Posted on 08/05/2012 8:52:00 PM PDT by carlo3b
http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/304834/what-romney-needs-say-about-romneycare-mona-charen
July 6, 2012 12:00 A.M.
What Romney Needs To Say About Romneycare
Its not the same as Obamacare.
By Mona Charen
Romney aide Eric Fehrnstroms blunder telling an interviewer that Romney believes the individual mandate is not a tax was politically dumb, if revealing. It suggests that the Romney camp continues to struggle with the ghost of Romneycare. Romneys subsequent attempt at clarification, saying that its a tax because the Supreme Court said it is, though I agreed with the dissent, succeeded only in further confusing matters.
The campaign desperately needs clarity on this issue. It needs also to shake that worrying tentativeness on Romneycare a timidity that suggests to voters that Romney has something to hide.
The answer to the question Wasnt Romneycare exactly the same thing as Obamacare? is, to quote Nancy Pelosi, Are you serious? The Massachusetts law contained an individual mandate (which states, unlike the federal government, are allowed to impose). But it did not consist of 2,700 pages of new regulations; 159 new boards and commissions; more than $500 billion in new taxes (and counting); the Independent Payment Advisory Board, a rationing board whose decisions are unreviewable by the courts and practically untouchable by Congress itself; restrictions on religious liberty; Medicare cuts; affirmative-action mandates for medical and dental schools; huge new authority over one-seventh of the U.S. economy for the secretary of health and human services, and open-ended regulations of the way doctors and others perform their jobs.
Beyond that, a glance at the history of Romneycare in Massachusetts shows that Romneys instincts and initiatives were for free-market reforms. An 85 percent Democratic legislature thwarted his best efforts, and a Democratic successor as governor twisted the laws trajectory dramatically.
Before Romneys time, Massachusetts had enacted a number of laws that made its health-care system needlessly expensive. All policies offered in the state were required to cover expensive treatments like substance-abuse counseling and infertility. In 1996, the state passed a law requiring guaranteed issue and community rating meaning people could wait until they got sick to purchase health insurance. Naturally, rates skyrocketed. In addition, a 1986 federal law required hospital emergency rooms to treat all patients, regardless of ability to pay.
Romneys idea was to permit Massachusetts insurers to sell catastrophic plans. As Avik Roy explained in Forbes, Shorn of the costly mandates and restrictions originating in earlier state laws, these plans, called Commonwealth Care Basic, could cost much less. Romney also proposed merging the non-group and small-group markets, so as to give individuals access to the more cost-effective plans available to small businesses. Romneys plan would also have involved a degree of cost sharing, so that those receiving subsidies would have an incentive to minimize their consumption.
Romney agreed to the mandate believing that Massachusetts citizens would get the opportunity to purchase inexpensive, catastrophic plans. But the legislature, together with Romneys successor as governor, Deval Patrick, changed the law to require insurers to offer three tiers of coverage all of them far beyond catastrophic care. Perhaps Romney ought to have foreseen what future legislatures and governors would do but thats a far cry from the accusation that Romneycare was indistinguishable from Obamacare.
Romneys proposed reforms included fraud-prevention measures for Medicaid, requiring the income of both parents to be considered in childrens Medicaid eligibility, medical-malpractice tort reform, and giving individuals the same treatment as small businesses in the purchase of health plans. He envisioned a system of increased competition and choice.
The bill that passed the legislature contained a number of features Romney couldnt countenance. He opposed the mandate, preferring to permit individuals to post a $10,000 bond in lieu of insurance. The legislature overrode him. He vetoed the employer mandate, coverage for illegal aliens, the creation of a new bureaucracy to be called the Public Health Council, a provision limiting improvements to Medicaid, and another provision expanding Medicaid coverage to include dental care. His vetoes were overridden.
The health-reform law Romney introduced as opposed to the one that was implemented by his successor stressed competition, reduced regulation, and expanded choice for the consumer.
It was a mistake for Romney to sign the bill. As Avik Roy put it, The individual mandate was a loaded gun that Romney handed to his opponents, who used it to force individuals to buy comprehensive insurance they didnt need. But Romneys bona fides as a free-market advocate and critic of Obamacare are not undermined by Romneycare. He can rightly claim that he foresaw, and attempted to prevent, the consequences of heavy-handed government control of the health-care market.
Mona Charen is a nationally syndicated columnist. © 2012 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
Good article. Thank you so much for posting it.
I will say this, though. The Romney campaign needs to fire Andrea Saul...yesterday.
IIRC, she worked for the McCain campaign?
I get it! Romney will get my vote because he’s not Obama.
I am doing exactly what you are doing.
Finally a voice of reason amongst the madness.
Yes, she worked for McCain, and yea, Ann Coulter agrees with you.
Ann Coulter joined Hannity to discuss the latest in this heated campaign season. She said, I think the bigger issue is how repulsive this ad is. This man, his wife didnt even have health insurance through his job. She had health insurance through her job [ ] Obama is a liar, this is a repulsive despicable ad, it shows the true colors of the man that oh we thought was hope and change.
She saved some of her criticism for the Romney campaign spokeswoman, Andrea Saul. Instead of calling out the ad for being despicable or pointing out that Romney had already left Bain or even that the woman had died five years after the plant closed, Sauls response in Coulters words was, well if she had lived in Massachusetts with Mitt Romneys health care plan, she wouldve had health insurance.
Coulter charged, Anyone who donates to Mitt Romney, and I mean the big donors, ought to call Mitt Romney and say if Andrea Saul isnt fired and off the campaign tomorrow, they are not giving another dime because it is not worth fighting for this man if this is the kind of spokesman he has.
Heatedly, she went on to say, There is no point in us going to a convention and pushing for this man if hes employing morons like this.
Fixed it.
It's nothing but a useless exercise, at best.
Balderdash. The best way to do that, Mona, would have been for him to not sign the bill. The people have spoken clearly and have said they don't want government intervention in their health care, period. They don't care whether government might or might not 'expand their choice'. They want government OUT.
Romney still doesn't see that. Saul's statement of yesterday proves it.
Please do not tell me what is between me and God. I will do whatever I can to protect life, liberty and happiness in this country, little as it may be. He knows what is in my heart.
Coulter rammed Romney down our throats to the point of claiming that Romneycare was conservative. At that time, she was a force.
In the Hannity interview, she announced her irrelevancy.
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