Yes,
there are Republican alternatives to Obamacare
by
Jason Pye
Thu,
11/07/2013
Since
the disastrous Obamacare at the beginning of October, some
administration officials, congressional Democrats, pundits friendly
to President Obama have been, unbelievably, trying to place some
blame on Republicans for the problems. They’ve also countered the
attempts to repeal or delay the Obamacare with the line that
Republicans haven’t offered any ideas or alternatives to this
administration’s ill-conceived law.
But
that’s not true, as George Will explained on Tuesday night during
an appearance on Fox News’ Special Report. Republicans have offered
alternatives to Obamacare, and they’ve pushed these ideas for
several years.
“I
think it’s unfair [to say Republicans don’t have healthcare
ideas]. Paul Ryan has a premium support plan, John McCain, amazingly,
got it right in 2008,” noted Will, a conservative Washington Post
columnist. “[H]e said, look, tax all employer-provided health
insurance as what it manifestly is, compensation, but compensate for
that by giving people a large tax credit to go into the market and
shop across state lines, which you’re not allowed to do now, for
health insurance.”
“Premium
support plus [McCain’s ideas], that’s a Republican plan,” he
added.
Bret
Baier, host of Special Report, noted that tort reform is also a
Republican idea. Dr. Ben Carson, who has garnered a lot of attention
from conservatives, agreed, but noted that trial lawyers have fought
on efforts to rein in excessive lawsuits.
Not
only have Republicans offered healthcare alternatives over the past
few years, they’ve done so in the current Congress. Reps. Tom Price
(R-GA) and Paul Broun (R-GA), both medical doctors, have separately
introduced comprehensive, patient-centered alternatives to Obamacare.
The
Republican Study Committee (RSC) incorporated many of Price’s ideas
into its own separate alternative, the American Health Care Reform
Act. This proposal would repeal and replace Obamacare and enact
reforms that would expand make health insurance more accessible,
incentives people to purchase coverage by making it tax deductible,
and covers the small number of Americans with pre-existing
conditions.
There
are two things at play that shape the narrative that Republicans
supposedly haven’t offered any alternatives. First, President Obama
and Democrats don’t like these ideas, so they dismiss them out of
hand and, falsely, continue to claim that Republicans have nothing.
More
importantly, Republicans have yet to coalesce around or promote any
particular set of alternatives to Obamacare. This one is, squarely,
on them. They’ve focused on foreign policy and tax issues, the
latter of which is understandable, without really pushing their ideas
on healthcare. Which is why you’re seeing more calls by
congressional Republicans to get out in front on the need to get
behind the RSC’s plan, especially now that Obamacare is fledgling.
“I
believe in coming months, the American people will recognize the
urgent warnings that the Republicans tried so desperately to convey.
And they will be looking to us for a way out,” Rep. Tom McClintock
(R-CA) told his colleagues in a recent speech.
“We
need to blaze that trail now, and for that reason,” he said, “I
rise to ask the House leadership to bring the Republican health care
reforms to the floor – get them to the Senate – and then let the
American people decide.”
If
there is a takeaway from the gubernatorial race in Virginia, it’s
that the botched Obamacare rollout and the stories of cancellations
letters to consumers because of the law are hurting Democrats; it
caused a much closer race in the Commonwealth than anyone
anticipated. That’s why some vulnerable Senate Democrats are
beginning to pivot on the issue, hoping that fixes will be enough to
appease voters back home.
Getting
out in front of this issue is imperative for Republicans. Being
against something only goes so far with voters, they have to get
behind one particular alternative and then sell it to an Americans
public increasingly weary of Obamacare.
Read
this and other articles at United Liberty
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