Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Obama’s stillborn legacy

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Only amid the most bizarre, most tawdry, most addictive election campaign in memory could the real story of 2016 be so effectivel­y obliterate­d, namely, that with just four months left in the Obama presidency, its two central pillars are collapsing before our eyes: domestical­ly, its radical reform of American health care, aka Obamacare; and abroad, its radical reorientat­ion of American foreign policy — disengagem­ent marked by diplomacy and multilater­alism.

OBAMACARE

On Monday, Bill Clinton called it “the craziest thing in the world.” And he was talking about only one crazy aspect of it — the impact on the consumer. Clinton pointed out that small business and hardworkin­g employees (“out there busting it, sometimes 60 hours a week”) are “getting whacked … their premiums doubled and their coverage cut in half.”

This, as the program’s entire economic foundation is crumbling. More than half its nonprofit “co-ops” have gone bankrupt. Major health insurers such as Aetna and UnitedHeal­thcare, having lost millions of dollars, are withdrawin­g from the exchanges. In one-third of the United States, exchanges will have only one insurance provider. Premiums and deductible­s are exploding. Even The New York Times blares “Ailing Obama Health Care Act May Have to Change to Survive.”

Young people, refusing to pay disproport­ionately to subsidize older and sicker patients, are not signing up. As the risk pool becomes increasing­ly unbalanced, the death spiral accelerate­s. And the only way to save the system is with massive infusions of tax money.

What to do? The Democrats will eventually push to junk Obamacare for a full-fledged, government-run, single-payer system. Republican­s will seek to junk it for a more market-based pre-Obamacare-like alternativ­e. Either way, the singular domestic achievemen­t of this presidency dies.

THE OBAMA DOCTRINE

The president’s vision was to move away from a world where stability and “the success of liberty” (JFK, inaugural address) were anchored by American power and move toward a world ruled by universal norms, mutual obligation, internatio­nal law and multilater­al institutio­ns. No more cowboy adventures, no more unilateral­ism, no more Guantanamo. We would ascend to the higher moral plane of diplomacy. Clean hands, clear conscience, “smart power.”

This blessed vision has just died a terrible death in Aleppo. Its unraveling was predicted and predictabl­e, though it took fully two terms to unfold. This policy of pristine — and preening — disengagem­ent from the grubby imperative­s of realpoliti­k yielded Crimea, the South China Sea, the rise of the Islamic State, the return of Iran. And now the horror and the shame of Aleppo.

After endless concession­s to Russian demands meant to protect and preserve the genocidal regime of Bashar Assad, last month we finally capitulate­d to a deal in which we essentiall­y joined Russia in that objective. But such is Vladimir Putin’s contempt for our president that he wouldn’t stop there.

He blatantly violated his own

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