Creative Chaos

DinoDoc

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Obama’s Arbitrary Health Care Flexibility
In the Affordable Care Act’s never-ending revisions, the only pattern is chaos.

The Affordable Care Act means what it says and says what it means.

Until it doesn’t.

The arbiter is President Obama and a phalanx of health care advisers and political strategists.

Together, they try to implement what even Obama’s heartiest loyalists concede is an onerous and complicated law. They do this amid myriad Democratic midterm anxieties. And frothy Republican objections.

But it’s time to concede that no one has been more adept or aggressive about delaying and defanging Obamacare than Obama himself. Systematically and with an eye toward his party’s immediate political troubles, Obama has reshaped, photo-shopped, reimagined, and reengineered Obamacare. It all sounds techy and cool and flexible—at least to the administration. To those who must live with and live under the law, the arbitrary is the norm. The only pattern is chaos. Obamacare’s worst enemy is Obama.

The New York Times has compiled a helpful list of recent changes to the Affordable Care Act—13 in just over a year. That comes out to more than one substantive change to policy or legislated deadlines per month. This, in a landmark law nearing its fourth birthday.

The latest switcheroo deals with the employer mandate, which the administration has delayed for another year for medium-sized businesses and softened for big employers. Companies with 50 to 99 employees will not have to provide health insurance under fear of fines (between $2,000 and $3,000 per full-time employee) until January 2016. Until Monday, the deadline was January 2015. Also, companies with more than 100 employees can provide insurance coverage to just 70 percent of their workforce in 2015 instead of the original 95 percent requirement.

The employer mandate is a significant component of the law that was subject to strenuous theoretical debate in the 2008 presidential campaign and lengthy legislative tussling during the drafting of Obamacare. This is a not an Affordable Care asterisk, although health care economists argue it has little impact on increasing insurance coverage.

That may be true, but it drove medium-sized businesses to distraction, and they lobbied the White House for a reprieve—and won the midterm political lottery.

Obama described the change soothingly in his joint press conference with French President François Hollande. “This was an example of, administratively, us making sure that we’re smoothing out this transition, giving people the opportunities to get right with the law, but recognizing that there are going to be circumstances in which people are trying to do the right thing and it may take a little bit of time,” Obama said.

It may take a little bit of time.

Eleven of the 13 alterations to the Affordable Care Act in the past 12 months have given individuals or businesses more time. The burden of compliance is palpable. And so the White House has had to again and again smooth out the transition, in a law it crafted exclusively with Democrats.

“Our goal here is not to punish folks,” Obama said, unwittingly admitting that compliance with his own law amounts to economic and administrative sanction. “Our goal is to make sure that we’ve got people who can count on the financial security that health insurance provides.”

Of course, those employees who work for companies that just happen to have 50 to 99 employees and were hoping, possibly expecting, to receive health coverage next year— well, they cannot count on Obamacare. Or Obama, who helpfully explained why:

“Where we’ve got companies that want to do the right thing and are trying to work with us, we want to make sure that we’re working with them as well.” Translation: If you want to provide coverage but not right now and in compliance with the law as written, and you complain loud enough and weaken the political footing of Senate Democrats, you don’t have to eat your Obamacare spinach— or cover your employees.

In the same breath, Obama made clear that this process of photo-shopping, rewriting, and reimagining will continue apace, depending on the hassle that is Obamacare compliance and the political terrain.

“That’s going to be our attitude about the law generally: How do we make it work for the American people and for their employers in an optimal sort of way?”

Optimal.

How would you like to work for a company (more than 115,000 of them in 2012) that you thought would have to provide health care coverage for you next year but now won’t? And how would you like to be one of the employees who works for a big company (more than 94,000 of them in 2012) but falls just on the other side of the 70 percent coverage threshold in 2015? Your health falls on the other side of Obama’s arbitrary coverage line, and you don’t have coverage.

I’m willing to bet “optimal” is not the word that will come readily to mind.

For Obama, it’s all about flexibility. He was asked if the Affordable Care Act would usher in the end of employee-based insurance in America.

“I don’t think that an employer-based system is going to be, or should be, replaced anytime soon,” Obama said.

Considering the creative clock-management and time-machine quality of Obamacare implementation to date, “anytime soon” sounds almost wistful. For Obama, that is, not necessarily for employees who have care they like and want to keep (yes, that phrase still matters ... and will matter more as Obamacare’s regulatory reach becomes fully manifest).

“What the Affordable Care Act does do is, it gives people some flexibility.”

But which people? And why?

There is no optimal answer.

The author is National Journal Correspondent-at-Large and Chief White House Correspondent for CBS News. He is also a distinguished fellow at the George Washington University School of Media and Public Affairs.
http://www.nationaljournal.com/all-powers/obama-s-arbitrary-health-care-flexibility-20140211

It's. The. Law?

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Anyway using the Obama precedent, what other aspects of tax law might a future GOP President be able to repeal or otherwise change is a fit of unitary power? My guess is the capital gains tax. What's yours?
 
It would have been better for him to just implement it all up front instead of the continued delays.
 
"A future GOP leader"

That's if they can prevent shooting themselves in the foot (they can't)
 
taxes?

end the drug war

:)
That's not part of the tax code as the Court declared the ACA to be. But sure why not? The Obama Precedent allows for the president to ignore the will of Congress if he wants to.
It would have been better for him to just implement it all up front instead of the continued delays.
You'll notice a similarity in all the delays. They push inconvenient and painful deadlines past potentially important elections or otherwise benefit favored slices of the populace.
 
Just repeal Obamacare! It's a job killing law anyway.
 
The Court did not declare the ACA to be part of the tax code. Someone needs to read the actual opinion. As for the Obama administration's manuevering, it is well within administrative law principles where the executive often has a great deal of flexibility in implementation. You would need to read the law and have an understanding of some Supreme Court precedent to know why Obama's actions are not all that unprecedented. If the GOP would have been more active in shaping the health care law, they could have more tightly restrained Obama.

Anyway, perhaps the thread starter could file suit and personally represent himself at the Supreme Court as Federal statute allows. Oh wait - he can't - there is a Supreme Court rule that, contrary to the statute, only allows lawyers to argue before the Supreme Court.
 
Anyway, perhaps the thread starter could file suit and personally represent himself at the Supreme Court as Federal statute allows. Oh wait - he can't - there is a Supreme Court rule that, contrary to the statute, only allows lawyers to argue before the Supreme COurt.
Lawsuits require standing.
 
If the GOP would have been more active in shaping the health care law, they could have more tightly restrained Obama.
I wonder...
KRAUTHAMMER: Remember how Democrats were complaining that when Republicans were trying to overturn Obamacare, it was somehow unpatriotic because it was an attack on the law of the land. This law of the land doesn't even exist; it exists in Obama's head. It's whatever he thinks, he wakes up in the morning and decides what the law is going to be. That is an understatement, that's not the way it's supposed to work. And we had an editorial in The Washington Post of all places, not exactly a right-wing rag, saying that Obama has really overstepped the lines arbitrarily, changing the law, and usurped what Congress is supposed to do.
Krauthammer on Obamacare: "This Law Doesn't Even Exist; It Exists In Obama's Head"

Truthfully I thought this was the law of the land we couldn't change one period of its holy text because it would be unpatriotic.
 
You'll notice a similarity in all the delays. They push inconvenient and painful deadlines past potentially important elections or otherwise benefit favored slices of the populace.

Which continues to leave it as an issue on the table. Take the hit and get over it already.

Just repeal Obamacare! It's a job killing law anyway.

An unfounded accusation at best, supported only by a handful of anecdotes.

Wow, they are still letting Krauthammer opine after he bought the skewed nonsense so heavily? During the W years, the Kraut was practically the head cheerleader for unitary executive power.

In his quasi-defense, he wasn't alone in this.
 
Buying into the skewed nonsense or cheerleading Bushco's unitary executiveness?

Both.

Not that it makes Krauthammer better, but there is a lot of hypocrisy there. For example, guys like Hannity were all for executive power ten years ago and now they can't stop ranting against it.
 
The thing that is really hypocritical about it, is that Obama's executive order numbers are lower than just about any recent President - certainly behind pace when stacked up against two termers. He's no Ronald Reagan for sure.
 
Which continues to leave it as an issue on the table. Take the hit and get over it already.
At this point, I wouldn't be shocked if Obama or another president "deems" the employer mandate to be repealed at the end of the latest delay the Admin deemed necessary.
 
This isn't an executive order, JR. Nor is it a means to implement the law. It's a means of avoiding that very prospect.

Show me the specific statutory provisions that are being violated by Obama. Without the actual statutory language, the is reliance on well known blowhards that have a track record of being wrong.
 
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