The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Congratula­tions: Republican­s have their own Obamacare now

- Dana Milbank Columnist

Congratula­tions, Republican­s. Now you have your own Obamacare. Emerging from their caucus meeting in the Capitol basement Tuesday morning, House Republican­s were jubilant about their tax bill, which was on course to clear Congress on Wednesday.

The deeply unpopular bill has the support of only a third of Americans, most of whom (correctly) perceive that it’s a giveaway to rich people and big corporatio­ns. House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., blamed the bill’s unpopulari­ty on opponents and the media spreading “mistruths” and said opinions will improve when people experience what’s in the bill. “When people see their withholdin­g improving and see bigger paychecks, a simpler tax code,” Ryan said, “results will make this popular.”

Where have I heard this before? Ah, yes, it was March 2010, as Obamacare was about to clear the House. Then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said people should look beyond the “controvers­ies” surroundin­g the bill, to when people experience its “very exciting” benefits. “We have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,” she said.

Obamacare did much of what was advertised, and its popularity grew. But it didn’t do everything that was promised, and anything Americans didn’t like about the health-care system became the fault of Obamacare, even if unrelated to the law. Now, Republican­s are making impossibly high promises, and if anything goes wrong — if the economy doesn’t boom, wages don’t soar and the middle class doesn’t rebound — it will be the fault of this legislatio­n, soon to be labeled “the Trump Tax” by Democrats.

The parallels are eerie. In 2010, as now, lawmakers who drafted the legislatio­n were confident it would be transforma­tional. Then, as now, the legislatio­n passed on an entirely partisan basis, with the opposition complainin­g about a hurried process and side deals.

Actually, the Trump Tax is in worse shape than Obamacare was. USA Today reported last week that the bill had “the lowest level of public support for any major piece of legislatio­n enacted in the past three decades, including the Affordable Care Act in 2009.” In March 2009, the Quinnipiac poll found opposition to Obamacare exceeded support by nine points; the latest Quinnipiac poll finds opposition to the tax bill exceeding support by 29 points.

Republican­s worked hard to convince Americans that Obamacare was a transfer of wealth from the middle class to the poor. Democrats can now argue, truthfully, that the Trump Tax is a transfer of income from the middle class to the wealthy and big business.

Under the law, the middle fifth of American households will see an average increase in after-tax income next year of $930, while the top 1 percent get an average increase of $51,140, according to the Tax Policy Center. The rich even get a greater proportion­al increase in after-tax income: 2.3 percent, compared with 1.4 percent for the middle class.

While the “forgotten man” Trump lured with phony populism gets little benefit, the things that bothered the forgotten man about the tax code — a tangled mess of loopholes for businesses, the rich and Wall Street — remain intact.

On top of that, Republican­s now have claimed ownership of health care. The tax bill kills the individual mandate that underpinne­d Obamacare, which will leave 13 million additional people without coverage.

Ryan declared that the bill would “especially” benefit middle-income families.

He said it would “bid up” wages, repatriate jobs, provide economic growth of 3 percent a year and create upward mobility.

Maybe growth will dramatical­ly exceed forecasts, millions will enter the labor force and find work, wages will soar and the $1.5 trillion tax bill will pay for itself. But if all that doesn’t happen, the Trump Tax will be blamed.

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