Health Reform: To hear Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
and White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs tell it, what people think
regarding what the president and Congress do is irrelevant — or worse,
immoral.
The Democrats' leader in the U.S. Senate, who will be in the fight of his
political life back home in Nevada next year, accused Republicans of Civil
War-era racism in opposing the multitrillion-dollar big-government health care
revolution Congress and the president have planned.
"Instead of joining us on the right side of history, all the Republicans
can come up with is, 'Slow down, stop everything, let's start over,'" Reid
charged on Monday.
According to Reid, "When this country belatedly recognized the wrongs of
slavery, there were those who dug in their heels and said, 'Slow down. It's
too early. Things aren't bad enough.'"
Going further, Reid then compared Republican obstructionism to the
opposition to women's suffrage and the civil rights movement.
Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., called the remarks "beneath the dignity of the
majority leader" and said he was personally insulted. But it's exactly in
character for the left as it seeks to boost its powers in American life.
Politicians who believe in the never-ending expansion of government are fully
willing to pull out the stops when something as big as government-run health
care is within grasp.
It is clear beyond doubt that the American public is revolting against what
Congress has planned. Rasmussen pegs public support for Congress' health
reform at just 38%; the Gallup poll shows it even lower at 35%.
An IBD/TIPP Poll of 922 adults last week showed only 42% support the plan,
and 45% oppose it. Closer examination of the numbers is more revealing.
Democrats support Congress' reform by 68% to 16%, while Republicans oppose it
by 76% to 16% and Independents by 51% to 37%.
Reid, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the president are a lot more concerned
about what their base wants them to do — that 68% — than what the public
overall thinks. If they don't enact the "change they can believe in," the
MoveOn-Daily Kos crowd won't be doing any moving — or voting. Or at least a
goodly portion of them won't.
No wonder White House Press Secretary Gibbs delivered his infantile
diatribe this week claiming that the president's 47% approval according to the
Gallup tracking poll — a new low — is meaningless.
It was among the lowest of any recent president in a December of his first
year in office, but Gibbs complained about its "11-point spread" and quipped
that "I'm sure a 6-year-old with a crayon could do something not unlike that."
He added that "I don't put a lot of stake in, never have, in the EKG that is
the daily Gallup trend. . .. I don't pay a lot of attention to the
meaninglessness of it."
The Gallup number suggests the president's recent speech on the Afghanistan
war has had little lasting favorable effect on his popularity. But Gibbs'
words translate into not placing "a lot of stake in" the wishes of the
American people, which the White House and the Congress obviously consider
"meaningless" right now.
Americans are happy with the health care they have now — courtesy of the
best medical system in the world — and as information about huge rises in
premiums for families of modest means gets out, not to mention the trillions
of dollars it will cost the government, they are saying stop, not just slow
down.
So it's actually the people themselves who Harry Reid is accusing of
maliciously being on the wrong side of history. Americans know how dangerous
it is to let history become a narrative of bigger and bigger government. We'll
check Harry's EKG after his coming election.