President Barack Obama has been busy attempting to sell his
government takeover of the health care citizen. In doing
so, he contines to be, shall we say, a bit lax with the facts.
Philip Klein has pointed to the president's, er,
"mistakes." Other publications are picking up the
trail.
Reports
Newsweek:
President Obama tried to sell his health care overhaul in prime
time, mangling some facts in the process. He also strained to
make the job sound easier to pay for than experts predict.
- Obama promised once again that a health care overhaul "will
be paid for." But congressional budget experts say the bills
they've seen so far would add hundreds of billions of dollars
to the deficit over the next decade.
- He said the plan "that I put forward" would cover at least
97 percent of all Americans. Actually, the plan he campaigned
on would cover far less than that, and only one of the bills
now being considered in Congress would do that.
- He said the "average American family is paying thousands"
as part of their premiums to cover uncompensated care for the
uninsured, implying that expanded coverage will slash insurance
costs. But the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation puts the
cost per family figure at $200.
- Obama claimed his budget "reduced federal spending over the
next 10 years by $2.2 trillion" compared with where it was
headed before. Not true. Even figures from his own budget
experts don't support that. The Congressional Budget Office
projects a $2.7 trillion increase, not a $2.2 trillion cut.
- The president said that the United States spends $6,000
more on average than other countries on health care. Actually,
U.S. per capita spending is about $2,500 more than the next
highest-spending country. Obama's figure was a White
House-calculated per-family estimate.
Oops!
About the Author
Doug Bandow is a Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute and the Senior Fellow in International Religious Persecution at the Institute on Religion and Public Policy. A former Special Assistant to President Ronald Reagan, he is author of Beyond Good Intentions: A Biblical View of Politics (Crossway).