http://www.forbes.com/sites/stevenhayward/2013/11/11/obamacare-will-be-repealed-well-in-advance-of-the-2014-elections/
Obamacare Will Be Repealed Well In Advance Of The 2014 Elections



By Steven Hayward



November 11, 2013

Prediction: even if HealthCare.gov <http://healthcare.gov/> is fixed by the
end of the month (unlikely), Obamacare is going to be repealed well in
advance of next year’s election.  And if the website continues to fail, the
push for repeal—from endangered Democrats—will occur very rapidly.  The
website is a sideshow: the real action is the number of people and
businesses who are losing their health plans or having to pay a lot more.
Fixing the website will only delay the inevitable.

It is important to remember why it was so important for Obama to promise
repeatedly that “if you like your health insurance/doctor, you can keep
your health insurance/doctor.”  Cast your mind back to the ignominious
collapse of Hillarycare in 1994.  Hillarycare came out of the box in
September 1993 to high public support according to the early polls.  This
was not a surprise.  Opinion polls for decades have shown a large majority
of Americans support the general idea of universal health coverage.  But
Hillarycare came apart as the bureaucratic details came out, the most
important one being that you couldn’t be sure you’d be able to keep your
doctors or select specialists of your choice.  The Clintons refused to
consider a compromise, but even with large Democratic Senate and House
majorities the bill was so dead it was never brought up for a vote.
Remember “Harry and Louise <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dt31nhleeCg>”?
Obama did, which is why he portrayed Obamacare as simply expanding coverage
to the uninsured, and improving coverage for the underinsured while leaving
the already insured undisturbed.  But the redistributive arithmetic of
Obamacare’s architecture could never add up, which is what the bureaucrats
knew early on—as early as 2010 according to many documents that have
leaked.  The wonder is that Obama’s political team didn’t see this coming
and prepare a pre-emptive strategy for dealing with the inevitable exposure
of the duplicity at the heart of Obamacare’s logic.  Now that people are
losing their insurance and finding that they may not be able to keep their
doctor after all, Obamacare has become the domestic policy equivalent of
the Iraq War: a protracted fiasco that is proving fatal to a president’s
credibility and approval rating.  The only thing missing is calling in FEMA
to help fix this Category-5 political disaster.

Senate Democrats endangered for re-election will lead the charge for repeal
perhaps as soon as January, after they get an earful over the Christmas
break.  They’ll call it “reform,” and clothe it in calls for delaying the
individual mandate and allowing people and businesses to keep their
existing health insurance policies.  But it is probably too late to go back
in many cases.  With the political damage guaranteed to continue, the
momentum toward repeal will be unstoppable.  Democrats will not want to
face the voters next November with the albatross of Obamacare.

The politics of the repeal effort will be a game theorist’s dream.  Tea
Party Republicans will resist “reforms” to Obamacare in favor of complete
repeal.  Democrats will try to turn the tables and set up Republicans as
obstacles to reform, hoping to inoculate themselves prospectively from
mayhem at the polls next November. The House might want to insist that the
Senate go first; after all, it was the Senate version of the bill that the
House had to swallow after Scott Brown’s election in January 2010.  The
House can rightly insist that the Senate needs to clean up the mess they
made.  Obama may well give Capitol Hill Democrats a pass on a repeal vote,
and veto any bill that emerges.  He’ll never face the voters again.

This wouldn’t be the first time that a health care entitlement was
repealed.  The same thing happened in the late 1980s with catastrophic
coverage for seniors.  Because seniors were made to pay for their benefits
under that scheme, the uproar forced Congress to repeal the measure barely
a year after it went into effect.  Obamacare looks to be on the same
political trajectory, and for the same reason.  Obamacare represents the
crisis of big government; the limits of administrative government have
finally been breached.  For the first time ever, some polls are showing a
majority of Americans doubting the goal of universal health coverage.

The hazard of the moment is that a compromise “reform” that drops the
mandate and attempts to restore the insurance *status quo ante* could leave
us with an unfunded expansion of Medicaid and a badly disrupted private
insurance market.  Republicans should avoid both the political traps and a
new fiscal time bomb by being ready with a serious replacement policy,
based on the premium support tax credit ideas that John McCain advocated
(poorly) in 2008.  While anxious liberals are in dismay, they should
recognize that Obamacare may well have achieved its chief purpose of making
universal or at least greatly expanded health coverage a fixture of
American social policy.  The cost to liberalism may prove fatal, however.

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