Three Cheers for RomneyCare!
If only the Democrats had decided to socialize the food industry or housing, Romneycare would probably still be viewed as a massive triumph for conservative free-market principles -- as it was at the time.
It's not as if we had a beautifully functioning free market in health care until Gov. Mitt Romney came along and wrecked it by requiring that Massachusetts residents purchase their own health insurance. In 2007, when Romneycare became law, the federal government alone was already picking up the tab for 45.4 percent of all health care expenditures in the country.
Until Obamacare, mandatory private health insurance was considered the free-market alternative to the Democrats' piecemeal socialization of the entire medical industry.
In November 2004, for example, libertarian Ronald Bailey praised mandated private health insurance in Reason magazine, saying that it "could preserve and extend the advantages of a free market with a minimal amount of coercion."
A leading conservative think tank, The Heritage Foundation, helped design Romneycare, and its health care analyst, Bob Moffit, flew to Boston for the bill signing.
Romneycare was also supported by Regina Herzlinger, Harvard Business School professor and health policy analyst for the conservative Manhattan Institute. Herzlinger praised Romneycare for making consumers, not business or government, the primary purchasers of health care.
The bill passed by 154-2 in the Massachusetts House and unanimously, 37-0, in the Massachusetts Senate -- including the vote of Sen. Scott Brown, who won Teddy Kennedy's seat in the U.S. Senate in January 2010 by pledging to be the "41st vote against Obamacare."
But because both Obamacare and Romneycare concern the same general topic area -- health care -- and can be nicknamed (politician's name plus "care"), Romney's health care bill is suddenly perceived as virtually the same thing as the widely detested Obamacare. (How about "Romneycare-gate"?)
As The New York Times put it, "Mr. Romney's bellicose opposition to 'Obamacare' is an almost comical contradiction to his support for the same idea in Massachusetts when he was governor there." This is like saying state school-choice plans are "the same idea" as the Department of Education.
One difference between the health care bills is that Romneycare is constitutional and Obamacare is not. True, Obamacare's unconstitutional provisions are the least of its horrors, but the Constitution still matters to some Americans. (Oh, to be there when someone at the Times discovers this document called "the Constitution"!)
As Rick Santorum has pointed out, states can enact all sorts of laws -- including laws banning contraception -- without violating the Constitution. That document places strict limits on what Congress can do, not what the states can do. Romney, incidentally, has always said his plan would be a bad idea nationally.
The only reason the "individual mandate" has become a malediction is because the legal argument against Obamacare is that Congress has no constitutional authority to force citizens to buy a particular product.
The legal briefs opposing Obamacare argue that someone sitting at home, minding his own business, is not engaged in "commerce ... among the several states," and, therefore, Congress has no authority under the Commerce Clause to force people to buy insurance.
No one is claiming that the Constitution gives each person an unalienable right not to buy insurance.
States have been forcing people to do things from the beginning of the republic: drilling for the militia, taking blood tests before marriage, paying for public schools, registering property titles and waiting in line for six hours at the Department of Motor Vehicles in order to drive.
There's no obvious constitutional difference between a state forcing militia-age males to equip themselves with guns and a state forcing adults in today's world to equip themselves with health insurance.
The hyperventilating over government-mandated health insurance confuses a legal argument with a policy objection.
If Obamacare were a one-page bill that did nothing but mandate that every American buy health insurance, it would still be unconstitutional, but it wouldn't be the godawful train wreck that it is. It wouldn't even be the godawful train wreck that high-speed rail is.
It would not be a 2,000-page, trillion-dollar federal program micromanaging every aspect of health care in America with enormous, unresponsive federal bureaucracies manned by no-show public-sector union members enforcing a mountain of regulations that will bankrupt the country and destroy medical care, as liberals scratch their heads and wonder why Obamacare is costing 20 times more than they expected and doctors are leaving the profession in droves for more lucrative careers, such as video store clerk.
Nothing good has ever come of a 2,000-page bill.
There's not much governors can do about the collectivist mess Congress has made of health care in this country. They are mere functionaries in the federal government's health care Leviathan.
A governor can't repeal or expand the federal tax break given to companies that pay their employees' health insurance premiums -- a tax break denied the self-employed and self-insured.
A governor can't order the IRS to start recognizing tax deductions for individual health savings accounts.
A governor can't repeal the 1946 federal law essentially requiring hospitals to provide free medical services to all comers, thus dumping a free-rider problem on the states.
It was precisely this free-rider problem that Romneycare was designed to address in the only way a governor can. In addition to mandating that everyone purchase health insurance, Romneycare used the $1.2 billion that the state was already spending on medical care for the uninsured to subsidize the purchase of private health insurance for those who couldn't afford it.
What went wrong with Romneycare wasn't a problem in the bill, but a problem in Massachusetts: Democrats.
First, the overwhelmingly Democratic legislature set the threshold for receiving a subsidy so that it included people making just below the median income in the United States, a policy known as "redistribution of income." For more on this policy, see "Marx, Karl."
Then, liberals destroyed the group-rate, "no frills" private insurance plans allowed under Romneycare (i.e. the only kind of health insurance a normal person would want to buy, but which is banned in most states) by adding dozens of state mandates, including requiring insurers to cover chiropractors and in vitro fertilization -- a policy known as "pandering to lobbyists."
For more on "pandering" and "lobbyists," see "Gingrich, Newt." (Yes, that's an actual person's name.)
Romney's critics, such as Rick Santorum, charge that the governor should have known that Democrats would wreck whatever reforms he attempted.
They have, but no more than they would have wrecked health care in Massachusetts without Romneycare. Democrats could use a sunny day as an excuse to destroy the free market, redistribute income and pander to lobbyists. Does that mean Republicans should never try to reform anything and start denouncing sunny days?
Santorum has boasted of his role in passing welfare reform in the 1990s. You know what the Democrats' 2009 stimulus bill dismantled? That's right: the welfare reform that passed in the 1990s.
The problem isn't health insurance mandates. The problem isn't Romneycare. The problem isn't welfare reform. The problem is Democrats.
- Ann Coulter's blog
- Login to post comments
















Comments
Ann
Submitted by Blonde on Thu, 02/02/2012 - 12:51am.
Kindly take your s*** sandwich elsewhere. You're boring me.
Handy Reference Guide to Obama's Gaffes and Goofs ~ Currently Numbering 200 (and Counting)
Well said. I mean, if you
Submitted by ckc1227 on Thu, 02/02/2012 - 4:41am.
Well said. I mean, if you want to support the guy, fine. But don't pee down our backs and tell us it's raining.
I don't mind her supporting
Submitted by motherbelt on Thu, 02/02/2012 - 9:41am.
I don't mind her supporting Romney; she can support anyone she wants.
But to go back and reinterpret history now that she's on his team makes her no better than those who interpret every failure of Obama's as actually being a success.
Where has her praise for Romneycare been all these years?
Legal Insurrection has this video: Just a few months ago (I guess when she was still hoping Christie could be persuaded to run) in an interview with Laura Ingraham, she had this to say about Romneycare:
Romneycare “shows the failure of even statewide universal care.”
Another sign that she's jumped the shark: She's making fun of Newt Gingrich's name, for crying out loud!
See Gingrich, Newt. Yes, that's an actual person's name.
This she says while shilling for a guy named MITT
Allahpundit wonders why Ann chooses this, of all topic, to justify her support for Romney:
She has a million arguments for Romney over Gingrich or Santorum if she wants them: He’s a better fundraiser and organizer, he polls better against Obama head to head, he’s good enough at debates to have thwarted Newt twice in Florida, he’s got private sector experience, etc. There’s simply no need to cheer him on for the least conservative thing he ever did in public life. Either she’s so sick of people dumping on her for backing Mitt that she decided to write this as a rhetorical middle finger to her critics or she’s curious to see just how strong her persuasive powers over the right are. If she can turn them around on RomneyCare, she can turn them around on anything.
This is unkind, I know, but I'm starting to wonder if Ann isn't having some menopausal mood swings.
Another sign that she's(Ann C) jumped the shark
Submitted by vrwc13 on Thu, 02/02/2012 - 12:28pm.
...sad but by definition this may be her way(wrong way) of becoming relevant again.
And his name is Willard Mitt Rmoney
v
The burden of life is from ourselves, its lightness from the grace of Christ and the love of God. - William Bernard Ullanthorne
Coulter has lost her conservative credentials
Submitted by Galvanic on Thu, 02/02/2012 - 2:17pm.
Her support of Romney and her defense of Romneycare destroys her image as a Bulldog of the Right.
She lost me with her big push
Submitted by Schofield Kid on Thu, 02/02/2012 - 3:46pm.
She lost me with her big push to run Christie as being a true conservative. I love what he's doing with the budget and unions in NJ...but he aint no conservative on most issues! It really is an amazing turn around, because I've really enjoyed her books/columns in the past.
Disappointed with ANN
Submitted by LionKing on Mon, 02/06/2012 - 10:20pm.
Very disappointed with Ann Coulter.
She has morphed into BOR.
Mark Levin
Submitted by Boudin on Thu, 02/02/2012 - 8:25am.
Took her column apart last night. This is very sad, a prominent conservative championing Gov control.
Will someone please take the kool-aid away from Ann!
Levin's verbal fisking of
Submitted by motherbelt on Thu, 02/02/2012 - 9:33am.
Levin's verbal fisking of Coulter's column is a must hear!
It's 30 minutes long, but well worth taking the time.
mb, thanks for the link
Submitted by mom_rox on Thu, 02/02/2012 - 4:43pm.
I listened to it this on my drive this morning. We all need to remember that health care, while very desirous, is not a right.
Well, there's your problem...
Submitted by c5then on Thu, 02/02/2012 - 9:39am.
"Conservatives" who support moderates because the liberal media tell them they they are the only ones who are "electable".
I just lost some respect for Ann Coulter. I used to think that she was a conservative. Now I see that she is just a republican.
Madison and Jefferson and Franklin built a Republic - Roberts killed it!
Mitt Romney is too shallow to be a conservative.
Submitted by acaiguana on Thu, 02/02/2012 - 10:13am.
Unfortunately, I'm gonna have to vote for the guy next November.
ACA
...
Quoted from: 'Acaiguana notes from the Underground' (Soon to be at theaters near you)
Let's see if I remember correctly...
Submitted by GW on Thu, 02/02/2012 - 11:23am.
Who was it that convinced me that moderates never win the Presidency? I think she used the examples of McCain, Dole, and George HW Bush after he showed himself a moderate? Oh yeah - that was Ann!
So what changed?
Ann, did you lose a bet? Is
Submitted by Scuba Dude on Thu, 02/02/2012 - 12:14pm.
Ann, did you lose a bet? Is this why you are writing this cr@pola supporting RomneyCare?
Scoob
Submitted by Free Stinker on Thu, 02/02/2012 - 3:15pm.
My theory is she is dating someone on Romney's campaign staff.
/// Sarah Palin Fan since July 11, 2007 /// خال
You're wrong Ann. The
Submitted by Free Stinker on Thu, 02/02/2012 - 3:14pm.
You're wrong Ann.
The goverenment cannot compel commerce. As Mark Levin has so ably noted, the government can regulate it, tax it, and even stop it. But they may not compell any individual to engage in it.
/// Sarah Palin Fan since July 11, 2007 /// خال
compelled commerce
Submitted by Agnostic on Thu, 02/02/2012 - 3:28pm.
Doesn't that depend upon the state Constitution?