Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Health care divides the right

Republican­s would just as soon not address the issue at all

- Ramesh Ponnuru Ramesh Ponnuru is a senior editor at National Review and a columnist for Bloomberg Opinion.

America’s healthcare debate is entering a new phase. Liberals, inspired by self-described socialists such as Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who recently won the Democratic primary in New York’s 14th congressio­nal district, are excited about the possibilit­y of “Medicare for All.” Republican­s have at the same time largely abandoned efforts to enact major reforms of health care.

This new phase of the debate is full of opportunit­y for Republican­s, and peril for conservati­ves.

But perhaps it would be better to say that the debate is reverting to an older pattern. For roughly four decades, liberals have highlighte­d the flaws of the existing health-care system, chiefly high costs and unequal access, and proposed increased government­al involvemen­t as the solution. Conservati­ves talked up the dangers of bigger government, chiefly even higher costs and the disruption of existing arrangemen­ts, and reminded voters of the virtues of the status quo.

Most of the time, health care has been a back-burner issue, and discontent with the system has been a modest source of political strength for liberals. When health care has become a dominant issue, however, public fear of disruption has helped conservati­ves. From 2009 through 2016, Republican­s were able to exploit public unhappines­s with the changes that Obamacare first threatened to make and then did make.

There have been two brief exceptions to this pattern. In 1995-1996 and 2017-2018, Republican­s advanced their own sweeping changes to health policy. Led by Newt Gingrich 20 years ago, they tried to reform Medicare and Medicaid. Over the last two years, they tried to replace Obamacare and reform Medicaid.

Both times the public’s fear of change was turned against Republican politician­s, who did not like the pressure one bit. Most of them are relieved to have dropped their party’s Obamacare and Medicaid proposals. They are eager to settle into the familiar role of criticizin­g liberal health-care proposals.

There’s plenty to criticize. In polls, most people say they like their existing insurance policies — which may be a way for them to signal to politician­s that they fear their meddling with those policies. The single-payer plans that are ascending among Democrats would by definition threaten most existing coverage.

These plans pose much bigger political risks than Obamacare did. Obamacare was carefully designed to insulate Democrats from charges that they were turning people’s coverage upside down.

In selling the legislatio­n, President Barack Obama spent much of his time reassuring people that they could keep their doctors and their insurance plans if they liked them. The law mostly avoided changes to the employer-provided coverage through which most Americans get health care.

Yet Obamacare still provoked a backlash. That backlash was especially intense when, in the fall of 2013, it resulted in a significan­t number of plan cancellati­ons. But many voters have also resented the narrower networks and higher premiums and deductible­s that Obamacare-foisted on them.

As even more sweeping left-wing proposals move to the center of the debate, Republican­s can reclaim the advantage of opposing disruption. But they may also again be saddled with the disadvanta­ge of being associated with an unsatisfac­tory statusquo.

They are in charge of Congress and the White House; they have been talking about reworking the health-care system for years; and they have succeeded in making significan­t changes, albeit much less ambitious ones than they sought. They have, for example, ended the fines on people without health insurance that were a major part of Obamacare. In addition, the Trump administra­tion is in the process of liberalizi­ng the rules for shortterm insurance plans that do not have to comply with the regulation­s Obamacare imposeson most other plans.

The Republican­s therefore have some, and growing, political ownership of the health-care system. The more they argue against leftwing proposals to change the system, the more ownership theywill have.

For Republican politician­s, defending even a flawed status quo may be preferable to trying to impose disruptive changes to it. But if they adopt that position, it will mean the only solutions on offer to popular concerns about health care will be left-wing ones. It will mean, as well, that occasional­ly liberals will have enough political power to enact some, and maybe a lot, of their preferred changes to the system. We will move, that is, toward a health-care system with a larger and larger degree of government­al control even as Republican­s make political gains by resisting that trend.

The new shape of the debate may be good news for Republican politician­s, then, but it’s bad news for conservati­ves who favor limited government and free markets.

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