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How Obama Can Win On Health Care (Guest Voice)

WASHINGTON — President Obama can still secure major health care legislation this year if he learns from his mistakes in recent months and spends more time reminding Americans why they were once eager for fundamental change.

His White House lost sight of the need to make a strong case that reform would deliver specific benefits to the insured as well as the uninsured. Absent a consistent set of arguments from reformers, advocates of the status quo filled the vacuum — often with outright lies.

The administration also sent mixed and confusing signals about its position on a public insurance option. This set off a liberal firestorm and increased the role that the public option played in the public debate — which, paradoxically, is exactly the opposite of what Obama’s lieutenants intended.

And his aides did not foresee just how fraught the situation would become in the Senate, where Max Baucus, the Democratic chairman of the Finance Committee, allowed Charles Grassley, the committee’s ranking Republican, to string negotiations along indefinitely without making any commitment to voting for a bill.

Senate leaders signaled Obama as early as June that they wanted him to intervene more actively to push Baucus along. The administration held back, hoping it could postpone its most forceful involvement until after both the Senate and the House had passed bills. But Baucus’ failure to produce a proposal before the summer recess added to the sense of legislative chaos and bred uncertainty as to what reformers are seeking.

Despite health care’s summer of discontent, supporters of change are in better shape than the accounts of recent weeks would suggest. The House is poised to pass a bill in early fall that would achieve most of Obama’s major goals. And Obama is a full year ahead of the schedule on which the Clinton administration found itself in the 1990s.

The health battle did not reach its legislative climax until the autumn of Clinton’s second year in office. Obama, by contrast, has forced a showdown with plenty of time left before the midterm elections, giving him more maneuvering room.

But backers of reform say that if Obama is to prevail, he will have to be much clearer about what he is fighting for.

Democratic strategists as well as members of Congress argue that for middle-of-the-road voters, the issues that matter are the high cost of insurance, their fears of losing coverage if they have pre-existing conditions, and the fact that policies often fail to cover necessary procedures and sometimes cut off benefits.

“They pay their premiums, they pay their co-pays, and then a doctor tells them they need a test and they discover their insurance company won’t pay for it,” said Anna Greenberg, a Democratic pollster. “That’s the kind of thing that people are upset about.”

John Marttila, another top Democratic adviser, argued in a memo to party leaders that “medical bankruptcies evoke profound empathy, fear and moral outrage” and that reformers should highlight as a central goal “that no American family should be bankrupted by catastrophic health care bills.”

In the meantime, by failing to make a strong and comprehensible case for the public insurance option, the administration has left many confused about exactly what it is.

Sen. Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., argues that the administration should use a simple analogy to drive home the idea that government has the capacity to expand the choices people have. “In my state and every state, we have excellent private universities and excellent public universities,” he said. “People have a choice.”

Marttila broadly agrees with Schumer’s analysis, but he adds that it is a mistake for reformers to lay too much emphasis on the public option. Doing so, he says, leads many to believe that it is the entirety of health reform rather than “only one element” and distracts attention from the most popular ideas Obama is pushing.

In the end, the administration would sacrifice the public option if that were necessary to win major expansions in heath coverage and tough new rules on insurance companies. But the public option’s most passionate supporters will not accept such a deal unless the administration first fights hard to get it enacted.

The road to compromise is not paved by offering premature concessions and vagueness. Having held back, the administration now needs to lay out clear and understandable goals, so it can bargain from a position of strength.

Dare one say it? That was Ted Kennedy’s way.


This column is copyrighted and licensed to run on TMV in full. (c) 2009, Washington Post Writers Group.

  • Silhouette
    Here we go again, Medmob's sugarcoated pill...lol...

    No compromise. No compromise. No compromise. Obama should play the tape of his inaugeration for a pep talk over and over and over. We elected him for radical change on health issues. We want socialized medicine. There I said it. We've got the military, roads, police, fire and farm subsidies. The keystone in that arch is public health care for those who want that option.
  • akorozco
    Obama's going to have a hard time getting reform through without a powerful leader in the Senate like Ted Kennedy - this video shows that the media believe Chris Dodd may be the one to take up that mantle (http://www.newsy.com/videos/chris_dodd_heir_app...)
  • It is indeed time for Obama to stop trying to work with those who are not interested in compromise in the first place. The actions of Grassley in delaying negotiations should have been a clear sign that compromise was not in the air. As to the mention of personal bankruptcies from medical bills as a tactic in advancing support, it may help, but I am concerned that it would be turned around by the opposition and presented as increased taxes leading to financial hardship for everyone.
  • DLS
    The desperation continues. The only question is if the Pro side's dishonesty as well as derangement will continue, and to what it extent it may actually get worse rather than less bad than it has been.

    I heard on NPR this morning (which may have included Dionne) a few such desperate people removed still from reality (and from the mainstream, beyond critical mass already in its wiser opposition to, and offense about the latest lunacy as well as this year's previous, "progressive" pattern).

    For example, they dishonestly claimed a false "middle ground" for the "public option" in a dishonestly portrayed context (involving their childish and excessive demands), that purport the public option to be a (generous, remarkably concessionary, and other false descriptions that embellish the dishonesty) compromise between whatever else may happen in lieu of lib Dem legislation and "single-payer" [sic; prompt 100% federal takeover of health care, which typically is seen as the Medicare model encompassing everybody]. "We've compromised enough already with the public option [sic] ..."

    They were (as is typical currently) incoherent, not even agreeing on what the other side of this false pair of opposing positions constitutes. (Given it's obvious they should have been able to describe their false depiction, it's incompetent as well.)

    The obvious truth, in addition to the Blue Dogs and GOP being more than willing to seek reform, is that reform in no way requires, nor has ever required, the public option, the truth that these people are flirting with mental illness in their motivation as well as in their disreputable behavior, to evade or to conceal deliberately (which makes their dishonesty about the positions the two sides hold and the context, unsurprising).

    The Pro side is still desperate -- and dishonest, when not deranged (and already disgusting).
  • HemmD
    DLS
    "the truth that these people are flirting with mental illness in their motivation as well as in their disreputable behavior"

    I know at least one person flirting with mental illness here. I know it goes against razor sharp insight, but the public option is required to break the monopolistic stranglehold that private health insurance companies have upon this "market."

    They have no reason to reduce costs because as the total bill goes up, their profits similarly rise. You may pontificate as much as you wish, but the economic fact remains that a public option that constrains the unfettered rise in costs is the only solution currently available.

    If you have the secret method to reduce costs and enhance coverage to all
    Americans, by all means proceed.
  • I think, as Josh Marshall has suggested, the simplest way to present the public option is to simply say, "under this plan, you can buy into Medicare before age 65. Or not." At any time your private insurance does not work for you, you can BUY into Medicare, at any age. Don't like your Medicare? Just like now, you can drop it and buy private insurance if you can get it and afford it.

    DLS, your repeated insults of everyone who disagrees with you are so tiresome. You never learned to have a fact-based discussion, did you?
  • DLS
    "I know it goes against razor sharp insight, but the public option is required to break the monopolistic stranglehold that private health insurance companies have upon this 'market.'"

    The public option or any other incremental (or complete) federal takeover is not needed to reform the ills (which are not due to "monopoly") currently found in "insurance"-based health care. Numerous reforms have been listed by me on a number of occasions, for example, and this fact is obvious to others, too.


    "so tiresome"

    Actually, I'm tired of the poor conduct and pathologies on the Pro- side that have happened here (which leads to resentment when some of us, with facts behind us, push back) as well as elsewhere. It's not my fault if others have missed the facts because they are prejudicial and insist on their "conclusions," no matter what the reality is. As it is, I've already calmed town from earlier frustrations -- it's impractical to persist in remedial (and deservedly harsh) efforts upon those who insist on being irremediable. [shrug] I can only guess (and roll my eyes) on what the reaction will be if the public option, which obviously and deservedly is endangered, is discarded in lieu of "mere" actual reform of some kind.
  • By actual reform, you mean protecting the profit of insurers while enacting mandatory insurance through them? Thanks, but as I've pointed out, that model costs around 35% more. We're a bit cash strapped right now, so cutting insurance moguls in on the deal hardly seems like the most cost-effective option.
  • HemmD
    DLS

    I'm sorry to hear you're tired and resentful; it must really be difficult to take the time and spout your TRUTH.

    So, one more time, profits of the top ten privates have gone up over 400% and the cost of insurance has risen almost as sharply. Meanwhile, the number of insured has gone down. If the public option will not be effective, why are you afraid it will destroy private insurance companies. If it is useless like the right is s fond of saying, why are you so opposed?

    The right's position is classic double speak. It's ineffective and yet devastating. Your logic fails here.
  • It's hard to disagree with his assessment of the health care situation. Obama has probably done enough at this point to drop the whole pretense of bipartisanship and just try to get as much as he can on health care with Democrats. If they go completely with Democratic support, it is hard to imagine them not getting something done, but it will probably not include the public option.

    He probably knows he has to get something done and that in the annals of history, the public option will probably be forgotten. The original Social Security program but much weaker when it was passed than it is today, but who remembers or cares? These programs always grow over time, which is probably why no virtually no Republicans will vote for it.
  • DLS
    I've listed reforms numerous times, as well as alternatives superior to what the Dems are trying to do now, as well having correctly identified the goal and purpose associated with the public optio Logic on the Pro side isas absent as honestly; how ironic that false accusations about the Antis as part of the mischaracterization of things (and possible additional examples of desperation).

    God only knows how y'all are going to react if the Dems grow up and slow down, much less if they [gasp] concede to reality (and propriety) and compromise, even muzzle the out-of-control lib Dems.
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