By Andrew Cline on 8.12.09 @ 6:10AM
A report from Townhall, New Hampshire, on an extraordinarily limp
performance.
President Obama gave an extraordinary performance at his "town
hall" meeting in Portsmouth, N.H., on Tuesday. There was no
soaring oratory or fainting crowd (although it was a very
friendly audience). Actually, overall, the affair was rather dull
and unmemorable. What was extraordinary was seeing the president
of the United States -- this president of the United States --
spend more than an hour limply defending himself against critics
who were neither named nor present on the premises, but rather
omnipresent in the very air.
Obama came to New Hampshire to stop the bleeding. His campaign
for massive health care reform is dying of 1,000 bipartisan cuts,
and the White House senses that time is running out. His
diagnosis: Expose the critics as liars. It didn't work.
The president said that people were misrepresenting the
Democrats' proposals. He said, "If you like your doctor, you can
keep your doctor. If you like your health care plan, you can keep
your health care plan. You won't be waiting in any lines." He
went to great lengths to deny that much of anything would change
for anyone who likes his or her existing health care plan.
And that's where he failed. At the same time he was promising
most everyone in America that health care reform would mean zero
noticeable changes in their health insurance, he was attacking
the "status quo" and explaining that if reform passes, everything
will change.
Only once did Obama refute a criticism by explaining what was
actually in any of the bills being considered in Congress. He
said the consultations on end-of-life care were not "death
panels," but simply extensions of insurance coverage for
physician consultations that people need to have toward the end
of life. However, he didn't exactly rule out that they could
result in bureaucrats pushing family members to pull the plug.
The rest of Obama's defense consisted of reiterating the same
talking points he's spent months reciting. He repeated what his
intentions were, but most critics aren't attacking his
intentions, they're attacking what the results of specific
legislation would be. To them, he dealt no crushing blow.
And he kept contradicting himself. For example, he noted that
Medicare was in crisis and would soon be bankrupt, then cited it
as a proof that government can do health care right.
"Our deficit will continue to grow because Medicare and Medicaid
are on an unsustainable path. Medicare is slated to go into the
red in about eight to 10 years. I don't know if people are aware
of that. If I was a senior citizen, the thing I'd be worried
about right now is Medicare starts running out of money because
we haven't done anything to make sure that we're getting a good
bang for our buck when it comes to health care," he said.
Moments later, he mocked critics who worry about a government
takeover of health care, saying, "I do think it's important for
particularly seniors who currently receive Medicare to understand
that if we're able to get something right like Medicare, then
there should be a little more confidence that maybe the
government can have a role -- not the dominant role, but a role
-- in making sure the people are treated fairly when it comes to
insurance," he said.
A program that's going bankrupt within the decade is proof that
"we're able to get something right"?
Shortly after that, he tried to reassure listeners that a public
option plan would not put private insurers out of business.
"People say, well, how can a private company compete against the
government? And my answer is that if the private insurance
companies are providing a good bargain, and if the public option
has to be self-sustaining -- meaning taxpayers aren't subsidizing
it, but it has to run on charging premiums and providing good
services and a good network of doctors, just like any other
private insurer would do -- then I think private insurers should
be able to compete. They do it all the time," he said.
"I mean, if you think about -- if you think about it, UPS and
FedEx are doing just fine, right? No, they are. It's the Post
Office that's always having problems."
It's hardly reassuring that the two examples Obama chose to
demonstrate the competence of the federal government and prove
his reform is no threat to private insurers were Medicare and the
Postal Service, both of which are going bankrupt.
It is no surprise that there was no "Aha!" moment when a viewer
would say, "So that's what he means! I get it now! I'm so
relieved!" Obama gave no skeptics any reason to suddenly start
believing him. If you weren't a believer before, you are very
unlikely to have changed your mind after listening to the
President in Portsmouth.
In addition, there were no assaults, and no one shouted down the
president. The closest the media could come to creating a
shocking moment was to note that someone showed up with a pistol
strapped to his hip. That wasn't the brightest move, but New
Hampshire is an open carry state, and it's not rare to see
someone with a sidearm. No Nazi flag-waving or take-downs of
little old ladies with "Hope" t-shirts meant no opportunity to
accuse critics of being right-wing lunatics.
If health care reform is to pass Congress, Obama must do more
than simply smile broadly and reassure us all that his intentions
are pure. It's the details that are killing the plan. And to date
the president has not convincingly demonstrated that his
intentions will translate into his hoped-for results and not the
nightmare critics envision.
topics:
Health Care, Obamacare