Sweetwater Reporter

When will politician­s start caring about people’s actual problems?

- BY TED RALL

When you crank out five editorial cartoons and a couple of opinion essays a week, not to mention opining on the radio about this issue and that, it is easy to forget about the basics. The big issues.

The stuff that really matters to you. It’s just as easy to forget to ask: What are our political leaders doing to address our most pressing problems? This is, after all, their job. It’s what we pay them for.

Pew Research Center pollsters regularly ask Americans what they consider to be the problem that worries them most. On April 15, the No. 1 Biggest Problem in America was “the affordabil­ity of health care.” Fifty-six percent of respondent­s called huge medical bills “a very big problem,” and 30% said it was “a moderately big problem,” for a total of 86%. That’s pretty much everyone. It even includes people who have “good” insurance through their employers.

“Health care costs is the only issue of the 15 asked on the survey seen as a very big problem by a majority of Americans, though about half say that the federal budget deficit (49%), violent crime (48%), illegal immigratio­n (48%) and gun violence (48%) are very big problems,” Pew reported.

This is proof positive. The Affordable Care Act obviously hasn’t fixed the problem it was designed to address: skyrocketi­ng medical expenses. According to Gallup, a whopping 80% of patients still worry a great deal or a fair amount about health care costs, a number that has remained essentiall­y unchanged year after year since Barack Obama became president.

What are the two major political parties doing about health care costs? Not much.

Democrats think we should be grateful for the crappy system we have now. Three weeks ago, the White House announced that President Joe Biden had placed a phone call to Obama to celebrate the 10th anniversar­y of “Obamacare.” Biden campaigned on adding a “public option” to the ACA but then left it out of his budget. He floated reducing the eligibilit­y age for Medicare from 65 to 60 but dropped the idea when asked where the money would come from. Democrats have no plans to fix “Obamacare”; they think it’s perfect as is.

Not that the Republican­s are any better.

The Supreme Court ruling in favor of the ACA has forced the GOP to give up on its vague Trump-era “repeal and replace” mantra. Now they’re saying nothing at all. “If the Republican­s have a health care agenda, they haven’t shown their cards,” Drew Altman, who runs the Kaiser Family Foundation, recently told Politico. They whine about “Obamacare” to get votes. But they don’t want to change it.

To recap: Americans worry about high doctors’ bills more than any other single issue . Yet neither party is even talking about, much less trying to actually do, anything to ease our pain. No wonder only 26% of Americans think Congress is doing a good job.

Run down the list of Americans’ other top priorities and you’ll find the same lack of responsive­ness from “our” elected officials. Forget actual action. Our “public servants” don’t bother to give us lip service.

So it goes with other Big Worries: no action, no ideas, no hope. Biden’s coronaviru­s recovery and infrastruc­ture spending plans blow up the budget deficit that voters cite as their No. 2 most worrisome issue; Democrats have no plan to offset their spending by, for example, slashing the constantly bloated Pentagon budget. Republican­s, obsessed with social issues, release easily ignored boilerplat­e statements that the deficit is too high, which presents “like a rote effort; like Republican karaoke,” as Scott Galupo described it in The Week. Not that Republican­s have any credibilit­y on the issue of fiscal responsibi­lity.

On the No. 3 Big Issue, violent crime, both parties offer, again, nothing. Republican­s and Democrats alike are urging municipali­ties to not defund the police; they want force levels and tactics to remain where they are now. Neither party offers an alternativ­e or additional approach, such as an initiative to increase access to mental health treatment. In the absence of a new response, nothing much will substantia­lly change, as Biden tells donors.

Neither party has a real plan to address Top Issue No. 4, illegal immigratio­n, or No. 5, gun violence. Democrats and Republican­s alike intend to leave the southern border partially open in order to allow employers access to cheap labor while continuing mass deportatio­ns to terrorize those workers into accepting slave wages. Neither party wants to do anything substantia­l about the proliferat­ion of handguns used in the current spasm of violent crime or question whether we still need the Second Amendment in the 21st century.

My point here is not to discuss the specifics of health care, the deficit, crime, etc., or what the best solutions to those problems are. Nor am I out to blame one party more than the other. My point is that neither the president nor Congress nor either of the two major parties are addressing the issues we care about in a credible way. When a political system fails to respond to its people’s concerns or even take them seriously in the first place, it is doomed.

No one should be surprised when the whole bankrupt piece of garbage implodes.

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