New York Post

On Health Care, Only Dems ‘Extremist’

- Jonah GoldberG Twitter: @JonahNRO

WILL the real moderate party please stand up? On the same day socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) introduced his “Medicare for All” health-care plan, Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and Bill Cassidy (R-La.) introduced a last-ditch effort to sorta-kinda repeal and replace ObamaCare. Despite having zero chance of being passed any time soon, Sanders’ bill grabbed the limelight for two reasons.

First, it’s a beacon of hope for the demoralize­d Democratic base. As a Rolling Stone headline put it, “Single-Payer Movement Shows: Life After Trump May Not Suck.”

Second, Sanders got 15 co-sponsors — including some Democratic senators with presidenti­al ambitions. The fact that so many contenders signed on to a bill that, if enacted, would throw 100 million Americans off their employer-provided health care and cost taxpayers an estimated $32 trillion over a decade revealed just how far to the left the Democratic Party has moved.

And yet, to listen to Democrats and many of the journalist­s who love them, you’d think it was the Republican proposal that’s extreme. “In reality, Graham-Cassidy is the op- posite of moderate,” The New York Times’ Paul Krugman pronounced. “It contains, in exaggerate­d and almost caricature form, all the elements that made previous Republican proposals so cruel and destructiv­e.”

The news section of the Times was more evenhanded: “Medicare for All or State Control: Health Care Plans Go to Extremes.”

Are they really both “extreme”? GrahamCass­idy’s chief goal is to pare back the federaliza­tion of health-care policy by getting rid of the individual and employer insurance mandates and letting governors waive out of some regulation­s. More important, it block-grants Medicaid — a long-sought dream for those wanting to get a handle on out-of-control spending and debt.

A main driver of exploding health-care costs has been the way the federal-reimbursem­ent system discourage­s thrift. ObamaCare made that problem much worse by vastly expanding Medicaid rolls, adding millions to a faltering program.

And in order to seduce states into signing up, the feds promised to cover 100 percent of the additional costs for the first three years and no less than 90 percent in later years. If you had an expense account where someone else covered most of the tab, how eager would you be to control costs?

By giving states a lump sum, the hope is that they would experiment with cost-saving reforms that improve health-care results. Opponents of giving states the money and flexibilit­y to innovate often seem to work from the assumption that governors and legislator­s want to harm their own citizens. Maybe they just have a better appreciati­on of how to help them than Washington does. Graham-Cassidy is by no means perfect, and odds are it won’t pass. Democrats are locked into the position that health-care reforms can only involve more government spending and regulation.

With 52 GOP senators, Graham-Cassidy can only pass if at least 50 of them vote for it, and they must do so before Sept. 30, when the arcane budget window known as “reconcilia­tion” closes. Because some Republican states would lose money on the deal, squishy senators such as Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski might balk, as she did with pre- vious attempts. This is why it would be smart to emulate ObamaCare (and welfare reform) and be overly generous up front with the block grants, to essentiall­y bribe politician­s into voting for it.

Meanwhile, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, who has mastered the art of supporting the status quo by voting against piecemeal improvemen­ts in the name of purity, has already indicated he’ll continue to play that game.

Heritage Action for America has grumbled, rightly, that Graham-Cassidy doesn’t repeal all ObamaCare taxes. But the choice for Republican­s isn’t between this and a better reform. It’s between this or leaving ObamaCare intact, violating all of those repeal-and-replace promises entirely.

That’s what’s so silly about the claim that Graham-Cassidy is as “extreme” as Sanders’ radical and shoddily written proposal (the bill is totally silent on how to pay for any of it). Graham-Cassidy is very close to the kind of legislatio­n we would have ended up with if Republican­s had an idea of what they wanted from the get-go and the Democrats were interested in compromise.

But we live in a time when extremism is defined as not getting everything you want.

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