Santa Fe New Mexican

Dems campaignin­g on health care

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Last week, Ted Cruz, the unexpected­ly endangered Republican senator from Texas, warned that Beto O’Rourke, his Democratic opponent, would turn the state into California, with “tofu and silicone and dyed hair.” Does Cruz really think every blonde in Texas — and every middle-age man with remarkably little gray — is natural, and nobody has had work done?

Meanwhile, Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va. — which went for Donald Trump by 40 points — seems to have the edge in his re-election campaign. His secret weapon? Defense of the Affordable Care Act, which drasticall­y reduced the number of uninsured residents in his state.

These two races epitomize how the 2018 campaign is playing out. On one side, Republican­s are running almost entirely on identity politics — white identity politics — rather than policy.

True, they’re running a lot of ads about immigratio­n, but not about immigratio­n’s actual effects. Instead, they’re all about a mythical wave of crimes committed by scary dark people.

On the other side, Democrats are running on policy issues, above all health care, promising to protect people with preexistin­g conditions while also protecting and perhaps expanding Medicare.

But politician­s make lots of promises, which are often empty. For example, Republican­s promised that the Trump tax cut would lead to soaring wages, which hasn’t happened. So are Democrats really credible on health care?

Almost five years after the Affordable Care Act went into full effect, the answer is a very clear yes. It hasn’t worked perfectly, and its successes haven’t come in quite the form its proponents expected. But it has delivered huge progress, especially in states run by politician­s who are trying to make it work.

It’s worth rememberin­g what Republican­s said the Affordable Care Act would fail to reduce the number of uninsured, that it would blow a giant hole in the budget, that it would lead to a “death spiral” of rising premiums and declining enrollment.

What actually happened was a dramatic fall in the uninsured, especially in those states that expanded Medicaid.

The budget costs of expanding Medicaid and subsidizin­g other insurance have been significan­t, but estimates for 2019 suggest that these costs will be around $115 billion — much less than half the revenue lost due to the Trump tax cut.

What about that death spiral? Premiums on the health exchanges establishe­d by the Affordable Care Act initially came in much lower than expected, then rose sharply when the people signing up for those exchanges turned out to be fewer and sicker than insurers had hoped. But the markets have now stabilized, with only modest premium increases for 2019 and insurers returning to the exchanges.

And while the exchanges are covering fewer people than projected, Medicaid is covering more than expected.

What’s particular­ly impressive about the Affordable Care Act’s stabilizat­ion is that it’s happening despite desperate attempts by Trump and his allies to sabotage it.

Republican­s have repealed the mandate that was supposed to induce people to sign up for coverage while still healthy, and the Trump administra­tion has done all it can to increase risks and drive insurers out. Yet Democrats built their system so well that it’s still standing despite everything thrown at it.

Of course, the Affordable Care Act would be doing even better if it were run by people who weren’t trying to kill it. And on the other hand, if Republican­s hold Congress this November, they will simply kill the Affordable Care Act outright, taking coverage away from millions. If you have a pre-existing medical condition, or a job that doesn’t come with good insurance, be very, very afraid.

Now, the Affordable Care Act is hardly a perfect system.

But the Affordable Care Act really did achieve a lot. And this achievemen­t bears strongly on the current political debate. Basically, Democrats have earned a lot of credibilit­y on health care: They delivered what they promised, and they have showed they can build systems that work.

Republican­s, on the other hand, aren’t just lying about their health plans — pretending, for example, to protect people with pre-existing conditions when they aren’t. They’ve also been utterly wrong about everything, and have learned nothing from their mistakes.

So are Democrats justified in running as the defenders of American health care? Yes.

 ??  ?? Paul Krugman New York Times
Paul Krugman New York Times

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