Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Democrats must own the task of fixing Obamacare

- Cokie and Steve Roberts

Nancy Pelosi, the House Democratic leader, wrote to her Republican counterpar­ts extending “the hand of friendship” and offering “to work in a bipartisan fashion” to fix the flaws in Obamacare.

Let’s hope she really means it.

Let’s hope Democrats won’t use the collapse of the Republican health care effort simply to score political points against an irresponsi­bly inept president and continue his record of legislativ­e futility.

Democrats must face an inconvenie­nt truth. They own Obamacare. They are responsibl­e for it, with all its many benefits and failings. They made a huge mistake by passing it without a single Republican vote.

Then they compounded that error by underestim­ating problems and overpromis­ing results.

And now they owe it to the millions of people who rely on their program to improve it, to stabilize the marketplac­e, to focus on actual policy for a change and not just politics

It won’t be easy. Hardline leftists in their own party will call any Democrat who works with the GOP a soft-headed traitor. And pragmatic Republican­s will be pressed by ideologica­l purists in their own ranks to reject Pelosi’s “hand of friendship.”

But Democrats must make a sincere effort here. And if they help produce a reform package that can pass the Congress and acquire Trump’s signature in some splashy Rose Garden ceremony, so be it.

Of course, Democrats relied on their own votes to pass Obamacare in the first place because Republican­s refused to cooperate in crafting the bill. But now a few GOPers seem ready to defy Trump and the party’s hard-core crazies and enter negotiatio­ns.

Three Republican senators provided the decisive votes that finally sank the Obamacare repeal effort; a half-dozen Republican governors also broke ranks and opposed measure. Sen. Lamar Alexander, who heads the committee that handles health legislatio­n, announced hearings for next month and endorsed legislatio­n that stabilizes Obamacare at least through next year.

Centrist lawmakers from both parties, calling themselves the Problem Solvers Caucus, have advanced a sensible set of reform proposals Rep. Tom Reed, a New York Republican who helps lead the caucus, said: “Maybe we look at a situation where it’s 51 senators, regardless of what party they’re from, and we put together a coalition of the governing who want to solve problems.”

One key fix that pragmatist­s of all stripes can agree on: Prop up shaky insurance markets by injecting more money into the system, as permanent subsidies for low-income policy buyers and better guarantees for insurance companies against excessive risk.

Democrats should emulate Collins and Alexander. They should take compromise seriously and consider a range of Republican proposals: from giving states more flexibilit­y in implementi­ng Obamacare to increasing the number of workers a company must employ before it’s required to provide insurance benefits.

Attention has focused on Sen. John McCain’s dramatic vote when he joined Collins and Sen. Lisa Murkowski in killing the Republican health care proposal.

But that moment should not overshadow the speech he made several nights before on the Senate floor, pleading for a revival of bipartisan­ship.

McCain, almost 81 and suffering from brain cancer, urged his colleagues to produce a health care bill “that will be imperfect, full of compromise­s, and not very pleasing to implacable partisans on either side, but that might provide workable solutions to problems Americans are struggling with today.”

He was speaking to Democrats as well as Republican­s.

They should listen to his words.

And act on them.

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