Author: Marc Ambinder

  • Finally, ObamaCare Arrives

    For a year, critics of the Democratic health care plans have been applying the label “ObamaCare” to whatever the current draft was. That was inaccurate — because, as Democrats were eager to say, it was never quite clear to them what President Obama actually wanted out of a health care bill.  Today, the questions end. The President has unveiled his own comprehensive health care bill. It borrows heavily from the Senate’s bill, adds some White House ideas, throws in some Republican-sponsored amendments, and pronounces itself ready for inspection.
    The topline highlights:

    — Proposes to cover 31 million Americans
    who
    don’t have health insurance;

    — Creates a new federal facility to
    help
    states crack down on insurance industry abuses and unfair rate
    increases;

    — Includes significantly ramped up efforts to crack
    down on
    waste and fraud within the Medicare/Medicaid systems — this is a nod
    to Republicans (Peter Roskam and Mark Kirk are behind proposals to do
    just this);

    — Adds a Medicare tax of 2.9% on unearned income —
    hitting the wealthy; it immediately closes the Medicare Part D doughnut hole gap —
    something seniors should notice before the November 2010 elections if
    this gets through Congress;

    — Increases tax credits to families
    to
    help them buy insurance; it spends $11 billion on community health care
    centers;

    — Endorses but adds consumer protections to the Senate’s
    proposal to grandfather in insurance plans that people want to keep; it
    adopts the Senate proposal to require that Americans who don’t buy
    insurance pay a flat fee — but lowers the fee;

    — Provides $40
    billion to small businesses to help them defray the costs of providing
    health benefits if taxpayers pay for the coverage; the president delays
    by five years the Senate’s excise tax on so-called Cadillac insurance
    plans;

    — Increases fees for brand name (as opposed to generic)
    drugs,
    depriving the pharmaceutical industry of an extra source of profits;


    Eliminates the Nebraska exemption for Medicare payments and adopts a
    universal, phased-in approach to help states pay for the increased
    costs of expanding the Medicare program. 100% of the increased costs
    would be paid for three years; the bill turns the fee on medical
    equipment providers in the Senate bill into an excise tax and delays
    its implementation; it also delays by three years the tax on insurance
    companies; 

    — Finally, the bill gives the executive branch $1
    billion to
    help efficiently implement the plan.

    The political highlights:
    there’s plenty in this bill for Democrats to like. But there’s no public
    option. It’ll be easier to get unions on board because the excise tax
    will be delayed and watered down a bit; the bill delays implementation
    of several provisions, which will annoy Democrats; it spends quite a bit
    of time focusing on trying to rid Medicare of waste, fraud and abuse.
    There’s no nod to tort reform, so far as I can see.

    So — this
    is just a bill. How does it become a reality?  It relies on the idea
    that Democrats now really want to get something done. There is no public
    option or a national exchange; the bill is still expensive and fairly
    complicated; there are some carrots for those concerned about the
    expensive of the House bill. It’s hard to see how any Republicans will
    support the bill, although the White House is framing it in a way so as
    to force Republicans to defend their opposition to it during Thursday’s
    Blair House health care summit.  Since the first House vote, Democrats
    are down at least three votes.

    The way forward: either
    rank-and-file Democrats accept this bill — Obama’s bill — or they
    don’t.  Republicans could suddenly discover an upside in supporting it,
    which is doubtful, but if they could also reduce the number of
    procedural delays to help the Democrats speed its passage. If not, we
    might be faced with the spectacle of Republicans trying to drag the
    votes out through the midterms. This could benefit either party; it
    depends on whether Americans view this bill, which is basically a
    product of the bills they don’t like, as something new. The reason why
    they might do this is because they never really opposed the provisions
    in the bills or the goals of the bills; it was the process that
    alienated them so profoundly, making health care in 2009 unlovable. 

    Another
    arrow in the White House quiver is the decision by insurers — Anthem
    in California being the best example — that decided to raise rates
    precisely at this moment, allowing the White House to trump them with
    its new insurance rate increase mitigation authority, a populist
    proposal that
    may — or may not work
    , but which would be hard to oppose
    politically, particularly if it’s seen as the centerpiece of the plan.
    That’s why the White House, which governs through the New York Times,
    provided the Times with that aspect of the plan.



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  • The iPad? There’s A Party For That

    Today is a day for salesmanship of Big Things — the president’s commitment to his governing agenda in the State of the Union and the introduction of the highly anticipated — and anti-anticipated — Apple tablet device, named, surely to please Trekkers, the iPad. Now, the iPad is going to sell. Customers would snap it up even if they didn’t know what it did, because of Apple’s brand strength.

    Republicans and Democrats…let’s just say that their storehouses are full of excess inventory. (Democrats have a bigger store, and are losing more customers at the moment.) Perhaps the parties can borrow some lessons from the iPad marketing. Indeed, let’s extend the analogy: which party best represents the iPad? Which party can best adapt the Apple philosophy to their brands?

    The Democrats might suggest that the iPad, like government, is a platform that allows the user — or people — experience a rich connection with civil society. Apple products in general have proven to be fertile soil for entrepreneurs — the creators of apps, in this vision, but there is a set of rules in place. And while Google’s app platform is more open, by setting standards, Apple ensures that each app won’t mess up its programming. Apps represent variety; the series of Apple products points to a vision of a mildly technocratic society where everyone can use the same toolset to pursue their own ends. But everyone starts from an equal position and possesses the resources — the social technology — to live a productive life. Also, the iPad’s real play is not for media but for education; an iPad in every classroom (or an equivalent device) could be a standard line on the stump. Global connectivity, high standards, green energy — less book production! — these are the buzz words.
    The Republican vision is a bit different. Think of an iPhone app as would-be entrepreneur who opens a corner shop and relies on his or her own devices — and the power of the market — to earn a profit and grow. As @thetonylee puts it, Republicans could use the iPad or the iPhone  as a symbol for a new Republican governing philosophy based on flexibility, portability (think of health savings accounts and insurance portability) and customizability. Or, Republicans could demagogue: with liberals raising taxes, innovations like the i{Pad would never make it to market. And the liberal approach: it’s like stale old IBM. (Liberals might retort that IBM has retooled itself and now sells solutions, rather than products.)

    Republicans, suggests Mr. Lee, might even use the iPad directly to introduce an iContract with America. In 1994, the GOP had a plan, on paper; in 2010, if their leadership gets their act together, they can reimagine the entire concept of a political platform.

    More prosaically, since the Supreme Court opened the floodgates for even more political ads in 2010 and 2012, perhaps the iPad will be our only respite from the onslaught.

    The Democrats might suggest that the iPad, like government, is a
    platform that allows the user — or people — experience a rich
    connection with civil society. Apple products in general have proven to
    be fertile soil for entrepreneurs — the creators of apps, in this
    vision, but there is a set of rules in place. And while Google’s app
    platform is more open, by setting standards, Apple ensures that each
    app won’t mess up its programming. Apps represent variety; the series
    of Apple products points to a vision of a mildly technocratic society
    where everyone can use the same toolset to pursue their own ends. But
    everyone starts from an equal position and possesses the resources —
    the social technology — to live a productive life. Also, the iPad’s
    real play is not for media but for education; an iPad in every
    classroom (or an equivalent device) could be a standard line on the
    stump. Global connectivity, high standards, green energy — less book
    production! — these are the buzz words.
    The
    Republican vision is a bit different. Think of an iPhone app as
    would-be entrepreneur who opens a corner shop and relies on his or her
    own devices — and the power of the market — to earn a profit and
    grow. As @thetonylee puts
    it, Republicans could use the iPad or the iPhone as a symbol for a new
    Republican governing philosophy based on flexibility, portability
    (think of health savings accounts and insurance portability) and
    customizability. Or, Republicans could demagogue: with liberals raising
    taxes, innovations like the i{Pad would never make it to market. And
    the liberal approach: it’s like stale old IBM. (Liberals might retort
    that IBM has retooled itself and now sells solutions, rather than
    products.)

    Republicans, suggests Mr. Lee, might even use the
    iPad directly to introduce an iContract with America. In 1994, the GOP
    had a plan, on paper; in 2010, if their leadership gets their act
    together, they can reimagine the entire concept of a political platform.

    More
    prosaically, since the Supreme Court opened the floodgates for even
    more political ads in 2010 and 2012, perhaps the iPad will be our only
    respite from the onslaught.





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