Posted on 03/25/2015 2:21:00 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Yes, Ted Cruz can buy insurance through Obamacare while remaining totally committed to repealing it. Just like his competitors for the 2016 presidential nomination.
Cruz said Tuesday that he and his family will sign up for health insurance through the exchanges created by Obamacare, prompting plenty of chest-beating from Democrats looking to paint Cruza staunch opponent of the health care lawas a hypocrite.
But Cruz isn't the only 2016 contender to turn to the exchanges. Sen. Rand Paul signed up when the marketplaces first opened. "It made me an unhappy person," he said at the time.
Sen. Marco Rubio also signed up for coverage through Obamacare's exchange. So did Rep. Paul Ryan. In fact, most members of Congressyes, including the Republicans who have vowed and voted so many times to repeal the Affordable Care Actuse the exchanges.
So, why are so many of Obamacare's critics covered through Obamacare? Some critics have called Cruz a hypocrite for "going on Obamacare" while continuing to beat the drum for repeal. But Cruz and other Republicans aren't secretly starting to like Obamacarethey've simply backed themselves into a corner where the exchanges are the most rational choice.
"Senator Rubio is following the law, even though he opposes it," a spokeswoman told the Tampa Bay Times when he first signed up.
First of all, let's be clear that Cruz is not "on Obamacare." There is no such thing as being "on Obamacare." It's not an insurance plan, or a single program like Medicare or Social Security. Cruz, Rubio, Ryan, Paul and the 11.7 million other Americans who have used the exchanges are all on private insurance plans, and there are hundreds of them to choose from.
But that's about where the similarities end. Cruzand Rubio and Ryan and all the rest of lawmakers in the exchangesaren't really using Obamacare for any of the reasons it exists, or in the same way the other 11-odd million enrollees are.
Most Americans, about 60 percent, get insurance through their jobs. The exchanges are there for people who don't, and therefore have to buy it on their own.
The Cruz family was among the 60 percent of people who get insurance through work. They used to be on the plan offered by Heidi Cruz's company, Goldman Sachs. But she's taking an unpaid leave for the presidential campaign, so they're switching to the coverage offered by Ted Cruz's employerthe federal government.
And if members of Congress want to get health insurance from their employer, the Obamacare exchange in Washington, D.C. is the first place to go.
Members of Congress used to get their health insurance just like any other federal employee, but Obamacare changed that. An amendment from Republican Sen. Charles Grassley kicked lawmakers and their staffers out of the exchange for federal employees; instead, they would have to use an Obamacare exchange. The government can still cover a portion of their premiums, just as almost all large employers do for their employees.
If he really wants to make a point, Cruz can go outside the exchange. But he probably would be purchasing roughly the same coverage maybe even the exact same policy, just with a more cumbersome shopping process.
The biggest reason for lawmakers to use the exchanges, though, is so the government will be able to make its contribution to their premiums. Cruz has said he will forego that subsidy, which would have covered more than 70 percent of his family's premiums.
The subsidy Cruz passed up but which other lawmakers are receiving is not from Obamacare. It's from his job, and it's very common. Americans who have employer-based insurance (remember that's about 60 percent of the country) get, on average, 70 to 80 percent of their premiums paid by their employers, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.
So, sure, Ted Cruz might go into the exchanges. With most members of Congress. And even if he had taken the government's contribution, that would have been a standard workplace benefit unconnected to the Affordable Care Act.
This whole process is an aberration. It's not an extension of how Obamacare works or what Obamacare does.
Congress shoehorned itself into the exchanges to make a political point ("what's good enough for our constituents is good enough for us"). The Obamacare safety net is not catching Ted Cruz, nor is he surreptitiously hoarding the particular benefits he wants to take away from other people. This is just the awkward process Congress decided on.
The exchanges are there for small businesses and people who don't get coverage through their jobs at all. It might not make a ton of sense that Congress tossed a small sliver of federal employees people who work for the largest employer in the country, and who have health benefits into a market for small businesses and the uninsured.
But it also doesn't make a ton of sense to argue that if Ted Cruz hates Obamacare so much, he has to prove it by renouncing standard, non-Obamacare health care benefits that most Americans receive. Which is why his Republican colleagues haven't done so, either.
You posted that to another thread as well. Did you read the article?
From the article:
Members of Congress used to get their health insurance just like any other federal employee,
but Obamacare changed that. An amendment from Republican Sen. Charles Grassley kicked
lawmakers and their staffers out of the exchange for federal employees; instead,
they would have to use an Obamacare exchange. The government can still cover a
portion of their premiums, just as almost all large employers do for their employees.
atta boy EEE
Mr. Cruz is really getting into liberals’ heads. That’s not hard to do, seeing as how must liberals are 50 IQ apes. I’m loving it.
He’s in their heads and way ahead of them...its really simple actually...for one just stop being on defense. Cruz IS the winning team...more and more are now seeing what alot of us have known about him. He’s strategic, he’s modern, but he’s got a great solid grounding in conservatism.
He is not forced to be in government system. He could have purchased a private plan outside of the exchange. They could have Cobra’ed his wife’s plan. There are a lot of ways he could have insurance without getting the government involved. With his money, he has a lot more options than the “Joe six-pack” American, and he is going with the government plan. How can this NOT be fodder for detractors?
Again, did you read the article?
I see that. I googled it
Seems they had to have their arms twisted.
Or smart enough to follow the law.
Yes. The article is rationalization, not information. The historic American Tea Party was a bunch of Americans who threw tea in the harbor, rather than participate in an unjust program. Cruz could have made headlines instead of punchlines.
Cobra only lasts 18 months. I’m certainly not going to attack the man for following the law. One lawless President is enough.
She’s on Bubba’s coattail plan no doubt.
I am not suggesting that he and his family should go without insurance. I’m just saying that he missed a perfect “Throw the Tea into the Harbor” moment. Now he’s one of 16 million in a governemtn program.
You may be right, although I am not completely convinced. We shall see in the coming days and months if there is a negative response by a significant number of potential voters.
Ted Cruz / Sarah Palin 2016
Ted Cruz / Scott Walker 2016
At this point, I think everyting Cruz does is going to draw fire. If he had done as you suggest, he would have been criticized for thinking he was exempt from the laws that apply to the rest of us. I think this is much ado about nothing.
I hope Cruz sues BamBam, Pelosi and Reid personally for poor health care and takes it to a class action suit.
I am not anti-Cruz and fear that I may be construed as such, so let me make myself clear. I don’t think he did anything wrong, as much as I think it was an opportunity to drill a point home. This could have been a Tea in the Harbor, burn your draft card, refuse to move to the back of the bus moment, and he let it pass.
You are right. He is obeying the law. We’ll have to see what he has up his sleeve. Heck, he’s only been on the campaign trail two days now. Certainly there is a learning curve.
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