Sen. Snowe: Finger on the trigger
of a single-pay system? AP
Health Reform: Congress' planned health care revolution
will be bad enough without a government-run option. With it, Euro-style
socialism becomes inevitable. It's time for a bipartisan way out of this
disaster.
Last week proved Democrats want as much big government control as possible
in the huge medical sector of the economy. The president's advisers said he's
still committed to a government-run public option, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
lined up three versions of such a plan and the Senate majority leader
announced a public plan with a state opt-out.
Why is the public option back at all? It seemed dead after a study earlier
this year indicated such a plan would mean private health insurers could lose
nearly 120 million customers.
Described as being "prized by liberals as a fundamental pillar of reform,"
the public option is really a way to put capitalistic America on a path toward
socialized medicine.
Senate Banking Committee Chairman Barney Frank, a longtime co-sponsor of
single-payer legislation, said in July, "I think the best way we're gonna get
single-payer, the only way, is to have a public option and demonstrate its
strength and its power." Why not just enact single-payer? "We don't have the
votes for it," Frank replied.
The public option was conceived by leftist organizations such as the
Campaign for America's Future years ago because polls showed the American
people liked private health insurance and would never go for a direct
government takeover. Ex-Sen. John Edwards' presidential campaign embraced it
as "stealth single-payer," and the campaigns of Hillary Clinton and Barack
Obama followed suit.
Renegade Republican Sen. Olympia Snowe of Maine may be the one to thank if
this new medical entitlement becomes reality, at a time when government
accountants warn that Washington is spending the country toward a fiscal
doomsday.
The president is reportedly smitten with Snowe's public option "trigger" —
an idea that comes down to this: If private insurers charge customers more
than Uncle Sam dictates as they deal with all the new costs Washington
imposes, the federal government will become their unfair competitor and wreck
the private health insurance industry.
With or without a government-run option, the Democrats' radical
transformation of the greatest health care system in the world still means
reams of new regulations on private insurers, including the likely end of
anti-trust protection.
It means fines for those — especially the young — who won't buy what will
become high-priced insurance. It may slap uncooperative employers with an 8%
payroll tax. And it may impose a $460 billion, 5.4% income tax surcharge sure
to kill private sector jobs.
It's time for new ideas, like the expanded private coverage options of the
Patients' Choice Act, backed by Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., and Sens. Tom Coburn,
R-Okla., and Richard Burr, R-N.C.
As Ryan warns, the federal government would run health care "with the
compassion of the IRS, the efficiency of the Post Office and the incompetence
of Katrina."