By Alan Caruba
Congress
is going on vacation in August and the President will be taking another one in
Martha’s Vineyard where the very rich and the extremely rich pass a summer’s
day. When both return they will have until September 30 to pass a continuing
resolution; the way the government has been funded for many years.
On the
table will be the need to raise the debt ceiling to allow the U.S. to borrow
enough money to pay off the largest debt in U.S. history. In his first term,
Obama borrowed more than all preceding Presidents combined. His “stimulus”
package didn’t work and neither has anything else that might pass for an
economic policy. The nation has been stuck in a rut of very low, inadequate
growth for five years during which Obama spent the first four blaming George W.
Bush and the last year blaming the Republicans.
Looming
ahead to further exacerbate the nation’s economic decline is the implementation
of Obamacare. Nobody seems to like it much. Major unions have written Obama,
telling him to “fix” it and hardly a day goes by that we don’t learn some new
horrid thing about it. Nearly half the states refused to set up the insurance
exchanges it requires. By nearly everyone’s assessment, it is unworkable.
How bad is
Obamacare? As far back as 2009 the Democrats in Congress tried to get
themselves and their staffs exempted from it.
There is a
debate raging among Republicans over whether to defund Obamacare as a way of
avoiding its full implementation and driving a stake through its heart until it
can be repealed. The White House is, as usual, lying to the public, saying this
would “shut down” the government. It would not. The only services that would be
affected would be those deemed “non-essential.”
Rep. John
Boehner, the Speaker of the House, has maintained that repeal of Obamacare is
the only solution. It is not the only
answer. Defunding its implementation has been an option since it was signed
into law. Boehner (R-OH) has been sharply criticized for not putting this
option before the House. Now there’s a momentum growing in both the House and
Senate to defund Obamacare.
“Republicans
in the Senate and Republicans in the House need to stand on this issue, need to
refuse to budge,” says Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah), “because we will be complicit in
Obamacare…if we provide funding for the administration to do that.” Defunding
would be a victory for the Tea Party movement that was instrumental in electing
Senators Ted Cruz (R-Cruz), Marco Rubio (R-FL), and others.
Leading
the effort to defund Obamacare, the Heritage Foundation reports that it is
closing in on securing enough co-sponsors of the Defunding Obamacare Act of
2013 to achieve “critical mass in the House”, but notes that “the Washington
Establishment is more interested in striking a deal with President Obama on
immigration, taxes, and spending than fighting to defund Obamacare.”
The House,
which has passed any number of bills to repeal Obamacare at this point,
controls the “purse strings” because all laws involving spending can only be
initiated there. The bills, however, never go farther than the House.
Obama
knows that the last thing Republicans on Capitol Hill want is to be blamed for causing
the government to “shut down.” Political pundits recall that when it happened
in 1995 everyone blamed then-Speaker Newt Gingrich and the GOP, but what they
don’t remember is that, in 1996, the party picked up seats in the Senate and
continued its control of the House. That could be a 2014 scenario, but these
are different times with different players involved.
The problem
the Republican Party has, in addition to a whole bunch of very squishy members in
Congress, is a media that will defend Obama and Obamacare by framing the
situation as one of intransigence and a blind desire to punish the President
who bested them in 2012 by getting reelected.
The bigger
problem, however, is Obamacare.
In my opinion,
the Republicans in the House will likely not vote to defund it because they are
looking ahead to the 2014 midterm elections. It is easier to fuss about the
debt ceiling, get a few spending cuts, and use Obamacare as an issue to secure
political control of Congress next year. Only then would the GOP be in a
position to repeal Obamacare. To politicians on Capitol Hill, it is a less
scary scenario. I would never bet on the courage of politicians.
One possible
outcome for Obamacare would be something comparable to the fate of Prohibition,
the national ban on the sale, production, and transportation of alcohol that
was the law of the land from 1920 to 1933. It was enacted by the 18th
Amendment and repealed by the 21st due to its unpopularity. It too
was unworkable.
The only
thing we know for sure about Obamacare is that it will ruin the best healthcare
system in the world and it will end up killing people.
© Alan
Caruba, 2013