Chattanooga Times Free Press

UNHEALTHY ACTS

- Cal Thomas

Is there anyone who can point to the “Affordable Care Act” (aka Obamacare) and credibly claim it is accomplish­ing the goals set for it seven years ago?

Insurers are pulling out of the exchanges, premiums and related costs are going up, not down, as supporters of the misnamed law claimed they would. Many people who like their doctors are not being allowed to keep their doctors.

In a Facebook post last week, Obama himself didn’t even bother to defend Obamacare. Instead, he criticized a proposed replacemen­t, calling the Senate bill written by Republican­s “a massive transfer of wealth from middle-class and poor families to the richest people in America.”

Leaving aside whether the poor, and much of the middle class, have any wealth to transfer, much less to meet their own needs, who would know more about a massive transfer of wealth than Obama, whose own health care law is attempting to do just that?

In a statement following the release of a summary of the Senate Republican bill, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said: “In the coming days, we expect to receive a budget estimate on our plan. After that, we will proceed with a robust debate and an open amendment process on the Senate floor. I hope every senator engages. Senate Democrats may not have wanted to work with us in a serious way to address Obamacare’s failures before, but I hope they will take this opportunit­y to do what’s right for the American people now.”

Good luck with that. In our politicall­y polarized atmosphere, even a “Good morning” from a member of the opposition party might provoke a “says who?” response.

In business and in virtually every other area of life, when something doesn’t work, most people would suggest trying another path. Not in Washington where failure is just another opportunit­y to spend more money. Here, it’s all about intentions, feelings and appealing to “the base,” not accomplish­ments. If your intention in supporting Obamacare was to fix what is wrong with health care, that is all that matters, not whether your fix worked.

One senator is trying to solve a related problem that could serve as a model for his colleagues when it comes to a new health care bill. Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., who chairs the Budget Committee, wants to end duplicativ­e government programs, along with unauthoriz­ed spending on programs whose legislativ­e authority has expired. Enzi estimates duplicativ­e government programs are costing taxpayers $310 billion and counting.

According to figures supplied to me by Enzi’s office, there are hundreds of laws that duplicate each other. Comptrolle­r General Gene Dodaro told a Senate panel in April that a Government Accountabi­lity Office (GAO) report found 645 ideas in 249 areas that would reduce or eliminate overlappin­g and duplicativ­e programs. So far, Dodaro testified, “… 51 percent have been implemente­d, 31 percent partially implemente­d and 18 percent not implemente­d.” More needs to be done.

The biggest challenge may be reducing unauthoriz­ed spending. Enzi says some spending is on “auto-pay” with some programs not having been re-authorized in 30 years. No wonder Ronald Reagan once quipped: “No government ever voluntaril­y reduces itself in size. Government programs, once launched, never disappear. Actually, a government bureau is the nearest thing to eternal life we’ll ever see on this earth!”

Taxpayers are paying for 158 science, technology, engineerin­g and math (STEM) programs, and nearly 700 energy initiative­s, according to GAO. Enzi wants to restore the historical link between authorizat­ions and appropriat­ions.

The real scandal in Washington has nothing to do with Russia. It is overspendi­ng, overtaxing and overreachi­ng government. All of these programs, along with health care and unauthoriz­ed spending, can be fixed. All it takes is willpower and goodwill, two characteri­stics that are sorely lacking in Washington. While attention is focused on restructur­ing health insurance, Enzi is trying to highlight another problem that could save billions. His colleagues should listen and act.

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