Health Reform: Thursday's much-hyped health "summit" seemed
mainly designed to show the president telling Republicans, "Those are all
legitimate points." Democrats admit it was a setup to pass their $2 trillion
plan.
Not long before the president assembled Democrats and Republicans at
the Garden Room of Blair House for a health care powwow, Rep. Anthony Weiner,
D-N.Y., let it all hang out on the House floor, roaring that "every single
Republican I have ever met in my entire life is a wholly owned subsidiary of
the insurance industry."
Civility was the cool thing during the grand gathering, but the real
purpose behind this televised event was cutthroat.
A Politico story by Mike Allen made that clear, reporting that according to
a Democratic official the summit was meant to "give a face to gridlock, in the
form of House and Senate Republicans."
Democratic Party strategists told the Web-based publication that the push
will begin early next week for "a massive, Democrats-only health care plan."
The official said of the summit's purpose: "The point is to alter the
political atmospherics."
Clearly, while the public face with the C-SPAN cameras on is the
president's soft-spoken "those are all reasonable points," the unseen reality
is closer to the partisan rants of Rep. Weiner.
Again and again, Democratic participants insisted that "we're really not
that far apart," "we really are close" and "we basically agree" except for
"semantic differences." House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Charles
Rangel, D-N.Y., whose trouble with numbers extends to his own tax returns and
whose airtime was buried toward the end of the event, absurdly claimed that
there was 70% agreement between Democrats and Republicans.
When Republicans respectfully objected, with factual backup, that the
differences were actually basic, relating to government vs. individual
control, they were curtly accused of rattling off political "talking points"
by the president.
A perfect example of the trickery was the president's seeming willingness
to agree to let consumers buy health insurance across state lines — maybe
after his national health insurance exchange is established. The continual
theme: Let the federal government intrude, then we can talk.
What we can expect now is the possibility of a modest increase in the
dismal approval ratings of the Democrats' plan — almost inevitable after such
a big media event. We'll also likely be told that the Democratic plan
incorporates lots of Republican ideas — though it doesn't. All this will
provide cover for Democrats to push hard to enact ObamaCare through the misuse
of the budget reconciliation process, requiring only 50 votes in the Senate.
The real issue on health reform is an incompetent centralized government —
whose intentions may be good — getting control.
Democratic politicians, so many of whom have no business or practical
experience in their careers, see government as a solution. But they don't see
that placing government in charge of pooling beneficiaries' risk will actually
cause costs to rise because of all the restrictions and mandates the
government will impose.
As viewers listen to Democrats playing on their sympathies with anecdotes
about health coverage horror stories, they shouldn't forget an incompetent
government's limited ability to deal with such problems.
Do Americans really want to spend trillions, then find that a Washington
bureaucrat is deciding what type of surgery is proper?
The president and congressional Democrats may look forward to pleasing
their core supporters if this summit serves as the prelude to ramming through
their big-government plan.
But it will be a costly Pyrrhic victory, and they will pay by losing
control of Congress this November.