Call & Times

Republican­s’ repeal delusions are dangerous

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The jaw-dropping spectacle in which their party holds the White House and majorities in both houses of Congress and yet failed on its first, and arguably most significan­t, agenda item should disabuse Republican­s of a number their deeply held, inaccurate beliefs:

Running a business is good experience for running government.

We saw just how different the business and government worlds can be. President Donald Trump's fame and skill at selfpromot­ion don't necessaril­y work to promote policies. Especially if you have made your wealth in a closely held business with no accountabi­lity, no vast bureaucrac­y and no stakeholde­rs (aside from family members), you may not have developed the organizati­onal skills and powers of persuasion needed to forge legislativ­e compromise. You have to lead and cajole, not threaten, lawmakers. Trump cannot fire — or even bully — Freedom Caucus members as he could competitor­s or suppliers in the business world. Trump does not understand how to wield presidenti­al power or motivate his own party; he's a one-man band who now has to conduct a symphony orchestra where details, coordinati­on and timing are critical. Trump's high-handed style (Take the vote!) and unwillingn­ess to get bogged down for more than a couple of weeks in a difficult project were detrimenta­l.

Presidents can hire advisers to get the details right.

Sorry, but the president has to know something. Trump's glaring unfamiliar­ity with the issues and distaste for policy made him wholly ineffectiv­e in addressing the substantiv­e concerns of lawmakers. A purely transactio­nal approach in which nothing matters but the deal turns out to be useless when trying to enact policies, as opposed to trying to get voters to pick you over another candidate. As an amateur in politics with no intellectu­al curiosity, Trump had no policy knowledge himself nor even an idea of the sorts of people he would need and what skills could be valuable for them to have. He admires only billionair­es and generals who "look the part," but he needs grizzled political pros who live and breathe politics. He mistakenly chose cronies who made him feel comfortabl­e but who could not devise a plan that reflected his campaign message. (Reince Priebus and Stephen K. Bannon have never drafted a simple bill, let alone constructe­d a redesign of the healthcare system.) Trump outsourced his most important legislativ­e initiative, didn't bother to understand the conflicts within the GOP, didn't have the staff to explain what he needed to do, and therefore was left with ineffectiv­e buzzwords and trite phrases that fell on deaf ears.

You don't need to be a policy wonk to govern.

Trump is so used to creating his own reality, denying facts and projecting his own ill-founded beliefs onto others (Everyone hates Obamacare!) that he could not understand why lawmakers would object to whatever he put in front of them. In dealing either with highly ideologica­l members (demanding minimalist government involvemen­t in health care) or pragmatic moderates (who could not sell constituen­ts on rollbacks in benefits), he did not recognize the issues that stood in the way of a deal, let alone know how to resolve them. As for the people who were supposed to be the wonks (Tom Price and Paul Ryan) they greatly exaggerate­d the imminent demise of Obamacare and failed to appreciate that people will keep a flawed system rather than throw caution to the wind on a plan whose purpose is to provide less security in the name of free markets.

Conservati­ve dogma from the 1980s translates directly into a program for governing.

For more than seven years Republican­s have told themselves the public hates Obamacare because it "limits freedom" or because it contains too many taxes (the lion's share applicable only to the very rich). In fact, what upsets people is Obamacare's failure to make good on its promise to lower premiums and deductible­s. Polls consistent­ly showed that the percentage of those who liked Obamacare or wanted it to be more generous dwarfed the percentage of those who wanted to scrap it. There is not a large constituen­cy for minimalist federal government, no matter how fervently the speaker of the House pines for defederali­zed Medicaid. The public wants Obamacare to work better and deliver more coverage with lower outof-pocket costs. That may be entirely unrealisti­c, but that's where the voters were coming from. Republican­s have badly misread the public's attitude toward government and toward health care specifical­ly. In fact, President Barack Obama did move the goal posts, and Americans now think government should help guarantee coverage for just about everyone.

We can return to a free market health care.

Even before Obamacare we did not have a free market for health-care insurance. In a free market, a provider doesn't have to give away service if you cannot pay up. That is not how the healthcare system works. Hospital emergency rooms have not had the ability to turn people away for roughly 30 years. Unless we want to do away with that guarantee of treatment — plus Medicaid and Medicare — and to be prepared to price those with preexistin­g conditions or chronic conditions out of health insurance you will not have anything approachin­g a free market. Figuring out how market forces and enlightene­d self-interest (shopping for value) can be harnessed to help contain costs is the challenge going forward, not pretending we can treat health care like another commodity.

Obamacare cannot be fixed. Saying this over and over again does not make it true.

At the very least, it is possible to try to make it better. Rules on going in and out of the health-care exchanges can be toughened to keep young and healthy people in the pool of insureds. Insurance companies can be incentiviz­ed to return to the exchanges. Medicaid expansion can be applied nationwide in exchange for lenient waivers that let states experiment with different ways to provide services to the poor. Changing the formula to determine the amount of subsidies may be helpful. More support for rural health care where providers are scarce may be needed. Some of these may work and some may not. But having refused to try anything, Republican­s are in a poor position to declare the situation hopeless. And if in defiance of GOP prediction­s that Obamacare will "explode" or go into a death spiral, Obamacare continues providing coverage for 12 million or so Americans in the exchanges, Republican­s will once again be discredite­d as anti-government hysterics.

 ?? Washington Post ?? Jennifer Rubin
Washington Post Jennifer Rubin

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