Chattanooga Times Free Press

SWAMPCARE: THE GREAT BETRAYAL

- Creators.com

Since 2010, Republican­s have repeatedly promised to repeal the Affordable Care Act, now universall­y referred to as Obamacare. Republican­s finally unveiled their alternativ­e to Obamacare, and it is best described as swampcare. Far from repealing Obamacare or replacing Obamacare, it only tweaks the Affordable Care Act and does nothing to drain the swamp.

Obamacare has never been popular. It has never polled above 50 percent. Democrats have invented a host of reasons why it polls so terribly, including that people just do not realize Obamacare is the Affordable Care Act. It is simply not popular. More people were hurt by Obamacare than helped. It created a massive new and costly entitlemen­t and expanded the least efficient, least effective existing entitlemen­t program — Medicaid.

For all of its flaws, and the flaws outweigh the benefits, the Democrats included mechanisms to keep government spending on Obamacare from exploding in the first several years of the legislatio­n’s enactment. Many of those provisions are the massively unpopular parts of the legislatio­n. They include employer mandates on providing insurance, individual mandates forcing people to buy insurance, and taxes on generous health care plans.

In enacting their swampcare alternativ­e, Republican­s scuttled all the things people have hated about Obamacare, but they did not restructur­e the legislatio­n to save money. The Republican­s’ plan will wind up costing taxpayers even more. On top of that, they are not really even getting rid of the individual mandate. Under swampcare, instead of paying the government a fine for failing to get insurance, people will pay insurance companies a penalty if they cancel insurance then get new insurance later. The constituti­onality of that provision alone is dubious.

Swampcare violates core Republican promises going back to 2010. Republican­s have taken to noting how many times they have voted to repeal Obamacare, but those times did not really count and they know it. In 2015, Republican­s structured a comprehens­ive plan to roll back Obamacare. Every Republican supported that legislatio­n. Now many of the same Republican­s who supported the 2015 plan are refusing to support it again.

The reality is that if Republican­s pass swampcare in the Senate after passing it in the House they know they will be breaking all their promises made in the last seven years. If they do nothing, they will also be breaking all their promises. But if the Republican­s do nothing, they will not have to own the collapse of Obamacare. The system will collapse. The spending will eventually explode. The insurance companies involved are fleeing Obamacare. None of that is the Republican­s’ fault. But the moment both houses pass swampcare, it all becomes their fault and Democrats can abdicate responsibi­lity.

Republican­s promised to repeal Obamacare, and President Trump promised to drain the swamp. Swampcare makes the whole mess worse. Ironically, President Trump is president because his voters had enough of the Republican Party. They had enough of the leadership of the party and its pundit cheerleade­rs who supported every Republican expansion of government and every too-clever-by-half compromise with Barack Obama.

Now those very same establishm­ent politician­s and their pundit cheerleade­rs are rushing to claim swampcare is the best thing ever. Trump’s supporters are outraged and recognize the breach of trust. President Trump himself appears to be going along with the GOP plan.

Trump’s longtime supporters hope this is just the opening salvo and the art of the deal. If swampcare continues, the government takeover of health care will escalate and costs will soar. It will all be on Trump.

Republican­s are whispering that swampcare is only the first salvo. If they pass this, they will pass tax reform. If they pass tax reform, they will fix everything. Republican­s always tell voters about the next fight hoping they are distracted from the present. We should, this time, focus specifical­ly on the present. Since 2010, the GOP has pledged to repeal Obamacare and now, in the present, we know they have been lying the whole time.

 ??  ?? Eric Erickson
Eric Erickson

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