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Ed Kilgore, New York Magazine
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If Obamacare Bombs, States Must Share the Blame
By Ed Kilgore
Now that there are renewed doubts
about the workability of the private-insurance exchanges set up under
the Affordable Care Act, the president must again take the blame if
things don’t work out as intended, right?
Well, at most, that is half-right or maybe one-third right. The U.S. Supreme Court bears some responsibility for thwarting the original design
of the ACA by insisting on a state opt-in for the Medicaid expansion
that was so integral to the overall effort. And that enhanced the
residual power of the states — many under hostile management — to
frustrate the implementation of Obamacare by active or passive
resistance.
It is not a coincidence that nearly all
the states suffering from a lack of competition of private plans under
Obamacare are states that did not bother to create their own exchanges
or undertake the kind of public-education measures that might have
encouraged broader enrollment and that have made the ACA successful in
places like California.
And as Paul Krugman points out,
many of the states fighting Obamacare implementation are the very
states that made a federal solution necessary by using their power under
the preexisting Medicaid program to shirk health-care access for poor
people with serious health problems.
The
much-quoted characterization of the states by Louis Brandeis as the
“laboratories of democracy” is almost invariably used by those promoting
the utility of greater freedom for sub-federal jurisdictions in
domestic governance, even if the federal government is footing the
bills. But it’s the nature of true laboratories to sponsor failed as
well as successful experiments. Letting the states — and yes,
particularly the states of the former Confederacy — call the shots on
indigent health care has been an ongoing disaster. Blaming the latest
stage of that disaster on Barack Obama — who sought to mitigate the risk
via a mandatory Medicaid expansion and a public option for insurance
purchases — is a bad joke.
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