take the fight to the Democrats at every campaign stop.

— Robert Goldberg is vice president of the Center for Medicine in the Public Interest.


John Goodman
Mitt Romney is the only U.S. politician who can credibly claim to have created universal health care coverage. His Massachusetts Health Plan may yet falter; but so far he has walked the walk, while his Democrat opponents have only chattered.  He alone owns the health care issue.
The Good.  In taking the Massachusetts plan nationwide, Romney has left most of the bad features on the cutting room floor.  There is no individual mandate, no employer mandate, and no managed competition.  States  would have the opportunity to go their own way.  

People who buy their own health insurance would get the same federal tax relief as those who obtain health insurance at work.  Subsidies would allow low-income families to buy private insurance.  A block grant of medicaid funds would give states the ability to move enrollees to the private sector.

The Bad.  People would be able to deduct all out-of-pocket  health costs.  This bizarre idea probably got added late at night when the Romney team was tired.  In New York City, where  the marginal tax rate is 50 percent, you would be able to buy an MRI scan or a stomach staple for fifty cents on the dollar.  The incentives would be to spend, spend, spend.  By contrast, Health Savings Accounts (which Romney also supports) create incentives to save.

The Question Marks.  What kind of subsidy will low-income purchasers of health insurance get?  Romney is still resisting tax credits.  That opens the door to a spending subsidy, which risks becoming another entitlement. As in Massachusetts, funds hospitals now use to provide free care to the uninsured would subsidize private health insurance instead.  That's good.  But if people turn down the offer and remain uninsured, surely the money needs to go back into the safety net.  That promise needs to be explicit.

 — John Goodman is president and CEO of the National Center for Policy Analysis.


Scott Gottlieb
A patient recently told me he was switching doctors, because he was switching jobs. His new employer didn’t offer his current insurance — a plan incidentally that he was largely happy with. And the plans offered by his new job didn’t include my hospital in its roster of “preferred” practitioners. Even if my patient — I’ll call him Tom — wanted to go outside his employer and re-purchase his present insurance in the private market, tax laws that give unfavorable treatment to such a transaction would make it prohibitively expensive.

These tax rules, and the system of private, employer-based health insurance they spawned, has become the pervasive model in this country, but it was not the product of careful planning or policy design, but rather the result of a series of disconnected political decisions that have left reasonable insurance coverage too costly and incomplete for many Americans.

First was the decision by the Roosevelt administration to make fringe benefits exempt from wartime wage controls. That encouraged employers to offer more health insurance, since better benefits were one of the few enticements they could use to attract workers in a tight, wage-controlled labor market. Next, the government decided that money spent on health insurance provided by employers would not be subject to tax. The result? Increased demand for such benefits, since a dollar of health insurance was more valuable than a dollar of salary.

This leaves people like Tom, who live paycheck to paycheck, at a particular disadvantage. He is tied to his job — for better or worse — since he is unable to purchase economical insurance on his own. Even if he could scrape together the same amount of money his employer was spending to give him health insurance it wouldn’t be enough, since the unfavorable tax treatment means buying the same plan on his own could cost twice as much.

Governor Mitt Romney’s health plan aims to level the playing field, giving people like Tom the same opportunities offered to his employers, or to the wealthy Americans who have enough extra cash to go into the marketplace on their own and buy individual policies, forgoing the tax advantage they’d have if they got a similar plan through a large corporation.

Romney is proposing to change the tax code to allow more people like Tom to deduct their health-care premiums, co-pays, and out-of-pocket expenses. Romney would also give states more flexibility to design programs that help cover more low-income Americans. And the proposal includes medical malpractice reform through the use of specialized health courts and caps on punitive and non-economic damages.

Meaningful reform also needs to free people like Tom to buy health plans that are liberated from all of the extraneous and expensive state “mandates” — on everything from chiropractors to in vitro fertilization — that state legislators heap onto individually bought insurance policies in order to satisfy special-interest groups who use these requirements to make sure their services are covered even if people don’t want them.

The Left complains that the market for health care is broken and they use all the present shortcomings as justification for more government regulation and control. But the problem is that health care isn’t a market at all, and won’t be until people like Tom are liberated to become real consumers of these services, armed with the same tax advantages, choices, and freedom from costly mandates that are offered to big employers.

— Dr. Scott Gottlieb is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and a practicing medical doctor.



David Gratzer
During his tenure in Massachusetts, Gov. Romney pushed through a comprehensive reform package that won praise from the people at the Heritage Foundation but, also, the people in Senator Edward Kennedy’s office. Critics on the Left and the Right tend to oversimplify the plan. Nevertheless, it is heavy in government requirements and subsidies, and light on deregulation.

Romney’s health-care advisers divide into two camps: the Massachusetts people and the uber-economists. Needless to say, the people who he’s brought from his Boston days see little wrong with RomneyCare. He also is advised by two of the sharpest minds in health policy: Glenn Hubbard and John Cogan. Hubbard and Cogan co-authored (with Daniel Kessler) the best book written in this field: Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise. They favor deregulation, greater competition, tax reform, and host of other free-market ideas.

Romney, in other words, has two sets of advisers, pushing in two separate directions. In Florida on Friday, Romney announced some principles for reform. Wisely, he listened to Hubbard and Cogan. The outline doesn’t have much in way of details, but the ideas are solid and worthy of serious consideration. Together, they offer a dose of needed medicine for American health care.

Voters will need to consider, though, why he didn’t seek the counsel of Hubbard and Cogan years ago.

— Dr. David Gratzer, a physician, is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute. His most recent book is The Cure: How Capitalism Can Save American Health Care. He advises the Giuliani campaign.


John Hood
I’ve always thought that one of the most reliable ways to assess a political program is whether it attracts the right criticism. For most politicians, the natural impulse is to find a way to fashion a plan or craft a message that has something for everyone. The impulse isn’t without its virtues. Indeed, most important policy reforms in Washington and state capitols have come from bipartisan or cross-ideological coalitions of some kind, though usually they aren’t 50-50 propositions — there is a senior partner (such as the Republican Congress on welfare reform) and a junior partner (the Democratic president who eventually signed the bill).

Judging by the criticism standard, Mitt Romney has found the right pitch on health care, where useful reforms will certainly require assembling a coalition. Previously, as a governor, Romney sang a bit sharp. Too eager to get his health-insurance measure through the Massachusetts legislature, he acquiesced to excessive regulation. Don’t ask me, ask Teddy Kennedy — who liked the outcome. Bad sign. Now, as a presidential candidate, Romney’s ideas on market reforms and federalism have drawn fire from John Edwards (“it will make a dysfunctional health care system even worse”) and Obama adviser Stuart Altman (“[Romney’s] run away from the Massachusetts plan”).

That’s a start.

— John Hood is president of the John Locke Foundation.


John McClaughry

Mitt Romney’s Health Care Vision is widely shared by almost every policy advocate not wedded to the government-run alternative. Indeed, every ingredient in it has long been on the agenda of Republican leaders in Congress and free market think tanks — including mine, dating back to 1993.

To his credit, Romney was the first governor to address the tax inequities in health insurance, and devise a scheme (“The Connector”) to allow employees to claim deductibility for individual premium payments through simplified employer cafeteria plans.

A major sticky wicket in Romney’s plan is his reliance on state insurance market reform - rarely if ever achieved, and not easily forced by federal pressure. The plan is also vague about the consequences facing impecunious non-participants seeking medical care in his “no free rider” participation system.

Romney’s surprising advocacy of coupling HSAs with even zero deductible insurance would reverse a hopeful trend toward reducing the role of third party payers for normal health maintenance.

That said, Romney’s articulate advocacy of this comprehensive package will add a strong voice to the pro-market side of a debate in which most other Republicans, including President Bush, have fared poorly. That’s a big plus.

— John McClaughry is president of the Ethan Allen Institute, a free market think tank in Vermont.


Robert E. Moffit
Romney’s health-care-reform proposal is a refreshing reaffirmation of federalism. At the federal level, he proposes a universal tax deduction for all health-care expenses. Every person would be able to get the same federal tax deduction for health insurance, for example, regardless of where they got it; health insurance would then be personal and individuals would be able to carry their health insurance from job to job. Romney would also strengthen health savings accounts by eliminating today’s minimum deductible requirement.

These are major and welcome changes. But the real heavy lifting would be up to the states. The Romney plan provides federal incentives for states to reform their insurance markets in ways that would reduce premium costs and expand private coverage options for consumers.

He leaves it to the states to determine how best to work out all the mind-numbing details, ranging from creating new risk pooling arrangements to drafting new underwriting rules. But under the plan, state officials would “earn” federal funds to help low income people get private coverage by making their insurance markets more affordable and consumer-friendly.

Romney’s got this exactly right: Essentially, he’s using existing government funds to do get the uninsured out of the hospital emergency rooms and into private health plans.

Romney’s national tax reform proposal would unify the tax treatment of health care for every American, while his encouragement of innovative state officials would respect the diversity of the states. After all, what works best for Massachusetts may not work well for Mississippi.

— Robert E. Moffit is director of the Center for Health Policy Studies at the Heritage Foundation.


Sally C. Pipes

Mitt Romney launched his “extreme health-care makeover” on Friday, outlining his federal health-care agenda to the Florida Medical Association. The docs, who are calling for Romney’s individual mandate at the national level, must have been disappointed at the former governor’s reversal. Out of Massachusetts and into the primary states, he’s jettisoned the harsh individual mandate for calls for a gentler adjustment to the tax code, deregulation, and a crack down on medical malpractice. To this, I’d say welcome home, but that would require that we know his permanent and fixed address.

Meanwhile, to quote Bob Dylan, his past is close behind. Back in Massachusetts, a slew of new bureaucrats in well-paid jobs are filling in the details of his healthcare handiwork. Despite claims to the contrary, Romney’s legacy to Massachusetts is a more regulated health environment. The alleged market maker — The Commonwealth Connector — issued regulations that dictate the design of health plans, declaring that as many as 200,000 people who were already insured didn’t have the right kind, subjecting them to a fine or forcing them to purchase new insurance. Regulators exempted 20 percent of the uninsured from the mandate. This puts at risk a financial and philosophical pillar of the plan: a redirection of funds from the state’s charity care pool to the subsidized insurance market. Stay tuned to this event, a smash up is on the way.

— Sally C. Pipes is president & CEO of the Pacific Research Institute. She is author of
Miracle Cure: How to Solve America’s Health Care Crisis and Why Canada Isn’t the Answer. She advises the Giuliani campaign.


Grace-Marie Turner
Governor Romney is the most battle-tested of all of the Republican presidential candidates on health care issues. The proposal he initiated for the commonwealth of Massachusetts went through the maw of the legislative process, and he necessarily had to make many compromises with an overwhelmingly Democratic legislature in order to get some version of his plan passed. But many people, especially conservatives, are troubled about the over-reach of state control that has been the result of Massachusetts’s health-care legislation.

Now that he is running for president, Romney has an opportunity to talk to voters about his ideas, his true convictions, and the lessons learned from his experience in Massachusetts. To his credit, his latest proposal does not call for an individual mandate that would require people to purchase health insurance. He also clearly understands the importance of having the federal government address the tax treatment of health insurance: He recommends changes that would allow insurance to be portable and not tied to the workplace, and he also would provide new subsidies to the uninsured to purchase private insurance. He also understands, as a former governor, giving the states more authority and resources to improve health care delivery. It is important for Romney to reassure primary voters about his true convictions and to prove that he will stick with the free-market convictions he articulated before the AMA, that he has learned the consequences of over-compromising, and that he truly is on the side of competition and consumer choice.

— Grace-Marie Turner is president of the Galen Institute.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: elections; healthcare; romney; romneycare; romneytherino
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To: Lovebloggers

What no politician will ever admit publicly is that the most significant single thing to affect costs is Medicare. Since its inception Medicare has been distorting and shifting costs to users in the private sector. When the government forces providers to furnish services at or below their cost, someone has to pay the difference. That would be those of us who use insurance or pay out of pocket.

There are obviously multiple variables at work, HC is a complex system. But the boogyman, the six hundred pound gorilla is the government/Medicare.

As as surely as that is true, it is also a guarantee that our system can’t and won’t be fixed because no one is going to stand in front of voters and say that Medicare has screwed up things. That until the government gets out of the business of price fixing via Medicare, things will not improve.

The government solution to fixing the problems it has caused is more government intervention. Welcome to socialized medicine, it is already halfway here.


41 posted on 08/28/2007 5:15:50 AM PDT by ChildOfThe60s (If you can remember the 60s........you weren't really there)
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To: MojoWire
I could go on and on and on, naming every single conservative YOU consider a hero. None of them "withdrew ... and were quiet' or whatever it is you demand regarding govt. involvment in health issues.

You could? Because I don't consider Reagan nor Santorum a 'hero' I don't consider any politician of the 20th century a 'hero'. But please do continue.

Romney's plan, in a nutshell, would REDUCE the meddling hand of today's government beaurocracy by encouraging low income/non-covered people to BUY THEIR OWN PRIVATE HEALTH INSURANCE (thru individual partial grants or subsidies).

And just where does that grant or subsidy money come from? The money fairy? They won't be buying it, we will. With our tax dollars

A compassionate American just cant sit idly by and watch someone get sick and die, regardless of how irresponsible that person is or was to begin with.

Of course they can't. That's what charities are for. To help the less fortunate. Perhaps if we had a little more money in our own pockets instead of politicians suggesting 'plans' these charities might be doing a little better than they are.

42 posted on 08/28/2007 5:20:20 AM PDT by billbears (Those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it. --Santayana)
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To: MojoWire

he’s your

rino.


43 posted on 08/28/2007 6:01:43 AM PDT by ken21
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To: ConservativeofColor
I thought it was a powdered donut.

Of course, Americans more and more are in a vicious cycle of donut hell. It’s why we all need health care. Romney is the guy to save us all from our powdered donuts. ;-)

44 posted on 08/28/2007 6:36:47 AM PDT by sevenbak (Many things Jesus did... the world itself could not contain books that should be written. John 21:25)
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To: MojoWire
Oh, I get it.

I don't think you do.

You Romney haters...

I don't hate Romney, I just don't think he should be the nominee...not of the GOP anyway.

...are the only REAL conservatives...

I never said that.

...and everyone else is just pretending.

Not everyone else is just pretending, just Willard.

Is that is?

Was that was?

45 posted on 08/28/2007 7:02:59 AM PDT by Petronski (Why would Romney lie about Ronald Reagan's record?)
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To: redgirlinabluestate
So let's see, Gov. Romney's plan is going to help me by deciding that my health care insurance isn't good enough, forcing me to spend even more money on a health care plan that some bureaucrats think I need, rather than what I think I need.

That seems to be the same kind of proposal most socialists make. The people don't know what's good for them, so they need us to dictate to them.

What next. Will the RomneyCare bureacrats decide that what I am eating is unhealthy and start dictating to me what to eat?

"They who would give up an essential liberty for temporary security, deserve neither liberty or security." - Ben Franklin.

46 posted on 08/28/2007 7:24:04 AM PDT by deebee1
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To: MojoWire

So we should be “Mind-numbed robots” and vote for whoever Ann tells us to?


47 posted on 08/28/2007 7:25:16 AM PDT by deebee1
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To: neverdem

Anyone mind if I scream?


48 posted on 08/28/2007 7:26:24 AM PDT by LIConFem (Thompson 2008. Lifetime ACU Rating: 86 -- Hunter 2008 (VP) Lifetime ACU Rating: 92)
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To: neverdem

I have no desire for Ronmeny-care any more than Hillary-Care.

If the issue boils down to Ronmeny vs Hillary this would be a very tough tough choice.

I have no more desire for romney stealing money from my pocket than i have for hillary to steal money from my pocket.

stick a fork in romney he is finished.


49 posted on 08/28/2007 7:33:09 AM PDT by longtermmemmory (VOTE! http://www.senate.gov and http://www.house.gov)
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To: MojoWire; Petronski; Canticle_of_Deborah; ken21; Squantos
I knew I'd draw fire for that graphic. I was wondering who would be first. :-) Don't get your shorts in such a knot. :-)

Romney is professional panderer, and a leftist. He'll tell anybody, any version of anything they want to hear. It's just what he does. I don't hate him anymore than I hate finding a Copperhead in the garden (which we do occaisionally). By the same token, we're going to cut the head off the snake. But it's nothing personal, just something that needs to be done. We don't try and pretend that the snake is a possum. Nor do we invent some reason for permitting the snake stay in the garden. We know from experience that if we do these things, eventually somebody is going to get BIT because the snake is a snake and he's simply dangerous.

I'll say it again... IF the GOP manages to get Giuliani, Romney, or McCain on the 2008 presidential ballot, they will do so at the peril of the nation because there are too many of my types who will simply vote for men like Duncan Hunter, irrespective of what the "Almighty GOP" thinks.

This will put Hillary Clinton squarely into the Oval Office. We will NOT vote for the lesser of two evils again, and we will not live in fear, or the fear of what will come because of those who do vote for the lesser of two evils.

I personally am dismayed beyond anything I can express here that the GOP has presented us with such a dismally lacking choice. They have failed us. But people down here at our level are picking nits off the dogs and trying to decide among themselves which stinking dog is the least offensive after its cleaned up as much as possible, which doesn't account for much. All three lack character and integrity and have established records of siding with the left on too many issues. They have records indicating that they give no heed to our Constitution. One is even a cross dresser. All three are terrible examples of the type of leader we need as POTUS and CINC, and it's pathethc that people continue to debate which is the best of the worst. It's a cowardly pattern and dangerous.

This behavior pattern I've noted above is quite a quandry for the cowards who exhibit it since practicing it is going to bring their worst fears upon them....having Hillary as the President.

So call us what you will, but I'm simply telling you what's going to happen. There's enough time to change the course of this disaster. But if things simply procede on their present course, Hillary Rodham Clinton will be the 44th President of The United States of America.


50 posted on 08/28/2007 7:40:33 AM PDT by hiredhand (My kitty disappeared. NOT the rifle!)
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To: ChildOfThe60s

I agree with you. Medicare is fraught with fraud and abuse and the government has proven that they are completely incapable of dealing with that.

How that can work? Instead of paying for health coverage for seniors, subsidize insurance premiums so that the private health insurance carrier is running the show — I can assure you the provider fraud we see so out of control now will be reigned in immediately.

The reality of it is that the government cutting it off completely just is not going to ever happen - EVER. So let’s try to fix the system with a system that will work, which is what Romney did.


51 posted on 08/28/2007 8:05:06 AM PDT by Lovebloggers
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To: MojoWire
If someone gets sick and doesn't have insurance, it doesn't affect me personally at all.

Sure it does. If he goes to the emergency room, he'll get treated for free, causing your healthcare costs to go up. If he gets a contageous disease, he might spread it to you.

But that doesn't pan out when you consider that many people who DON't have health insurance simply spend LESS on health care, not more.

Yeah, but the difference is, when they don't have health insurance, they're spending your money. When they have health insurance, they're spending their own.

Those who are covered by health plans (especially those covered by employers) will go to the doctor waaay more, studies show.

Yeah, but it's not on your dime.

If a non-covered person gets sick and dies, it in fact costs society less than if they were covered by Medicaid or Medicare, or whichever.

What if they have kids or dependents? A breadwinner getting sick dying means all of them become wards of the state. What if the person doesn't get immunized, or gets a contageous disease and spread it? The costs of that are huge.

52 posted on 08/28/2007 8:29:54 AM PDT by curiosity
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To: longtermmemmory
stick a fork in romney he is finished.

I heard that a lot waaaay back when he first announced.

I hear it less often now.

I suspect we'll be hearing even less of it in the future.

53 posted on 08/28/2007 8:41:41 AM PDT by sevenbak (Many things Jesus did... the world itself could not contain books that should be written. John 21:25)
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To: neverdem

I love the hand ringing about government intervening in healthcare. We already have government run healthcare, you pay for it in your premiums. The courts are running the system demanding every illegal be treated in the hospitals. All we are arguing about is how to streamline the process to make it efficient and as cheap as possible. Premiums are killing all of us. We have to figure out how to channel patients to doctor offices instead of emergency rooms. You do that by having more people insured.


54 posted on 08/28/2007 8:51:55 AM PDT by Goreknowshowtocheat
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To: redgirlinabluestate
We need to de-regulate the health care sector and have it become a true market. This would put in the opposite trajectory from RomneyCare, ArnoldCare and HillaryCare. The problem isn't the American health care system, which is the best in the world for all its shortcomings. No - the real problem is government has heavily regulated health care to the point where its more expensive and less accessible than it ought to be. Piling more of the same on a broken system will make it even worse. Its time to remove the shackles and allow consumers to decide what sort of health care best fits their needs.

"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." - Manuel II Palelologus

55 posted on 08/28/2007 9:04:17 AM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives In My Heart Forever)
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To: deebee1
No, deebee1, you seem to be woefully uninformed about the plan. Perhaps you should actually read it before going off on silly rants.

Contrary to what you think, it's not all about you. It's about the thousands of freeloaders who somehow have enough money to buy cell phones for each family member, 45 inch TVs, MP3 players, SUVs etc, but when a medical emergency hits they leave the hospitals, and, ultimately us, holding the bills. Why? Because they can.

It's about personal responsibility which seems to be a vanishing commodity around here -- even though a traditional conservative principle.

Romney's plan doesn't force you to buy any health insurance plan some bureaucrat thinks you need. On the contrary, you have the option to maintain Health Savings Accounts or demonstrate an ability to pay for you own medical care instead of forcing me and the other taxpayers to pay the consequences for your irresponsibility in higher premiums or closed hospitals.

You are never going to get the government completely out of the system, but this plan goes a long way to doing just that by putting the onus on private citizens to plan ahead. Romney believes that by expanding and deregulating the private health insurance market, we can decrease costs and ensure that more Americans have access to affordable, portable, quality, private health insurance. No more excuses.

One way or the other, someone is forced to pay the bill. Most people would prefer it be the person who actually receives the care -- not the taxpayers.

Look, go here ------> (http://www.freerepublic.com/~unmarkedpackage/#healthcare) and get informed on the actual proposal so you know what the heck you are talking about next time so you don't have to appear foolish.

I like that quote from Ben, but in this case Mark's quote is more appropos. It is better to keep your mouth closed and let people think you are a fool than to open it and remove all doubt.-- Mark Twain

56 posted on 08/28/2007 9:09:36 AM PDT by redgirlinabluestate
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To: sevenbak

why he is going to keep self financing his candidacy?


57 posted on 08/28/2007 9:11:26 AM PDT by longtermmemmory (VOTE! http://www.senate.gov and http://www.house.gov)
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To: goldstategop
True and Romney agrees with that -- in fact he sees it as Step #1. Romney believes that by expanding and deregulating the private health insurance market, we can decrease costs and ensure that more Americans have access to affordable, portable, quality, private health insurance.

Here's a more viewable version of the plan in a power point format:

The Romney Vision: Health Care Reform Goals

• First, Instituting Reforms That Make Private Health Insurance Affordable. More Americans need access to quality, private health insurance.

• Second, Providing Access To Quality Health Insurance For Every American.

• Third, Enhancing The Portability Of Private Health Insurance.

• Finally, Slowing The Rate Of Inflation In Health Care Spending.

Linking Goals With Action Steps:
The Federalist Approach -- Governor Romney's Approach To Health Care Reform Is One That Values The States As Laboratories Of Innovation And Beacons Of Creativity.

The Romney Plan: Six Action Steps

• Step 1: Establish Federal Incentives To Deregulate And Reform State Health Insurance Markets So Market Forces Can Work.

• Step 2: Redirect Federal Spending On "Free Care" To Help The Low-Income Uninsured Purchase Private Insurance.

• Step 3: Institute Health Savings Account (HSA) Enhancements And The Full Deductibility Of Qualified Medical Expenses.

• Step 4: Promote Innovation In Medicaid.

• Step 5: Implement Medical Liability Reform.

• Step 6: Bring Market Dynamics And Modern Technology To Health Care.

58 posted on 08/28/2007 9:13:46 AM PDT by redgirlinabluestate
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To: longtermmemmory
Because he estimates it will take 300 million to defeat Hillary. He’s a very successful numbers guy.

His nephew is my neighbor, and he told them as much way back in October in a extended family council when he was deciding whither or not to run.

Those kind of numbers are near impossible in regular campaign financing.

We’ve already seen candidates drop out due to money. While Mitt is a great fund raiser, he has other resources that he might pull from. I see nothing wrong with that, especially if it means defeating the Clinton machine,

59 posted on 08/28/2007 9:22:13 AM PDT by sevenbak (Many things Jesus did... the world itself could not contain books that should be written. John 21:25)
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To: goldstategop
Also, a very big part of the puzzle to bringing healthcare costs down is tort reform which Romney supports and other top-tier candidates oppose.

Like Newt Gingrich said: "You can have affordable health care and a good environment for jobs. Or you can have rich trial lawyers filing frivolous lawsuits. Not both."

From the Romney Platform:

- Tort Costs Are Too High. According to a recent report, U.S. tort costs reached $260.8 billion in 2005, which translates to $880 per person. This is an amount greater than the Gross Domestic Product of all but 35 countries in the world. Frivolous lawsuits and outrageous damages awards create a "liability tax" or "tort tax," which are passed along to every consumer in the country.

- Governor Romney Believes We Should Limit Non-Economic Damages And Prevent Excessive Punitive Damages Award. Non-Economic damages are inherently speculative, and a reasonable statutory cap makes sense. Governor Romney also believes we need a statutory prohibition on outrageous punitive damage awards.

- Governor Romney Believes We Should Require More Disclosure In Contingency Fee Arrangements. More disclosure will help clients make informed decisions, and it will help end abusive lawsuits and extortionate settlement demands by plaintiffs' lawyers.

Even the co-founder of the Federalist Society, Judge Robert Bork, agrees that national tort reform has become necessary.

60 posted on 08/28/2007 9:24:22 AM PDT by redgirlinabluestate
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