Karl Rove, the former senior adviser and deputy chief of staff to President George W. Bush, writes in his weekly column in The Wall Street Journal that President Obama is now using fear to sell his health care plan.
On the campaign trail last year, Barack Obama promised to end the politics of fear and cynicism, but now he is now trying to sell his health-care proposals on fear.
At his news conference the week of July 20, Mr. Obama said "Reform is about every American who has ever feared that they may lose their coverage, or lose their job...If we do not reform health care, your premiums and out-of-pocket costs will continue to skyrocket. If we do not act, 14,000 Americans will continue to lose their health insurance every single day. These are the consequences of inaction."
Responding to a White House proposal to create an independent panel to recommend Medicare cuts, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) said on July 25, 2009, that the probability is high that no savings would be realized in the next decade, while entitlement spending would rise $1.042 trillion. The CBO did say there might be $2 billion in savings in the second decade of the program.
White House Budget Director Peter Orszag reponded to the CBO with a blog posting on the White House’s Web site saying that the point of the proposal was never to generate savings over the next decade. But yet, the White House rolled out the proposal hoping to give cover to Blue Dog Democrats in Congress complaining about the cost of overhauling health care.
Mr. Rove says that the House version of ObamaCare adds to the deficit even though the new taxes to pay for part of it begin two years before the program itself kicks in. That head start puts ObamaCare in the black through 2013, but net new spending after that overwhelms future revenue to add to the deficit each year.
Keith Hennessey, who was a National Economic Council director for George W. Bush, estimates the annual deficits in Mr. Obama’s plan will grow to $64 billion a year by 2019. This assumes that Mr. Obama gets all the tax increases and Medicare cuts he wants.
On July 26, 2009, the CBO reported it would "probably generate substantial increases in federal budget deficits during the decade beyond the current 10-year budget window." The CBO does not believe that Mr. Obama’s proposal bends health-care spending down, as the president has repeatedly claimed it would. The CBO says it escalates above today’s rate.
By 2029, Mr. Hennessey estimates that new taxes will bring in $143 billion a year, while net new health spending will have increased by $348 billion a year.
Mr. Rove says that nine out of 10 Americans would likely get worse health care if ObamaCare goes through. Of those who do not have insurance, approximately one-fifth are illegal aliens, nearly three-fifths make $50,000 or more a year and can afford insurance, and just under a third are probably eligible for Medicaid or other government programs already.
Mr. Rove says that for the slice of the uninsured that is left, about 2% of all American citizens, Team Obama would dismantle the world’s greatest health-care system. That’s a losing proposition, which is why Mr. Obama is increasingly resorting to fear and misleading claims. It’s all the candidate of hope has left.
According to a new Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll, support for President Barack Obama's health-care effort has declined over the past five weeks, particularly among those who already have insurance.
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