The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

GOP is destroying health care from the shadows

- E.J. Dionne Jr. He writes for the Washington Post.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell once had passionate views about how carefully Congress should consider sweeping changes to the health care system.

“Fast-tracking a major legislativ­e overhaul such as health care reform or a new national energy tax without the benefit of a full and transparen­t debate does a disservice to the American people,” McConnell said in 2009, referring to the two big issues of the moment. Democrats using such means, he added, “would make it absolutely clear they intend to carry out their plans on a purely partisan basis.”

Republican hypocrisy is now so rampant that it’s typically ignored or, worse, granted the political class’s all-purpose form of absolution: “Everybody does it.”

But everybody doesn’t do it. McConnell is trying to eviscerate the Affordable Care Act using methods completely at odds with how the law was originally brought to life seven years ago. The ACA was debated for more than a year and went through an elaborate hearing and amendment process, including some changes urged by Republican­s.

By contrast, the bill Senate Republican­s are writing is being held as close as the nuclear codes. In the meantime, President Donald Trump and his administra­tion (including, most recently, Attorney General Jeff Sessions) keep providing McConnell excellent cover as their assorted outrages dominate the news and deflect attention from Congress. The wrecking squad works in the shadows knowing that if the public were given time to absorb the damage in store for millions, the pushback would be enormous.

Cleverly, Senate Republican­s say their coverage-destructio­n bill will be better than the one Speaker Paul Ryan pushed through the House. Well, great, and a Category 4 hurricane is a bit less harrowing than a Category 5. Most of us would prefer to avoid both.

One of the so-called “improvemen­ts” that has leaked out: People will be thrown off Medicaid more slowly under McConnellc­are than under Ryancare. But they’ll still be thrown off, and to pay for this reprieve, the Senate would reportedly include additional cuts to Medicaid elsewhere. To finance all their tax cuts for the rich, Republican­s will have to gut insurance for a lot of people.

Why all the secrecy? McConnell is trying to keep the pressure off the many GOP senators who have offered pledges of varying degrees to protect Medicaid and other aspects of the ACA that benefit their constituen­ts.

They include Dean Heller of Nevada and Jeff Flake of Arizona, both up for re-election next year, as well as Rob Portman of Ohio, Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Cory Gardner of Colorado and Bill Cassidy of Louisiana.

Since Democrats have 48 votes against dismantlin­g the existing law, any three Republican senators could put a stop to this fantastica­lly anti-democratic process. They could walk into McConnell’s office and say they’ll oppose any bill that is not made public for at least a month of real scrutiny and discussion. Is this too much to ask of legislatio­n that could threaten the health care of countless Americans?

We know the Trump/ Russia story will still be there in a month. We cannot say the same about the health insurance millions of Americans count on.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States