Net
Right Daily
House
Republicans all set to fund Obamacare
By
Robert Romano
Sometimes
you have to wonder why they even bother.
A new
proposal by House Majority Leader Rep. Eric Cantor (R-Va.) that
purports to defund Obamacare will do exactly the opposite. It will
guarantee that it is funded, meanwhile providing political cover to
elected leaders who can claim they did everything they could to stop
implementation of the law.
The
plan calls for passing a clean continuing resolution as soon as this
Thursday, and then passing a separate resolution that would “defund”
the health care law. In the meantime, the rule that brings the bill
to the floor will allow the Senate to ignore the defunding bill and
simply pass the continuing resolution that funds Obamacare.
The
bill would then go to President Barack Obama for his signature, not
back to the House of Representatives as under traditional,
constitutional order when the House and Senate pass differing
versions of the same legislation.
In
short, it’s a gimmick. And a sellout.
In
2010, when Republicans won the House majority, in the Pledge to
America they promised to “fight efforts to fund the costly health
care law.” They also promised to “give all Representatives and
citizens at least three days to read the bill before a vote,” but
with a vote expected Thursday, Sept. 12, and language having only
been made available on Sept. 10, they apparently won’t be keeping
that pledge, either.
“This
is an insult to the intelligence of the American people,” said
Americans for Limited Government President Nathan Mehrens.
“Separately passing a defunding Obamacare measure not tied to the
continuing resolution that can simply be decoupled by the Senate is a
useless gesture that does not merit serious consideration.”
Club
for Growth President Chris Chocola was no less adamant against the
resolution, all but calling it deceptive: “Trying to fool
Republicans into voting to fund Obamacare is even worse than offering
a bill that deliberately funds it.”
Chocola
is right. If House Republicans want to fund Obamacare, they should
just go ahead and do it. At least that would be honest. Instead, they
are hiding behind parliamentary tricks to evade accountability for an
outcome they are directly responsible for.
Every
member of the House would be well-advised that a vote in favor of
this continuing resolution, and the rule that brings it the floor, is
a vote to fund Obamacare.
Adding
insult to injury, the legislation is not as “clean” as
advertised. It also partially rolls back sequestration budget cuts on
the defense side of the budget that were promised in return for the
$2.1 trillion increase of the debt ceiling, that largest such hike in
U.S. history, an analysis by the Center for American Progress shows.
All
told, this will be a scarlet letter emblazoned on every member who
votes “yes” as the House stands for reelection in 2014. It will
encourage primary challenges.
It
cedes the moral authority on the health care issue, and if it
succeeds, it could result in a change in House leadership. The stakes
could not be higher politically for Republicans.
But
they are even higher for the American people who are being forced
into a government-run health care system. On that count, this is do
or die
If
the House fails to defund Obamacare this year, it is doubtful we will
ever get rid of it in 2014 and beyond when taxpayer insurance
subsidies for up to 80 million Americans through Medicaid or the
state insurance exchanges. Every election after this will be about
not defunding Obamacare subsidies, but how those subsidies should be
expanded.
Just
look down the road.
Even
if Republicans reclaim the Senate next year, because they are
unwilling to face a government shutdown and will lack the votes to
override a certain Obama veto, they will be unable to defund the law
in 2015 or 2016 either.
Meaning
the American people will be stuck with it, all the way through the
next presidential election cycle. Then, there will be tens of
millions of Americans newly dependent on the government for all
issues covering life and death, a brand new political constituency
Republicans will be unwilling to take on.
Come
2017, it will be over. Obamacare will become permanent.
That
is why now is the time to act — before it is too late. If
Republicans intend on taking a stand, now is the time.
Read this article and more
at Net Right Daily
|