By W. James Antle, III on 3.17.10 @ 6:09AM
Massachusetts Treasurer Tim Cahill blows the whistle on President
Obama's health care plan -- and Mitt Romney's.
On Sunday, White House political adviser David Axelrod appeared
on ABC's "This Week" and tried to brush aside the message sent by
Sen. Scott Brown's (R-Mass.) improbable election. "Senator Brown
comes from a state that has a health care plan that's similar to
the one we're trying to enact here," Axelrod said. "We're just
trying to give the rest of America the same opportunities that
the people of Massachusetts have."
Appearing after Axelrod, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) could
barely contain himself. "The American people are getting tired of
this crap," Graham spluttered. "No way in the world is what they
did in Massachusetts like what we're about to do in Washington."
Actually, says Massachusetts Treasurer Tim Cahill, the two health
care bills are very much alike -- and that's exactly the problem.
Both health care plans rely on the individual mandate, subsidies,
and exchanges intended to match buyers with health insurance
plans. "If President Obama and the Democrats repeat the mistake
of the health insurance reform adopted here in Massachusetts on a
national level, they will threaten to wipe out the American
economy within four years," Cahill said, launching an all-out
offensive against Romneycare in Massachusetts and its cousin
Obamacare nationwide.
Medicaid costs have continued to explode, rising from $7.5
billion to an estimated $9.2 billion since the Massachusetts
health care law has taken effect. More people now have coverage,
but of the 407,000 newly insured only 32 percent paid for their
insurance entirely on their own. The remaining 68 percent were
either partially or wholly subsidized by the taxpayers. Only 5
percent of newly insured Massachusetts residents who are not
receiving any taxpayer benefits obtained their coverage through
the state's "Connector" health care exchange.
What's more, according to figures obtained from Cahill's office,
only 23 percent of those enrolled in the state-managed health
insurance programs pay anything toward their coverage. About
99,000 newly insured Massachusetts residents now receive free
coverage through Medicaid. Another 87,000 receive 100 percent
taxpayer subsidies through the Connector's "Commonwealth Care"
program. And another 26,000 are legal immigrants ineligible for
federal subsidies who benefit under the Commonwealth Care Bridge
program.
Not only has health care reform cost the state an additional $4.2
billion, but small businesses and consumers are getting walloped.
Health care costs continue to skyrocket. Insurance premiums have
jumped 12 percent over a two-year period. So much for bending the
cost curve.
In a conference call yesterday, Cahill blamed both conceptual
flaws in the bill and Gov. Deval Patrick's implementation. "We
haven't changed the way we deliver health care. We haven't
changed the way we pay for health care," he said. "Nothing's
changed about the cost structure but we've blown a huge hole in
the budget to increase coverage by 400,000." Just more people are
being moved into a broken system, largely at taxpayer expense.
Cahill argued that the consequences of repeating this at the
national level will be even worse. First, Massachusetts already
had a high percentage of its population covered. The 2006 Bay
State health care reform only insured another 4 percent. In many
states, the percentage of uninsured is far higher. Second, as
even critics of Cahill's analysis of Romneycare acknowledge,
Massachusetts has benefited from both subsidies and regulatory
concessions from the federal government.
"Who, exactly, is going to bail out the federal government if
this plan goes national?" asked Cahill. He implored "the federal
government, Democrats, and Obama" not to "make the same mistake
we made in 2006." "There is a reason people in Washington want
this pass to quickly," Cahill continued. "We're going to be
paying a lot more money."
Reporters asked Cahill for some of the benefits. Did
near-universal coverage in Massachusetts bring about a drop in
the reliance on emergency room care? No, the state treasurer
replied. What about cost benefits from preventive care? Not that
Cahill was aware of.
Could it have been better implemented by, say, Mitt Romney rather
than Deval Patrick? "I could probably agree with that partially,"
Cahill allowed. "I certainly have some concerns about how
Governor Patrick has implemented it." But Cahill called the bill
"fatally flawed from the beginning."
The treasurer noted that the theory was by increasing access, it
would bring down health care costs. Instead Massachusetts has
seen costs increase almost across the board. Those costs, he
said, "are being passed on to businesses and consumers in the
form of premium increases."
Cahill's timing has as much to do with Massachusetts politics as
the looming national health care debacle. Elected state treasurer
as a Democrat, Cahill bolted the party last July and is running
for governor as an independent -- a designation shared by 51
percent of the commonwealth's registered voters. This stance
allows him to outflank the Republican candidates, tap into the
sentiment that propelled Scott Brown to the Senate, criticize the
Democratic incumbent, and distance himself from his former party.
But by forthrightly attacking an approach to health care reform
that has been embraced by Republican darlings, Cahill may be
doing conservatives -- and the country -- a service. "The
insurance companies were at the table, the hospitals were at the
table, the large providers were at the table," he said during
yesterday's call. "The taxpayers and small businesses weren't at
the table. It appears to be repeating itself at the national
level."
Massachusetts nearly derailed the federal health care juggernaut
once before. It remains to be seen whether Cahill can get that to
repeat itself at the national level too.
topics:
Health Care, Barack Obama, Deval Patrick, Mitt Romney, Tim Cahill