I'd been meaning to take issue with Matthew Cooper for
saying it is "total revisionism" to blame the Clintons'
hardball tactics for sinking their own health care reform bill.
Ramesh Ponnuru has already
said what there is to say, including Cooper's snide aside
about Republican opposition to the public option.
Cooper: "And now that the outlines of a real plan are on the
table we see the wolves gathering, first in opposition to the
very seensible idea of a public plan-because Karl Rove and Newt
Gingrich HATED their health insurance when they were in
government-and then surely later to the whole cost of the
package." Ponnuru: "The federal employee health benefits plan
provides employees with a lot of options, but none of them is
government-run."
The only thing I'd add is that one need not be "naive about the
way Washington works" to understand that Democrats who had been
serving on Capitol Hill for decades had no desire to be dictated
to from a president who had just arrived from Little Rock. The
Clintons' mistakes were far from the only thing that doomed their
health plan, but those Democratic committee chairmen might have
been able to craft a bill less vulnerable to interest group
opposition than Hillarycare.