I have never been the biggest fan of the Affordable Care Act.
I believe that since the government is already paying over 70% of our nation’s health care bill and we’re paying another 12% out of pocket, this colossal effort to preserve the small share financed by privately-funded private insurance without bankrupting the nation may not have been worth the effort. Medicare-for-all would have been a much better approach.
But now that an emerging group of at-risk Democratic senators have joined the Republican chorus to delay the individual mandate, I want to offer an opposing view to theirs.
Obamacare has been compromised enough.
Since it was enacted in 2010, Obamacare has undergone the following significant changes:
- The minimum medical loss ratio requirements were delayed in several states.
- The long-term care insurance program has been repealed.
- The prevention fund has been raided.
- The reductions in payments to providers have been put off.
- The mandatory Medicaid expansion has been made optional.
- The employer mandate has been delayed.
These have all occurred before the program was fully implemented. And this has had more to do with public pressure than public policy.
Now there are at least three more changes gathering steam – a delay in the individual mandate (favored by conservatives), a delay in the reinsurance pool tax (favored by liberals), and a delay in the 2.3% excise tax on medical equipment (favored by both).
The irony is that members of Congress think these changes will make them more popular with their constituents. But that isn’t going to happen. The popularity of Congress is at an all-time low. Obamacare is at least four to five times more popular than Congress.
So enough already. How about trying leadership for a change?
Democrats reversing course on the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate is only today’s news. Even though they now count on short memories, the Republicans and their conservative allies, who for the most part laid the philosophical foundation of the Affordable Care Act, including its individual mandate in the first place, also used to favor the individual mandate. They reversed their position on it around the time President Obama embraced it.
So here is the question. Are any of these people capable of staking out a position on this law as a matter of policy and then actually sticking by it – at least until the law is implemented?
When John Kerry said in the 2004 Presidential campaign that he voted for an appropriation for the Iraq War before he voted against it, it became a national joke and added “flip-flopping” to the political lexicon.
A decade later, flip-flopping on the Affordable Care Act seems to have replaced leadership as a requirement of public office.
And here’s why a little leadership today could go a long way: because most of what is being argued about doesn’t really affect anyone anyway.
All the news this month about both the non-working federal exchange and the individual mandate affects about seven million people this year. They are all either uninsured or have really lousy employer-based insurance. That’s a little over 2 percent of the population.
For the rest of us who are not yet eligible for Medicare, the Obamacare consumer protections are what matter – no lifetime caps on benefits, no denial of coverage based on pre-existing conditions, no cancelling of coverage when people get sick, and mandated minimum medical loss ratios. And these have all been in place, for the most part, for the last couple of years.
And for Medicare beneficiaries, the closing of the donut hole and the new prevention benefits are pretty much all they need to be concerned about, and they, too, have been in place for a couple of years.
No one objects to these. And so far as I can tell no one is begging the members of Congress to change them.
So why don’t we just wait and see how the other 2 percent make out? They have until March 31stto sign up for insurance through the exchange. And if in February they cannot because of technical problems, there will still be plenty of time to help them out by delaying the March 31st “individual mandate” deadline.
In the meantime, let’s stop pretending that members of Congress have our interests in mind when they advocate delaying the individual mandate. Or that they’re showing any leadership at all.
Because pandering and leadership are not the same thing.
Paul Gionfriddo via email: gionfriddopaul@gmail.com. Twitter: @pgionfriddo. Facebook: www.facebook.com/paul.gionfriddo. LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/paulgionfriddo/
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