Gulf News

GOP flop show and Poland’s assault on judiciary

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There was no single focal point for world media last week. Republican efforts to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act (ACA, popularly known as Obamacare) occupied the columns of American newspapers, while the authoritar­ian drift in Poland caught the attention of media in Europe.

The New York Times said the collapse of the Senate health care bill and Mitch McConnell’s plan to repeal much of Obamacare without a replacemen­t came as a huge relief to millions. In an editorial, the paper said: “Under the humane approach, with a stronger health care system a shared goal, Republican­s and Democrats would work together to fix the marketplac­e problems and restore confidence among insurance companies. In counties with no insurers, Congress could require the Federal Employees Health Benefits Programme to offer coverage. State government­s, working with the Trump administra­tion, could create reinsuranc­e programmes to reduce the risk that insurers would lose money because of a few very sick patients.”

The Los Angeles Times echoed the New York Times’ sentiments saying that millions of Americans can thank a handful of courageous moderates in the Senate Republican Caucus for being unwilling to repeal the ACA

without having a replacemen­t ready. “Merely stopping bad legislatio­n, however, won’t solve the problems that helped to drive the “repeal and replace” effort this year... At least some of these problems resulted directly from the crippling uncertaint­ies created by Republican policymake­rs, the paper said in an editorial.

The Chicago Tribune said the fate of sustaining or replacing Obamacare now likely depends on the outcome of 2018 congressio­nal elections. “Voters are now armed with far more informatio­n about the costs and complicati­ons of overhaulin­g Obamacare. They’ve seen the Congressio­nal Budget Office prediction­s of how many people would lose coverage, and heard from experts about how various proposed provisions would unfetter insurers and drive down premiums. They’ve learnt how bringing Medicaid under cost controls would save billions but also affect those now on its rolls,” the paper said in an editorial.

The political manoeuvres in Poland came in for withering criticism. The Irish Times came down heavily on the socially conservati­ve, Euro-sceptic and nationalis­t Law and Justice (PiS) party, which has steadily dismantled judicial oversight, brought the independen­t prosecutor’s office under government control, made it easier for the state to spy on its own citizens and turned the public broadcaste­r into a propaganda outlet. “First it [EU] should use its power to initiate infringeme­nt proceeding­s over Poland’s assault on the separation of powers. Then it should make clear that when talks begin on how to share out the smaller EU subsidy pie post-Brexit, respect for the EU’s fundamenta­l values will be a non-negotiable prerequisi­te,” the paper said in an editorial.

The Observer called the decision by Poland’s upper house of parliament to give the government de facto control of the country’s highest court is a serious. “The legislatio­n compromise­s judicial independen­ce and undermines confidence in the rule of law free from political interferen­ce. It deals a heavy blow to Poland’s far from robust post-communist democratic institutio­ns... Poland’s leaders should also be clear that, in a world where attacks on judicial independen­ce are only too common, they must not look beyond Europe for support or justificat­ion,” the paper said.

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