Posted on 01/03/2010 8:55:36 PM PST by Delacon
Writing for Forbes, Bruce Bartlett puts forth an interesting hypothesis that healthcare legislation could have been made better (hopefully he meant to write less destructive) if the GOP had been willing to compromise with Democrats:
Democrats desperately wanted a bipartisan bill and would have given a lot to get a few Republicans on board. This undoubtedly would have led to enactment of a better health bill than the one we are likely to get. But Republicans never put forward an alternative health proposal. Instead, they took the position that our current health system is perfect just as it is.
Bruce makes several compelling points in the article, especially when he notes that it will be virtually impossible to repeal a bad bill after 2010 or 2012, but there are good reasons to disagree with his analysis. First, he is wrong in stating that Republicans were united against any compromise. Several GOP senators spent months trying to negotiate something less objectionable, but those discussions were futile. Also, Im not sure its correct to assert Republicans took a the current system is perfect position. They may not have offered a full alternative (they did have a few good reforms such as allowing the purchase of insurance across state lines), but their main message was that the Democrats were going to make the current system worse. Strikes me as a perfectly reasonable position, one that I imagine Bruce shares.
Lets explore Bruces core hypothesis: Would compromise have generated a better bill? Its possible, to be sure, but there are also several reasons why that approach may have backfired:
1. Its not clear a policy of compromise would have produced a less-objectionable bill. Would Senate Democrats have made more concessions to Grassley and Snowe rather than Lieberman and Nelson (much less whether the concessions would have been good policy)? And even if Reid made some significant (and positive) concessions, is there any reason to think those reforms would have survived a conference committee with the House? Yet the compromising Republicans probably would have felt invested in the process and obliged to support the final bill even if the conference committee produced something worse than the original Senate Democrat proposal.
2. A take-no-prisoners strategy may be high risk, but it can produce high rewards. In the early 1990s, the Republicans took a no-compromise position when fighting Bill Clintons health plan (aka, Hillarycare), and that strategy was ultimately successful. We still dont know the final result of this battle (much less how events would have transpired with a different strategy), but if the long-term goal is to minimize government expansion, a no-compromise approach is perfectly reasonable.
3. A principled opposition to government-run healthcare will help win other fights. The Democrats ultimately may win the healthcare battle, but the leadership will have been forced to spend lots of time and energy, and also use up lots of political chits. Does anyone now think they can pass a climate change bill? The answer, almost certainly, is no.
4. A principled approach can be good politics, which can eventually lead to good policy. Democrats wanted a few Republicans on board in part to help give them political cover. The aura of bipartisanship would have given Democrats a good talking point for the 2010 elections (My opponent is being unreasonable since even X Republicans also supported the legislation). That fig leaf does not exist now, which makes it more likely that Democrats will pay a heavy price during the midterm elections. It is impossible to know whether 2010 will be a 1994-style rout or whether the newly-elected Republicans will quickly morph into Bush-style big-government conservatives (who often do more damage to liberty than Democrats), but at least there is a reasonable likelihood of more pro-liberty lawmakers.
When all is said and done, Bruces strategy is not necessarily wrong, but it does guarantee defeat. Government gets bigger and freedom diminishes. For reasons of principle and practicality, Republicans should do the right thing.
I don’t need to read anything but the title.
Here’s the proper question....should the democrats have compromised in order to try to win over a few of the republicans?
Why doesn’t the question get asked like that?
HELL NO!!!!!!
I'm disappointed in the CATO Institute for lending ANY credibility to something we all should spurn with constant conservative certitude!!!
This constant incremental capitulation to evil in the pursuit of expediency is how we've regressed from the priceless principles of our ansestors and founders!!!
If we keep this crappola up, we'll NEVER get our country back from the clutches of hazardous moral STAGnation!!!
The bills they ended up with represented the least each house would accept. There would have been no way to compromise any more from them and all it would have done would have been to give them the cover of ‘bipartisanship’.
The Republicans played it exactly correct. Nothing they could have gotten for the cover their participation would provided would have been worth it.
No because this bill, ugly and bloated as it is, is still only a Trojan Horse for the US version of the NHS. Even principled objectors to Obamacare tend to forget that.
The answer should be “NO!” Because the Republicans - in contrast to the incurably immature Dimocrat/Liberals - are mature enough to say “NO!” There should be absolutely no “health care” bill at the Federal level. Should be left to the states.
You are letting Pubs off too easy. The fact is that many Pubs bought into the “gov’t is the best solution” idea. It started with Bush, was forwarded by McCain, and seriously, is being excepted by the GOP.
Free Dominion
Unadulterated BS. The Reps offered several bills including H.R.3400 - Empowering Patients First Act and the Tom Coburn/Paul Ryan bill.
Hey, CATO agrees that Republicans shouldn't compromise. That was the message of the article.
How Rino.
Are these people complete flaming, farking idiots?!
When will they get it?!
If that bill contains one single word, it will grow back to 2,000 pages.
Screw this bill. Fix what's already in place.
Stop the fraud.
Tort reform
Allow insurance shopping across state lines.
Medical savings accounts
Allow medical tax deductions for all medical expenses. Get rid of the 10% formula crap.
This is not rocket science, and could have been in place in less than a week.
Look at Reply #49, immediately prior to yours. It started right off with a blatant falsehood... C’mon!!!
It it wasnt so late, I could site HR and SR republican bills going back a decade.
Is Cato a Marxist organization?
NO!
Brevity is the soul of wit! At least Nancy Reagan was right about one thing... "JUST SAY NO!!!"
When the government is trying to take over pretty much everything, its time to become a libertarian. Not so much the message of the article but the message I was going for when I posted this and other articles.
Huh? The Cato guy was arguing against compromise.
Not like Shake was known for his brevity. Me, I am a Mencken fan. He fits on a tagline anyway.
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