The
Political Scene: The New Yorker
Unpopular
Mandate
Why do
politicians reverse their positions?
by Ezra
Klein
June 25,
2012
Republicans
turned against the individual mandate after supporting it for two
decades.
In March
23, 2010, the day that President Obama signed the Affordable Care Act
into law,
fourteen state attorneys general filed suit against the law’s
requirement that
most Americans purchase health insurance, on the ground that it was
unconstitutional. It was hard to find a law professor in the country
who took
them seriously. “The argument about constitutionality is, if not
frivolous,
close to it,” Sanford Levinson, a University of Texas law-school
professor,
told the McClatchy newspapers. Erwin Chemerinsky, the dean of the law
school at
the University of California at Irvine, told the Times, “There is no
case law,
post 1937, that would support an individual’s right not to buy health
care if
the government wants to mandate it.” Orin Kerr, a George Washington
University
professor who had clerked for Justice Anthony Kennedy, said, “There is
a less
than one-per-cent chance that the courts will invalidate the individual
mandate.” Today, as the Supreme Court prepares to hand down its
decision on the
law, Kerr puts the chance that it will overturn the mandate—almost
certainly on
a party-line vote—at closer to “fifty-fifty.” The Republicans have made
the
individual mandate the element most likely to undo the President’s
health-care
law. The irony is that the Democrats adopted it in the first place
because they
thought that it would help them secure conservative support. It had,
after all,
been at the heart of Republican health-care reforms for two decades.
The mandate
made its political début in a 1989 Heritage Foundation brief titled
“Assuring
Affordable Health Care for All Americans,” as a counterpoint to the
single-payer system and the employer mandate, which were favored in
Democratic
circles. In the brief, Stuart Butler, the foundation’s health-care
expert,
argued, “Many states now require passengers in automobiles to wear
seat-belts
for their own protection. Many others require anybody driving a car to
have
liability insurance. But neither the federal government nor any state
requires
all households to protect themselves from the potentially catastrophic
costs of
a serious accident or illness. Under the Heritage plan, there would be
such a
requirement.” The mandate made its first legislative appearance in
1993, in the
Health Equity and Access Reform Today Act—the Republicans’ alternative
to
President Clinton’s health-reform bill—which was sponsored by John
Chafee, of
Rhode Island, and co-sponsored by eighteen Republicans, including Bob
Dole, who
was then the Senate Minority Leader.
After the
Clinton bill, which called for an employer mandate, failed, Democrats
came to
recognize the opportunity that the Chafee bill had presented. In “The
System,”
David Broder and Haynes Johnson’s history of the health-care wars of
the
nineties, Bill Clinton concedes that it was the best chance he had of
reaching
a bipartisan compromise. “It should have been right then, or the day
after they
presented their bill, where I should have tried to have a direct
understanding
with Dole,” he said.
Ten years
later, Senator Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, began picking his way
back
through the history—he read “The System” four times—and he, too, came
to focus
on the Chafee bill. He began building a proposal around the individual
mandate,
and tested it out on both Democrats and Republicans. “Between 2004 and
2008, I
saw over eighty members of the Senate, and there were very few who
objected,”
Wyden says. In December, 2006, he unveiled the Healthy Americans Act.
In May,
2007, Bob Bennett, a Utah Republican, who had been a sponsor of the
Chafee
bill, joined him. Wyden-Bennett was eventually co-sponsored by eleven
Republicans and nine Democrats, receiving more bipartisan support than
any
universal health-care proposal in the history of the Senate. It even
caught the
eye of the Republican Presidential aspirants. In a June, 2009,
interview on
“Meet the Press,” Mitt Romney, who, as governor of Massachusetts, had
signed a
universal health-care bill with an individual mandate, said that
Wyden-Bennett
was a plan “that a number of Republicans think is a very good
health-care
plan—one that we support.”
Wyden’s
bill was part of a broader trend of Democrats endorsing the individual
mandate
in their own proposals. John Edwards and Hillary Clinton both built a
mandate
into their campaign health-care proposals. In 2008, Senator Ted Kennedy
brought
John McDonough, a liberal advocate of the Massachusetts plan, to
Washington to
help with health-care reform. That same year, Max Baucus, the chairman
of the
Senate Finance Committee, included an individual mandate in the first
draft of
his health-care bill. The main Democratic holdout was Senator Barack
Obama. But
by July, 2009, President Obama had changed his mind. “I was opposed to
this
idea because my general attitude was the reason people don’t have
health
insurance is not because they don’t want it. It’s because they can’t
afford
it,” he told CBS News. “I am now in favor of some sort of individual
mandate.”
This
process led, eventually, to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act—better known as Obamacare—which also included an individual
mandate. But,
as that bill came closer to passing, Republicans began coalescing
around the
mandate, which polling showed to be one of the legislation’s least
popular
elements. In December, 2009, in a vote on the bill, every Senate
Republican
voted to call the individual mandate “unconstitutional.”
This
shift—Democrats lining up behind the Republican-crafted mandate, and
Republicans declaring it not just inappropriate policy but contrary to
the
wishes of the Founders—shocked Wyden. “I would characterize the
Washington,
D.C., relationship with the individual mandate as truly schizophrenic,”
he
said.
Read the
rest of the article at The New Yorker
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