A middle-aged man dreaming of the day when he can stop begging for scraps and write for a living.
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Revisiting the history of the health insurance mandate.
It seems that the popular conservative apologetic today is to claim that conservatives never introduced or supported mandatory health insurance. Even a casual browse through the public record reveals that claim to be false, but the claim continues to get repeated apparently in hopes of replicating the Big Lie. So for the record (mostly for my own benefit) here's what's on the public record with regard to the GOP's health insurance mandate. First there's the 1993 GOP counter-proposal to "Hillarycare" taken from the proposal written by the Heritage Foundation. The idea was to force people to join the insurance pool to lower the overall risk just like they do with mandatory auto insurance. Then there's Romneycare, the Massachusetts health care reform law that the Heritage Foundation claimed credit for helping build based off their original health insurance mandate. Romney and other conservatives continued to hail the Massachusetts law as a model for national health care reform up until the point that Obama used Romneycare experts to help build Obamacare. That's the point when suddenly conservatives started talking about how the mandate was "unconstitutional," a claim they continue to make long after the mandate was upheld in the Supreme Court. To add insult to injury, Newt Gingrich admitted that the whole reform proposal was a red herring intended to block the Clinton reform proposal back in 1993 and that he never had any intention of allowing it to pass. That's what vindicates Alan Grayson's depiction of the GOP reform plan as "don't get sick. If you do, die quickly." Thankfully, Forbes includes many of the highlights of the Republican Party's history of the individual mandate.
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