September 22, 2009 11:12 AM

Party Is Such Sweet Sorrow

By
CBSNews
(The New Republic)  Jonathan Cohn is a senior editor for The New Republic.

Even before Ted Kennedy lost his battle with brain cancer late last month, Republicans were suggesting that health care reform had suffered in his absence--not because Kennedy was so devoted to the cause, but because he would have cut a deal with the Republicans. "In every case, he fought as hard as he could . . . but, when he recognized that he couldn't get everything he wanted, he could get a good bill by working with the other side," Utah Republican Senator Orrin Hatch said on ABC's "This Week." "If he was here, I don't think we'd be in the mess we're in right now."

It's true that Kennedy was the consummate dealmaker. His determination to reach across the aisle reflected, in no small part, his regret over one time he didn't--during the 1970s, when President Richard Nixon put forward a health care reform proposal that Kennedy and his liberal allies rejected as too timid. But the wistfulness for Kennedy's deal-making and, more broadly, his bipartisanship, overlooks a key detail. The deal on health care that almost came together in 1973--like the deals Kennedy later made on No Child Left Behind, immigration reform, and the Medicare drug benefit--involved Republicans who were willing to be part of the reform enterprise. Such Republicans are almost impossible to find today.

During the past year, Republicans have frequently said they want to work with Democrats. But the real story of the last few months is how unserious those pledges turned out to be. Although you wouldn't know it from their rhetoric or the media coverage, there are not one but two ostensibly bipartisan proposals out there right now. Either of them could be the template for successful reform if even a few Republicans started pushing them seriously. But, even the ostensibly reasonable Republican senators whom Democrats have tried to engage--Mike Enzi, Charles Grassley, and Hatch--just aren't interested. And it appears they haven't been for a while.

Nixon's old proposal--which would have covered nearly all Americans, mostly through private insurance--is a reminder that Republicans haven't always opposed health care reform, sight unseen. And, as recently as a few months ago, at least a handful of Republicans were signaling that they bought into the basic goals of health care reform: expanding insurance coverage substantially, improving the quality of medical care, and curbing the growth in health care expenses. "We're going to make it," Grassley said on CBS's "Face the Nation" in July. "We'll get this done because we're doing it in a bipartisan way."

The challenge, or so it seemed, was finding a way to accomplish these goals that meshed with conservative sensibilities. In practical terms, that meant relying heavily on private insurance to bring coverage to the uninsured, much as Nixon had proposed, rather than relying heavily on expanded--or even newly created--public insurance programs. It also meant minimizing taxes on the rich and fostering a sense of individual responsibility.
Earlier this year, a group of former Senate majority leaders--Republicans Howard Baker and Bob Dole, along with Democrats Tom Daschle and George Mitchell--showed how that might be accomplished. After negotiating with each other for more than a year, as if they were still in office and representing their two parties, the group (minus Mitchell, who had since joined the administration) unveiled a fully fledged health care reform proposal in June. They released it through the Bipartisan Policy Center, a think tank they'd establish precisely to advance proposals like these. And, at least on paper, it looked like the kind of scheme members of both parties could support in good conscience.

The Center's proposal had the same basic architecture as the plan Obama put forward in his presidential campaign and that congressional committees have been debating this year. Everybody would have to get insurance; in exchange, government would make sure everybody could get insurance, by subsidizing the cost for those who needed financial assistance--and by creating a marketplace in which people without access to employer policies could get coverage regardless of pre-existing conditions.

Still, it was hardly everything Obama or the Democrats would have wanted. Instead of a single public-insurance plan into which people could enroll, the Center's proposal would have given states the option of creating independent insurance plans to compete with private insurers; it allowed the federal government to step in with its own plan only if, after five years, there was evidence the system needed more competition. This was an effort to satisfy conservatives, who believe a public plan might drive private insurers out of business and, ultimately, starve doctors and hospitals of necessary resources by underpaying them.

The Center's plan included other compromises as well. It expanded Medicaid eligibility to the poverty line but not beyond, while the House bill, in line with liberal expectations, raised eligibility to include people making one-third more than the poverty line. This change helped achieve another major goal: holding down the overall price of reform. All told, the Center's plan called for $1.2 trillion in new government spending--a significant sum, to be sure, but less than initial Democratic proposals, which, according to most outside experts, were likely to cost $1.5 trillion or more. And, again consistent with conservative thinking, the Center did not simply impose new taxes on the wealthy, as both Obama and, later, the House Democrats would.

Instead, the Center's proposal would have paid for reform by capping the exclusion on group health benefits, then extracting savings from Medicare and Medicaid. It was, in short, a proposal in which both sides gave ground. "I had a lot of trouble with mandates, just as Tom had trouble with the public plan," Dole said. "But, if we can't compromise, how are you ever going to get a bill passed?"

But Baker and Dole's endorsement didn't move the Republican caucus in Congress, which barely acknowledged the Center's proposal. Instead, the Republican leadership continued to oppose Democratic proposals outright, while those few members willing to talk about it kept pressing for plans that would be even less generous--a lot less generous--than what the Center had put forward. Enzi, in particular, wanted to minimize the financial assistance going to people buying insurance through the exchanges. Democrats had hoped to make subsidies available to people making up to four times the poverty line. Enzi proposed making subsidies available only to people making two-and-a-half times the poverty line--or around $55,000 per year for a family of four. As the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities has concluded, "substantial numbers of people with incomes modestly above 300 percent of the poverty line could face difficulty paying the full price of coverage. . . . This could leave the family short of funds for other expenses such as housing and child care." And the $1.2 trillion price tag, the one lower than many Democrats wanted? Republicans have been saying reform can't cost more than $1 trillion--and should probably cost a lot less.

Of course, the Center's proposal wasn't a real bill. But the Healthy Americans Act--the bill that Ron Wyden, the Democratic Senator from Oregon, unveiled and began pushing back in late 2006--is real. The Healthy Americans Act is a completely different kind of reform: It would get rid of employer-sponsored insurance as it now exists and move to a system in which virtually everybody would buy coverage on their own--again, through some sort of structured marketplace in which the federal government set standards for benefits, made sure they were available to everybody, and provided subsidies for people who needed them. Although Wyden is a liberal Democrat, he crafted the proposal with Republicans in mind--seeking to reach what he called "a philosophical truce" between left and right. It is still the only proposal on the table that pays for itself within a few years, then starts to show actual savings after that. It would provide coverage entirely through private insurance, eventually folding in parts of Medicaid. And it would do all of this without raising taxes on the wealthy, at least not directly. Money for the program would come primarily from eliminating the existing tax exclusion on group health insurance, so that there would be no new taxes targeting the wealthy explicitly.

It was, in many ways, a conservative proposal, as the opposition of prominent liberal groups attested. And Wyden scored an early victory when he secured, as a co-sponsor, Bob Bennett of Utah--a Republican senator with solid conservative bona fides. "It's the right time," Bennett said. "[W]e have a situation in Congress that would lead both parties to want to have a solution." Over the next two years, a handful of additional Republicans agreed to co-sponsor Wyden-Bennett or its mirror version in the House. If Congress was to pass a bipartisan bill, surely, this was the chance.
But, presented with that opportunity, Republicans refused it. With one or two exceptions, even the legislators co-sponsoring the measure did not in fact seem to support it. When asked about it, they would inevitably refuse to endorse the particulars and call the proposal--as a spokesperson for GOP

Representative Mike Castle did in an interview--"a great conversation starter." And, while Bennett still seems committed to the bill, it's hard to know if that will last. The Club for Growth--a conservative group--began running advertisements in Utah, attacking Bennett for his advocacy of the bill. Bennett, in turn, has recently vowed to "kill" Obamacare, which suggests that combining the bills to produce a true compromise--a possibility others have certainly entertained--is not an option in his mind.

The White House and its allies seem to grasp that Republicans (except for Maine Senator Olympia Snowe) just aren't interested in promoting health care reform anymore. After Enzi gave a radio address in which he attacked Democratic health care plans, White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs told reporters, "I think Senator Enzi's clearly turned over his cards on bipartisanship and decided that it's time to walk away from the table." Gibbs didn't say anything about Grassley. But, after a string of comments attacking Democrats and the revelation that Grassley is now sending fund-raising letters asking for support so he can help defeat the Democratic health care plan, the administration has apparently given up on him, as well.

And yet, negotiations will go on, between liberals and those who remain at the table--conservative Democrats, who have their own qualms about the direction reform is headed. One issue is how much to spend on reform--a question that depends on Democrats' willingness to find new revenue, in the form of taxes or savings elsewhere, and on which the plan's ultimate generosity will depend. Another issue, naturally, is the public plan, which more conservative Democrats continue to talk down. Still, these are more differences of degree than of kind. At the end of the day, centrist Democrats may want less-ambitious legislation, but they still want legislation. Given their preferences, it wouldn't be at all surprising if they ended up endorsing--and, finally, enacting--something like the measure Baker and Dole embraced.

Which wouldn't be such a bad thing. The Baker-Dole-Daschle proposal still isn't everything liberal Democrats want. But it's far more ambitious than anything than the Enzis of the world would tolerate--and a measure that would accomplish much, if not all, of what liberal Democrats can realistically hope to achieve in the prevailing political environment. In effect, conservative Democrats now occupy the political space that moderate Republicans once did, years ago--a place on the ideological spectrum that tends to look upon government more skeptically, perhaps, but still recognizes its place as a protector of economic security. These are the people with whom Ted Kennedy used to make deals--and with whom liberals can still find common ground, even as they wish today's Republicans good riddance.


By Jonathan Cohn:
Reprinted with permission from The New Republic.

The New Republic
Add a Comment See all 12 Comments
by Ni_Hao September 9, 2009 2:22 AM EDT
Any politician that accepts their own top shelf healthcare plan, and for life as they have granted themselves, that does not work to provide the same option for all Americans is a coward. A self serving, miserable excuse for a human being. If what we have now is "good", it must be "good" for the politicians themselves too. And if we can't afford that for all Americans, we certainly can't afford it for the politicians, who are all earning far more than the average American, and with far more perks.
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by smoknmirrors September 8, 2009 10:46 PM EDT
The Healthy Americans Act (circa 2006) eliminates the one strength of health insurance coverage in this country. It was a negotiated benefit of working for a specific employer instead of somewhere else, it provided a way for people with pre-existing conditions to obtain coverage that individual insurance companies did not want to offer and it extended affordable coverage to all employees irrespective of age, gender and health. It has been so effective that all federal employees are given that benefit, including our Senators and Congressmen. For some reason it becomes ineffective only when the possibility is mentioned of extending it to everyone.
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by jimbob133 September 8, 2009 12:34 PM EDT
They both partys sent all our good paying jobs out of the country as a way to control us. Now the democrats want to promise every thing will be free. And let all the poor illegals in that way they get more votes. More people to promse everything. Well it is going to blow up in awhile
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by bcpats September 8, 2009 11:06 AM EDT
Again -- the hateful, name-calling, demeaning blow-hards of the blog world are up and at 'em this morning. Only one or two conservative notes that are jumped on with blatherskite enthusiasm.
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by noloyalisti September 8, 2009 10:01 AM EDT
What is the Republican plan for health care reform? The ugly party of No, Nope and No Hope continues to dig their own graves. How blatantly can they defend the "rights" of the filthy rich against America and it's people? They want the government to do only one thing, invade countries for corporate gain. Wow!
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by wrexall9 September 6, 2009 8:12 PM EDT
Can I get another democratic response?

I'd like to hear from the left...


Aren't we all Americans and haven't we lost enough already? What happened to rising above and being the best?




I'm just asking because it's time for a gut check and I'm tired of holding mine in. Shouldn't we all check ours?
Reply to this comment
by babooph September 6, 2009 7:39 PM EDT
"When in trouble,or in doubt;run around,scream & shout."This has worked so well for the republican party ,why should they do anything else ?
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by proudmilvet September 6, 2009 7:21 PM EDT
old1oncnet... What the Hell is the matter with you Idiots? According to Republicans, Every Single thing that you don't agree with 100%, or that doesn't fit into your narrow little world is somehow some kind of Communist Plot to bring down America! It Always has to be your way or NOTHING! When are you Childish People going to Move out of the 1950's? There is no Communist Plot. No Marxist or Socialist Plot. Just a Plot by Republicans/Conservatives/Neocons Under Marching Orders from Rush Limbaugh,Glenn Beck, & Fox News To Whine, Cry, Delay, Oppose, & Subvert Until You Get Your Way. Not Going To Happen!!
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by klevenstein September 6, 2009 12:08 PM EDT
The GOP has painted itself into a radical, nutty and anti-American corner, and they can't stop painting.

This nation was not founded on baseless attacks and selfishness. If they stay their present course of hyperbole and nonsense, the GOP will marginalize themselves out of existence.
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by thebob-bob September 6, 2009 11:38 AM EDT
Republicans were given the opportunity to participate in actually governing but you can't negotiate with a Party whose ONLY interest is winning the next election. The Republican response to everything Obama has been fury, hatred, fear-mongering, distortion and division.

America has seen their true colors and they aren't red, white and blue.
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by old1oncnet September 6, 2009 4:06 PM EDT
"but you can't negotiate with a Party whose ONLY interest is winning the next election." Don't you win elections when you give the "people" what the want? Or prevent "them" from getting something they do not want? That's what Red White and Blue is all about.
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