Antelope Valley Press

Donald Trump’s abdication on health care

- Rich Lowry Commentary COMMENTS.LOWRY@NATIONALRE­VIEW.COM

He’s been promising a health care plan since he started running for president, often with superlativ­e adjectives attached, and yet never produced one. His lack of a proposal was a stumbling block in Tuesday’s debate and plays into a broader, long-standing Republican vulnerabil­ity on health care.

Polling tends to show that, far and away, the three most important issues to voters are the economy, COVID-19, and health care. Trump leads on the economy and trails on the other two. To the extent that issues play a role in a Trump defeat in November, health care will have had some hand in it. He has done little to inoculate himself and, in fact, has further exposed himself.

His administra­tion backs a lawsuit that seeks to strike down Obamacare, including its popular protection­s for people with preexistin­g conditions. This allows Democrats to say — and they say it all the time — that he wants to destroy Obamacare.

Never mind that the suit is very unlikely to succeed. The background is that in a previous case, the Supreme Court upheld the individual mandate in Obamacare as a tax. Then, Congress zeroed out the tax. The current case argues that the individual mandate therefore can no longer be upheld as a tax and further — this is the real stretch — that if this now toothless mandate is thrown out, the rest of the law has to go as well. There’s no reason to believe that the conservati­ve justices would undertake this legal adventure.

This makes the politics a worstof-both-worlds scenario for the White House. By backing the suit, it opens itself up to the attack before the election that it will eliminate protection­s for preexistin­g conditions, without having any realistic chance of winning when the court takes up the case after the election.

It would help at least to have a plan, and that’s Trump’s instinct. But his supposedly imminent health care plan has become as meaningful as the various versions of “infrastruc­ture week.”

Coming up with a health care plan is not like, say, promising to create 10 million jobs, a pledge that would depend on circumstan­ces not fully under any president’s control. Drafting one, at bottom, requires only a consensus among some wonks, a word-processing program, and a printer.

No one would have bet at the outset that the administra­tion would have in hand two historic Middle East agreements — namely, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain normalizin­g relations with Israel — before having one health care plan. But here we are.

It’s not as though there aren’t options (and it should be noted that the administra­tion has adopted worthy, piecemeal changes to the health-care system). A plan from The Heritage Foundation is tailor-made to be picked up by the administra­tion. In fact, it’s been promoted in an op-ed titled, “A Health Plan for President Trump.”

But the administra­tion has remained divided, with one faction reflecting vintage Tea Party thinking that no Obamacare replacemen­t is necessary. In addition, health-care policy inevitably involves trade-offs that are all politicall­y perilous.

So the path of least resistance is to commit to nothing. The administra­tion has instead offered up an executive order pledging to cover people with preexistin­g conditions. The president has touted this as a historic act, even though it’s only a more official version of Trump’s prior promises.

The president is more populist, both in manner and substance, than his Republican predecesso­rs. But health care is an area where his populism is insufficie­ntly realized. Seeking to repeal Obamacare without bothering to tell people how it’s going to be improved on is what you’d expect from a stereotypi­cal Republican.

God might scoff, but it’d be better to have a plan.

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