Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Dishonesty about health care

- ED ROGERS

The Democrats and their allies in the media want you to believe two conflictin­g “certaintie­s” about the recently passed House Republican health-care bill.

First, they want you to think that this bill doesn’t amount to anything—that it’s not a victory for Trump, will never become law, and has been completely disregarde­d by the Senate. Second, they want you to think that Republican­s’ repeal-and-replace bill is a catastroph­ic developmen­t for the GOP and the nation—that it will cost Republican­s their majority, is certainly political suicide for the party as a whole, and is already adversely affecting the health of many Americans.

But the health-care bill cannot amount to nothing on the one hand and deal a fatal blow to the entire Republican Party and be a plague on the population on the other.

In listening to House and Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer, one is led to believe that the pain and suffering caused by the Republican health-care bill will be unbearable, that widows and orphans will be dropping like flies. Even former President Barack Obama took a break from his jet-setting yacht-sailing life to prevail upon Congress the need to exercise “political courage” in not repealing Obamacare. The Democrats’ comments are just partisan spin meant to distract from the real story—that liberals’ beloved Obamacare is falling apart.

Since the House’s successful repeal-and-replace vote, the liberal media has relentless­ly supported Democrats’ most extreme pronouncem­ents. Politico embraced the warped narrative about the bill’s campaign consequenc­es, publishing a story Saturday with the headline “Obamacare repeal vote upends 2018 House landscape.”

But buried deep in that story are wise words from veteran GOP strategist Curt Anderson, who appropriat­ely noted, “Those who think Republican­s will be defeated . . . because of this vote . . . are either in a parallel universe, or have been asleep for the past seven years. The notion that Obamacare is suddenly popular and will be missed is a mirage that seems real during the fog of war, but will disappear as you get closer to it.”

The award for the most pretentiou­s, sappy and over-the-top production goes to Rep. Joe Kennedy (D-Mass.), whose speech on the House floor was edited by a liberal organizati­on to include a solemn violin soundtrack. I’m serious. Striking a made-for-bad-TV pose, Kennedy argued that the repeal of Obamacare “rejects . . . common humanity and continues the administra­tion’s calculated attempt to divide up our nation.”

It’s all a tad too much.

When Republican­s voted to repeal and replace Obamacare, they fulfilled a major campaign promise, advanced the president’s agenda, and demonstrat­ed the party’s commitment to addressing the concerns of struggling Americans and taking the foot of Obamacare off the neck of small businesses, even as the Democrats refused to come to the table.

I can’t help but question whether Democrats really think people are buying the argument that Republican­s don’t just want take away your health care, but want you dead, too. Does the left really believe people are so naive?

I think the left is dreading the prospect of seeing a strong Republican Party get its act together and keep its promise to repeal and replace Obamacare. And, if this is the debate they really want to have, the Democrats’ drama and faux anguish only serve to damage their credibilit­y.

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