Toronto Star

Fighting fake news about health care

- Linda McQuaig Linda McQuaig is a journalist and author. Her column appears monthly.

I recall my frustratio­n years ago watching U.S. television while an “analyst” from the right-wing Cato Institute spewed blatant lies about Canada’s public health-care system — including that all hospitals in Ontario, having run out of money at the end of the year, had completely shut down for the month of December.

This was back in pre-social media days, making it difficult (beyond yelling at the TV) to immediatel­y challenge such a breathless release of alternativ­e facts.

So it was with some pleasure last week that I watched as a Republican congressma­n tried to insist that Canadians routinely flock to the U.S. for health care, only to have MSNBC host Ali Velshi stop him dead in his tracks.

“Sir, I grew up in Canada,” Velshi declared. “I live in Canada. My entire family is in Canada. Nobody I know ever came to the United States for health care. I am sure you have a handful of stories about things like that. It is not actually statistica­lly true.”

Whenever Americans start tinkering with their deeply dysfunctio­nal healthcare system, we feel the reverberat­ions up here, as right-wing commentato­rs seek to denigrate our system of universal health-care coverage, which they know sets a dangerous example.

With the ruling Republican­s now poised to take health-care coverage from 14 million Americans (eventually 24 million) and keep a straight face while insisting this is about increasing their “choice,” it’s worth reminding ourselves just how merciless, cruel (and stupid) so many of the Trump/Republican solutions truly are.

Health care is a particular­ly stark example, but it is symptomati­c of the Republican keenness to fully embrace the private marketplac­e, even though that means abandoning vast numbers of their fellow citizens by the side of the road.

Americans have always had more of a taste for unbridled capitalism than Canadians, but today’s Republican Party is infected by a particular­ly virulent strain — a strain that has been nurtured with ample funds from a few dozen billionair­es, led by Charles and David Koch, who have a combined fortune of $84.5 billion. The Koch brothers have long been radical libertaria­ns, far to the right of even radical conservati­ves such as Ronald Reagan.

When David Koch tried his hand at politics in 1980, running for vice-president on the Libertaria­n Party ticket that called for an end to public schools, social security and taxation, he and his running mate won only 1 per cent of the vote in the Reagan landslide.

Undeterred, the Koch brothers set about to push America, particular­ly the Republican Party, much further right.

Operating mostly behind the scenes and driven by an abiding hatred of government and anything that smacked of distributi­ng wealth more broadly, the Kochs invested massively over the next few decades in creating a vast network of think tanks, academic programs, front groups, political action groups and campaigns, lobbyists and politician­s, as New Yorker writer Jane Mayer documents in her powerful book Dark Money.

(Indeed, the “analyst” I heard lying about the shutdown of Ontario hospitals was from the Cato Institute, which Charles Koch establishe­d in 1974.)

With the rise of Donald Trump, the media has tended to go along with Trump’s suggestion that, unlike other Republican politician­s who depend on Koch money, he enjoys a rare independen­ce from the brothers.

Trump’s independen­ce may be overstated; his vice-president, Mike Pence, has been a major recipient of Koch money and was Charles Koch’s first choice for president in 2012.

Pence has brought Koch operatives into the White House and shows signs of becoming a Dick Cheney-style puppetmast­er.

For that matter, the Kochs are only an impeachmen­t away from having their guy running the free world.

The role of Koch money in shaping Republican politics gets surprising­ly little media attention.

But it helps explain the otherwise baffling behaviour of Republican politician­s scrambling to justify stripping health coverage from their constituen­ts and using the savings to pay for $600 billion worth of tax cuts for the rich. Awkward.

Meanwhile, many Republican­s in the “freedom caucus,” who’ve been heavily funded by the Kochs, consider the proposed reform too generous to the disadvanta­ged.

American commentato­rs talk about how “complicate­d” reforming health care is.

True, if you utterly reject the simple solution that works — a Canadian-style public system — it does become awfully complicate­d devising a solution that pleases the broader American public while also satisfying two radical extremists who, together, have the world’s largest fortune and a deep aversion to sharing.

Pence has brought Koch operatives into the White House and shows signs of becoming a Dick Cheney-style puppetmast­er

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