Pull the Plug on ObamaCare
It's the best cure for what ails the Obama presidency.
By Peggy Noonan
WSJ.com
Looking back, this must have been the White House health-care strategy:
Health care as a subject is extraordinarily sticky, messy and confusing. It's
inherently complicated, and it's personal. There are land mines all over the
place. Don't make the mistake the Clintons made and create a plan that gets
picked apart, shot down, and injures the standing of the president. Instead,
push it off on Congress. Let them come up with a dozen plans. It will keep them
busy. It will convince them yet again of their importance and autonomy. It will
allow them to vent, and perhaps even exhaust, their animal spirits. Various
items and elements within each bill will get picked off by the public. Fine,
that's to be expected. The bills may in fact yield a target-rich environment.
Fine again. Maybe health care's foes will get lost in the din and run out of
ammo. Maybe they'll exhaust their animal spirits, too.
Summer will pass, the fight confined to the public versus Congress. And at
the end, in the fall, the beauty part: The president swoops in and saves the
day, forcing together an ultimate and more moderate plan that doesn't contain
the more controversial elements but does constitute a successful first step
toward universal health care.
That's not what happened.
It all got hotter, quicker than the White House expected. The many plans of
Congress congealed in the public mind into one plan, and the one plan became a
poison pool. The president is now immersed in it.
Associated Press
President John F. Kennedy walks with humility
after his Bay of Pigs fiasco.
***
Here's another thing that didn't work. (I write as if health-care reform or
insurance reform or whatever it's called this week is already a loss, a historic
botch, because it is. Even if the White House wins, they lose, because the cost
in terms of public trust and faith was too high.)
Every big idea that works is marked by simplicity, by clarity. You can
understand it when you hear it, and you can explain it to people. Social
Security: Retired workers receive a public pension to help them through old age.
Medicare: People over 65 can receive taxpayer-funded health care. Welfare: If
you have no money and cannot support yourself, we will help as you get back on
your feet.
These things are clear. I understand them. You understand them. The
president's health-care plan is not clear, and I mean that not only in the sense
of "he hasn't told us his plan." I mean it in terms of the voodoo phrases, this
gobbledygook, this secret language of government that no one understands—"single
payer," "public option," "insurance marketplace exchange." No one understands
what this stuff means, nobody normal.
And when normal people don't know what the words mean, they don't say to
themselves, "I may not understand, but my trusty government surely does, and
will treat me and mine with respect." They think, "I can't get what these people
are talking about. They must be trying to get one past me. So I'll vote no."
***
In a more beautiful world, the whole health-care chapter could become, for
the president, that helpful thing, the teachable moment. The president the past
month has been taught a lot by the American people. It's all there in the polls.
He could still step back, rethink, say it didn't work, promise to return with
something better.
When presidents make clear, with modesty and even some chagrin, that they
have made a mistake but that they've learned a lesson and won't be making it
again, the American people tend to respond with sympathy. It is our tradition
and our impulse.
Such admissions are not a sign of weakness. John F. Kennedy knew this after
the Bay of Pigs. He didn't blame his Republican predecessor, Dwight Eisenhower,
or the agencies that had begun the invasion's tentative planning under Ike. JFK
made it clear he'd learned a great deal, which increased confidence in his
leadership. His personal popularity rose so high that he later wryly noted that
the more mistakes he made, the more popular he became.
I suspect the American people would appreciate seeing Barack Obama learn from
this, and keep going. He's their president. He will be for the next few
difficult years, which will no doubt contain moments he will have to lead us
through. They also probably wouldn't mind seeing a wry, modest, very human and
self-critical stance from a new president who doesn't strut and doesn't swagger
but does have a level of 1950s cool, Old Vegas cool, of supreme and confident
smoothness that one wouldn't mind seeing ruffled a bit by that old ruffler,
reality. Critics of George W. Bush will say here, "Did he ever show wry
self-criticism?" No, he didn't. And that's why it ended so well for him.
Modern presidents are always afraid to show anything so human as modesty or
doubt. They're afraid of the endless cable-news loop of "I think I was wrong, I
think I misjudged, I didn't get it right." They're afraid of death by soundbite.
Which is understandable. But they should get over it, especially when it comes
to a bit of self-criticism, and even a bit of self-doubt. Modesty is one of the
prevailing moods of the moment, it's part of where the American people are and
have been since at least a year ago when the economy tanked. We all lived
through the abundance, made investments, not only financial ones, that turned
out good or bad, made mistakes of judgment, and are wondering about the past
decade, and its mistakes, and our part in its mistakes.
It shouldn't become a wallow, but there's nothing wrong with self-reflection
and trying to learn from everything we did that was wrong, and right. It
wouldn't be so bad to see a president echo this.
***
A final factor contributed to the mess of the health-care debate, and that
the White House might ponder it. Looking back, what a lucky man President
Clinton was to have—to help bring about after his own health-care fiasco—a
Congress controlled by the opposite party. What a great and historic team Mr.
Clinton and Newt Gingrich were, a popular Democratic president and a determined
GOP leader with a solid majority. Welfare reform, a balanced budget, and a sense
the public could have that not much crazy would happen and some serious progress
might be made. If Mr. Clinton pressed too hard, Mr. Gingrich would push back. If
Mr. Gingrich pressed too hard Mr. Clinton pushed back. Two gifted, often
perplexing and always controversial Boomers who didn't even like each other, and
yet you look back now and realize: Good things happened there.
Right now Mr. Obama's gift is his curse, a Congress dominated by his party.
While the country worries about the economy and two wars, the Democrats of
Congress are preoccupied with the idea that this is their moment, now is their
time, health care now, "Never let a good crisis go to waste," the only blazingly
memorable phrase to be uttered in the new era.
It's not especially pleasurable to see history held hostage to ideological
vanity, but it's not the first time. And if they keep it up, they'll help solve
the president's problem. He'll have a Republican congress soon enough.
Home | Articles | BLOG | Quotes | Photo Gallery | Favorites | Stupid Frogs Game | Store | Feedback | Search | Subscribe | About Us
|