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Today
we are closer than ever to sending ObamaCare to the ash heap of history and
opening the door for much-needed market-based solutions to health insurance.
With the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, Republicans banded together to
eliminate the unpopular ObamaCare individual mandate. Now the Trump
administration is determined to find a better way to address our nation’s
health-care needs.
But despite these positive
developments, both Democrats and Republicans in Washington are considering
policies that would not only retain ObamaCare for the indefinite future, but
also expand this health-care disaster beyond even President Obama’s ambitions.
These proposals would snatch defeat from the jaws of victory by shoveling
billions of additional dollars in deficit spending into the pockets of
insurance companies, which have been losing money on ObamaCare’s exchanges
because of the law’s misguided one-size-fits-all approach.
The real solution is obvious:
we need to do away with this massive, expensive and unfair government program,
instead of throwing money at a handful of corporations to tolerate it. But few
have accused Washington of ever recognizing the obvious.
Several competing proposals
appear to be on the table. One would direct the Obama-created bailout known as
cost-sharing-reduction (CSR) payments to go to ObamaCare insurance companies.
Another would create an entirely new reinsurance program to funnel billions of
taxpayer dollars directly to insurers in order to convince them to stick with
ObamaCare.
Republicans should reject
both approaches.
Before now, Republicans
correctly saw CSR payments for what they were – flagrant bailouts of favored
ObamaCare insurance companies – and refused to be complicit in that bailout.
Republicans also recognized
that CSR payments lacked sufficient pro-life protections, allowing taxpayer
funding for abortions. These problems with CSR payments still remain – but the
attitude among some Republicans has strangely and suddenly changed.
The reinsurance program
proposals under consideration today would create a new backdoor bailout similar
to one originally found in ObamaCare.
ObamaCare created a
three-year reinsurance program, tantamount to a bailout, which thankfully ended
in 2016. The Obama administration mismanaged this bailout so badly that it
failed to collect enough insurance slush money, and then sought to fudge its
mistakes by taking money from the Treasury and redirecting it into the pockets
of insurance companies.
Back in 2016, top GOP committee chairmen from both the House and
Senate called this scheme “the great Obamacare heist.” And now
some would seek to reproduce it.
This Frankenstein combination
of a new Republican-created insurance bailout plus funding ObamaCare’s existing
pro-abortion CSR bailout is exactly what we counseled against in March
last year. If we ignore the years of promises we made to the people on
ObamaCare, the voters would, quite rightly, distrust Republicans for years to
come.
Fortunately, there’s another
way. We can treat health insurance as the product it is and allow the
principles of choice and competition to provide cheap, effective options, as we
do for almost every other purchase in our society. Consumer freedom is the most
effective way to lower premiums and make health insurance more affordable.
We should expand health
savings accounts so Americans get a tax-free way to pay for health expenses,
allow people to purchase plans that work for them, and make these plans
portable between jobs. These three simple things will go a long way toward
promoting market competition that benefits consumers and reduces the cost of
health care for everyday Americans.
Republicans stand at a moment
of great opportunity, one we’ve been promising to seize for over eight years.
We can listen to the American people – who delivered historic Republican
majorities that promised to move our nation past broken government intrusions
into the health insurance market – or we can double down on this failed system
by bailing out ObamaCare. We know which one we choose.
Sen. Mike Lee represents Utah,
Rep. Mark Meadows represents North Carolina and Rep. Jim Jordan represents
Ohio. All are Republicans.
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