The editors of the Chicago Tribune have published a harsh editorial condemning the responses of “defenders of Obamacare” to the remarks of Jonathan Gruber, the unquestioned architect of Massachusetts’s healthcare insurance reform plan who was lionized five years ago as a principle architect of the PPACA and is now something of a goat:
A 2013 video has Gruber in St. Louis describing how that “Cadillac tax” got into the ACA: “They proposed it and that passed, because the American people are too stupid to understand the difference.”
Gruber told MSNBC on Wednesday that his Pennsylvania comments were “at an academic conference” and “off-the-cuff”: “I basically spoke inappropriately and I regret having made those comments.”
No doubt because they’re true. Gruber hasn’t renounced a thing he said.
These deceptions are a world apart from the scuzzy but not atypical payoffs (the Cornhusker Kickback, the Louisiana Purchase) that bought the final Senate votes to pass the ACA. Nor are we citing other sponsor claims that critics of the law also see as lies: that coverage really would be affordable, that the act would lower medical costs, that it would ease federal deficits. All debatable.
What’s not debatable is that Obamacare’s arc of deception is exposed — not unique, perhaps, but blatant and, thanks to our own eyes and Gruber’s words, provable: Obamacare, in order to function, had to break its backers’ promises. Also convincing: Gruber, recorded cautioning in 2012 that if states don’t set up their own insurance exchanges, “(your) citizens don’t get their tax credits.” That’s the very issue the U.S. Supreme Court now will litigate, perhaps to the functional downfall of Obamacare.
Defenders of Obamacare dismiss these revelations with three breezy retorts: We all knew how the law really would work. (No.) You gotta do what you gotta do. (No.) And this Gruber, he’s a nobody. This third excuse basked in absurdity Thursday: Pelosi dismissively said she didn’t know who Gruber is and that he didn’t help write the ACA, so, “Let’s put him aside.” Turns out she issued a 2009 news release touting “noted MIT health care economist Jonathan Gruber” whose modeling predicted “lower premiums than under current law for the millions of Americans using the newly-established Health Insurance Exchange.” Oh, and Pelosi also had discussed Gruber at a news conference.
The editors of the Trib have been increasingly opposed to the PPACA and that editorial is actually a pretty strong statement, at least by the standards of newspaper editorials these days.
I don’t have as much problem with what Dr. Gruber has said as some do. The fact is that the PPACA’s subsidies had to be portrayable as taxes to pass constitutional muster and to be politically acceptable.
The part that I find hard to swallow is the move to turn Dr. Gruber into an unperson. You should own your mistakes. And nowadays there’s no such thing as an anonymous remark or one that’s soon forgotten.
If you don’t want your past unfortunate statements to come back to haunt you, remain silent. That’s something that’s too much to expect of career politicians.