Back in the heady days of summer, President Obama and the leaders of the House and Senate wore arrogance about passing Obamacare like a stylish coat. Ram it through, was the order of the day, as the mounting protests from the grassroots were dismissed and denigrated as just “tea baggers,” or “racist haters,” but absolutely nothing about which to be concerned. So, “the process” as our political technocrats like to call it, was shoved through, bloated to an obese 2700 pages, and completed with crass backroom deals.
I began to sense they were wrong, not about the racist haters part–that was always ridiculous–but about the nothing about which to be concerned part, back in August. As recounted here, I was invited on very short notice to speak to a town hall meeting in Louisville. I expected maybe 150 people–and 1500 turned up, the air crackling with democratic determination. It was then that I knew something big was really up–especially after Harry Reid called such committed democratic participants “evil mongers.”
Over the next several months, President Obama got creamed in the healthcare debate, with Obamacare now approved in several polls by a mere 35 or so percent of the people, and the Senate seat in MA going to an unknown Republican who explicitly ran on the plank of defeating the bill. So now, after his political hat has been handed to him, Obama wants openness and a fair vote. From the story:
At the fund-raiser for the Democratic National Committee later on Thursday, however, Mr. Obama said that once Congressional Democrats had worked out their differences and settled on a final bill, he would push for a vibrant, public debate over the health care legislation. He said he planned “to call on our Republican friends to present their ideas.”
“What I’d like to do is have a meeting whereby I am sitting with the Republicans, sitting with the Democrats, sitting with health care experts and let’s just go through these bills,” Mr. Obama said. “Their ideas, our ideas. Let’s walk through them in a methodical way, so that the American people can see and compare what makes the most sense. And then I think that we have got to move forward on a vote. We have got to move forward on a vote.”
Too late. A bill with those kind of changes should receive full committee workups and analysis, not just inserted clauses and a vote, particularly since Obamacare’s benefits–as opposed to its costs–wouldn’t begin until 2014 anyway.
If POTUS and company had really wanted a measured and centrist reform, this approach should have been taken from the beginning. Now, it is just a means of trying to save face by cramming through something–anything. Better to wait until after the mid terms and then introduce targeted reform that doesn’t seek to remake the entire health care system. Obamacare is too flawed, its supporters already on record as wanting it as a shell in which to later reinsert all the bad stuff, to permit it to pass now that it has been soundly defeated in the public square.





February 6th, 2010 | 2:20 pm
Obama is using the “lead a meeting” style to try to be president. This style dictates that the leader of the meeting not inject his or her ideas, but work to get everyones ideas on the table and try to allow the participants come to a consensus.
He fails to understand that HE is in charge and should direct the outcome of the meeting. Given that he has never had executive experience and is unqualified for his job one should not wonder that he wanders.
That plus the speeches he reads are developed by the Rahm Emanual faction as the President really has no idea.
February 6th, 2010 | 3:08 pm
He’s a stooge. He and those around him are an ugly bunch. The real problem is that there are enough people in the U.S. who voted for him for him to have been elected. That many of them now regret it is better than nothing, but not enough.
February 7th, 2010 | 3:18 am
[...] the rest here: Obamacare: POTUS Idea For Open Debate–Too Little, Too Late … Tags: makes-the-most, methodical-way, move-forward, walk-through The Idea of Retirement was a [...]
February 7th, 2010 | 4:41 am
At this stage? With a 2,700 page document to go through? He knew where he was and to whom he was speaking to. What chutzpah! Do we have any video clips of their faces? ROTFL Urge to hum the theme from The Twilight Zone from me. Shock and awe, for sure!
February 7th, 2010 | 9:44 am
It’s ironic that Obama is finally tanking in the polls for carrying out what he promised to do in the election campaign: spreading the wealth and shamelessly pandering to special interest groups. Those who regret voting for him didn’t expect to get a community organizer from ACORN for President, but that’s what he is.
February 7th, 2010 | 4:18 pm
Publius: Well that sums up those who voted for him and that there were enough of them to get him elected. He was a community organizer from Acorn when they voted for him just as he is now.
February 8th, 2010 | 8:34 am
I hope the Rs do not fall for this trickery from the PR stunt man The ONLY way they should sit down to discuss healthcare reform is if Obama, Reid and Pelosi agree to start over. Otherwise they will get nothing and be protrayed as as obstructionists.
March 3rd, 2010 | 4:29 pm
There are just four things I think needs to be changed about healthcare and insurance
1) insurance companies have to stop being able to deny sales of policies to people who want to purchase insurance
2) benefits need to be fairly and equally priced for all – including no more golden tiers for top executives and no overpricing based on statistical groups
3) insurance companies have to stop denying care and dropping patients who need care
4) insurance cannot and should not be compulsory – i know people who pay the fine in MA as its cheaper than the premium – that means not only do they not have health care the money they might have spent on health care goes for fines…
Links
Blogs
Find Us
Contact