Why didn’t he say this during the election?  Romney is too little, too late.



B



*Romney Slams Obama's 'Fundamental Dishonesty' *

Sunday, November 3, 2013 05:35 PM

*By: Newsmax Wires*

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, the Republican candidate who lost
the 2012 presidential race to President Barack Obama, accused the president
Sunday of "fundamental dishonesty" when he repeatedly promised Americans
they would be able to keep their existing insurance plans under Obamacare.

“He wasn’t telling the truth,” Romney said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

“That fundamental dishonesty has really -- has really put in peril the
whole foundation of his second term,” Romney said. “I think it is rotting
it away.”


What “has really undermined the president's credibility in the hearts of
the American people is that he went out, as a centerpiece of his campaign
and as a centerpiece of Obamacare over the last several years, saying time
and time again that fundamental to his plan was the right people would have
to keep their insurance plan, and he knew that was not the case....”

Romney added: "Had the president been truthful and told the American people
that millions would lose their insurance and millions more would see their
premiums skyrocket… there would have been such a hue and cry against it,
(that) it would not have passed.”

During the presidential campaign and later, as Congress debated the
Affordable Health Care Act, Obama repeatedly said that no one would be
forced to give up their existing health coverage under the law.

As governor of Massachusetts, Romney signed into law a 2006 state program
used as a model for the federal law, known as Obamacare. Massachusetts,
Romney said, “teaches some important lessons some states are not going to
want to follow.”

Health insurance is more expensive in Massachusetts than in any other
state, Romney pointed out, adding that “Texas and Minnesota and Montana”
are not necessarily going to want to adopt such a costly plan.

"First of all, the Massachusetts experience was a state-run plan," Romney
explained. "The right way to deal with health care reform is not to have a
one-size-fits-all plan that's imposed on all the states, but recognizing
the differences between different states' populations, states should be
able to craft their own plans to get all their citizens insured, and to
make sure that preexisting conditions are covered.

"And there's some other differences," Romney said. "In Massachusetts, we
phased in the requirements so that there was a slow rollout. That way you
could test the systems as you went along to make sure there wouldn't be
glitches.

"I think you're going to find, when it's all said and done, after all these
states that are laboratories of democracy get their chance to try their own
plans, that those who follow the path that we pursued will find it's the
best path, and we'll end up with a nation that's taken a mandate approach."

Romney said Obama must work with Republicans if he's going to fix the mess
that the Obamacare rollout has become.

"I think the only way he can rebuild credibility is to work with
Republicans and Democrats and try and rebuild a foundation," Romney said.
"We've got to have a president. We've got to have a president that can
lead. And right now, he's not able to do so."


The White House quickly went on the defensive.

The Massachusetts plan did take time to get off the ground, White House
senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer said, enrolling only 0.03 percent of the
population in the first month.

“I can promise you that the first enrollment numbers, which were released
later this month, are not going to be what we want them to be. There’s no
question about that,” Pfeiffer said on ABC’s “This Week” program. “The
website hasn’t worked the way we want it to work. But we take
responsibility for that, take responsibility for the errors, take
responsibility for fixing it.”

Between 5 million and 7 million people will need to enter private health
care exchanges for the system to work, said Ezekiel Emanuel, vice provost
at the University of Pennsylvania and an architect of the Obama plan.
Enrollment will accelerate as the March deadline approaches, just as it did
in Massachusetts, he said.

“You would expect at this stage of the game, from everything we know about
the exchanges, that not a lot of people would sign up,” Emanuel said on
“Fox News Sunday.” “People will put off buying until the end.”

After appearances on the Hill last week, administration officials are set
to testify again this week about what went wrong with the online health
portal. The government’s health care website tells visitors that online
applications aren’t available from 1 a.m. to 5 a.m. ET daily “while we make
improvements.”

Marilyn Tavenner, administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services, which has overseen the building and startup of federal online
health exchanges, is scheduled to appear before the Senate Health,
Education, Labor and Pensions Committee Nov. 5.

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius is set to appear the
next day before the Senate Finance Committee.

The flawed debut of the health website, with delays, outages and software
errors, is tarnishing Obama’s signature legislative achievement and has
complicated his second-term agenda as his approval ratings drop.

Forty-eight percent of Americans said the government is doing a “poor” job
of implementing the health law, *a Kaiser Family Foundation poll
*<http://kff.org/health-reform/poll-finding/kaiser-health-tracking-poll-october-2013/>found.
The law itself is supported by about* 47 percent of respondents
*<http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/poll-more-americans-want-to-keep-or-expand-obamacare-than-repeal-it>who
said it should be kept or expanded, compared with 37 percent who said they
want it repealed.

“I think government is inherently inept, because they don’t work on a
profit motive,” Senator Rand Paul, a Republican from Kentucky, said on the
“This Week” program. “I would say that there are fundamental things
government can do. But government shouldn’t take on new opportunities or
new things to do when it’s not managing what it has now.”

Romney also tipped his hat to New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, a
potential Republican candidate for president in 2016.

“Chris could easily become our nominee and save our party and help get this
nation on the right track again,” Romney said. “They don’t come better than
Chris Christie.”

Christie, who is favored to win re-election on Nov. 5, is “one of the very
strongest lights of the Republican Party,” Romney said. Christie, Senator
Marc Rubio, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush and Representative Paul Ryan
of Wisconsin, Romney’s former running mate, all are electable, he said.





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