John Sheirer: Why the GOP really hates Obamacare — it’s not what columnist Jay Fleitman asserts
NORTHAMPTON — Jay
Fleitman’s Oct. 1 column, “Why Republicans hate Obamacare,” contains
more inaccuracies than New England has pumpkins this time of year. Like
pumpkins, Fleitman’s claims rot with prolonged exposure to sunlight.
Let’s shed a few rays.
To begin, Fleitman is
wrong about the process of passing the Affordable Care Act. Republicans
chose to obstruct the law at every turn instead of working to fix
aspects they didn’t like or proposing a viable alternative. Fleitman
claims Democrats “crammed” the law past Republicans, creating “enduring
bitterness.” Hogwash.
We all remember the
protest signs depicting Obama as Hitler or a witch doctor, town-hall
screaming fits, lies about “death panels,” and shouts of “You lie!” at
the president and “Baby killer!” at Democrats in Congress. Fleitman
apparently doesn’t remember, but those displays of bitterness and
incivility mostly predated the actual legislative process of passing the
law.
Republicans had plenty
of opportunity for input as the law took shape, despite Fleitman’s
revisionist history. In fact, many aspects of the law were originally
Republican ideas they disowned when President Obama endorsed them. The
“individual mandate,” for example, was proposed by the conservative
Heritage Foundation as a personal responsibility provision. Republicans
now act as though their idea is tyranny from a dictatorial Obama. As
Republicans obstructed, Democrats compromised on single-payer, public
option and even contraceptive coverage.
Fleitman also makes
false claims about the law itself. Is the law leading to more part-time
workers? No, the Bush recession years before the Affordable Care Act
caused that. Is the law causing higher insurance premiums? No, premiums
are rising at modest rates, and premiums on the Affordable Care Act
exchanges are lower than expected. Does the law disproportionately hurt
young adults? No, unless new opportunities for young adults to buy
affordable, comprehensive health insurance is somehow harmful.
Basic facts such as these are easy to find. The nonpartisan FactCheck.org and PolitiFact.com
have debunked many Republican claims about the Affordable Care Act. Of
course, finding reliable facts about the law requires filtering out
biased right-wing sources in the corporate media.
By far Fleitman’s most
inaccurate statement is calling the act an “intrusion of central
government into the economic and personal lives of Americans, an action
contrary to … the nature of American society.” That’s just absurd.
If the Affordable Care
Act were actually an example of “central government,” then it would
include at least a public option if not actual government-provided
insurance or healthcare. Fleitman simply uses slightly modified language
to recycle the lie that the Affordable Care Act is socialism. It isn’t.
Fleitman also seems
confused about “the nature of American society.” At our best, this
nation has a liberal, progressive tradition of government being a force
for good in the lives of American citizens. The Affordable Care Act is
squarely in the tradition of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid —
other instances where “we the people” care for one another. One
fundamental tenant of American society is that we are all in this
together, even if some Republicans need to be dragged kicking and
screaming into the American tradition of community.
The act isn’t perfect,
but it grows from the view that all of us — citizens, elected leaders
and the people of the private insurance industry — can partner to serve
the public good. That’s not tyranny or socialism or the end of America
or any other hair-on-fire attacks the right has launched against the
law. Basically, the law is an attempt at good government, a concept many
of today’s Republican saboteurs have trouble grasping as they cheer on
their shutdown and default disasters.
The core of the
Affordable Care Act is a method to help uninsured Americans get
affordable private health insurance. And the law is funded in a way that
reduces the federal budget deficit by hundreds of billions of dollars
over the first decade without raising middle-class taxes. Republicans
never seem to acknowledge that fact.
In addition, already
insured people benefit from many other commonsense aspects of the act
that Fleitman ignores: keeping kids on parents’ insurance until age 26;
not being denied coverage for pre-existing conditions; not having annual
or lifetime benefit caps; requiring that insurance companies spend the
vast majority of premiums on actual health care; eliminating insurance
coverage discrimination against women; making it illegal to offer
substandard coverage or to cut off coverage when people get sick;
expanding mental health care.
Fleitman’s column
purports to answer the question, “Why do Republicans hate Obamacare?”
The truth is three-fold: First, many Republicans “hate” Obama and have
made no secret of it. They seem more motivated by their obstruction of
the “Obama” part of the law to notice that it has a lot of “care” for
American citizens. Second, as Fleitman’s column shows, many Republicans
“hate” facts. They are woefully misinformed about the law and frequently
pass on their bias-affirming misinformation.
Most important, many of
today’s Republicans “hate” effective government. They are terrified
that the law will work. That would affirm the deepest fear in the
Republican mind, the truth that government can work to help the American
people.
John Sheirer of Northampton writes a monthly column. He can be reached at opinion@gazettenet.com.
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