I'm really enjoying watching the GOP implode on health care.
Obama made a shrewd politicial move (regardless of if that was his intention) to pass a right-wing healthcare bill with the ACA.
The GOP, determined to oppose him at all costs, have been making nonsensical ideological arguments against Bob Dole's healthcare plan for a decade. now that they're in power, they need to keep holding the principled stances they've made for a decade, while trying to harmonize the abject lack of integrity.
Spoiler!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Vox's Sarah Kliff
On Apr 20, 2017, at 2:12 PM, Sarah Kliff, Vox.com <newsletter@vox.com> wrote:
The White House has a big incentive to make it look like something is happening. The AHCA's failure was a major embarrassment, and they are approaching the 100-day milestone with no legislative accomplishments. Plus, they aren't ready to move on a tax reform bill. So the appearance of activity on health care is better than nothing.
Lawmakers in the centrist and conservative cohorts also want to shift the blame, either to the other group or, if they somehow pass something out of the House, to the Senate.
"I think they are just trying to save face in the House and couldn't care less what happens to it in the Senate," one GOP lobbyist told me.
The bill seems stuck in a vicious cycle as lawmakers try to appease both extremes of the GOP.
Think of it as the Obamacare ouroboros. (That's the snake that eats its own tail, symbolizing eternity.)
Every new policy idea to satisfy the conservatives creates a new problem for the moderates, which leads to a new policy to satisfy them. Round and round again.
The latest tweak illustrates it perfectly:
-If the bill passed, the letter of the law would still prevent insurers from denying coverage based on a person's medical history, one of Obamacare's core reforms.
So moderates can claim they are protecting people with preexisting conditions.
But to appease the archconservatives, they want to allow states to opt out of two other insurance reforms, which prohibited plans from raising premiums because of preexisting conditions and which required plans to cover certain benefits. But without those policies, prohibiting outright discrimination doesn't matter. Plans will hike premiums or tweak their benefits to weed out costly patients. So people with conditions are at risk again.
To make up for that, they want to require states that waive those protections to set up a high-risk pool to offer coverage to sick people. So moderates can still claim they are protecting these people.
But because of the conservatives, they won’t provide the funding experts say is necessary to really make those high-risk pools work. So people are at risk again.
It's dizzying, I know. But this merry-go-round explains why House Republicans are struggling to find an equilibrium and pass a health care bill. It's not at all clear this latest plan solves that fundamental problem.
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