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Congress faces
so many challenges in its effort to pass a comprehensive
health care plan that I can't envision how any final
legislation could ever be approved.
To
begin with, despite a House
81-seat Democratic margin
and months of tedious debate, Pelosi's Obamacare version
eked out the narrowest 220-215 victory.
Since July,
the argument about what should be in health care reform
has grown tedious and beyond the average American's
comprehension.
According to
House Majority Whip Jim
Clyburn, there have more than 81 hours of
Committee markups on the bill, over 86 hours of
hearings, and in excess of 203 hours of Democratic
Caucuses.
Democrats have
held roughly 3,000 public events on health reform this
year, including almost 2,000 between August and
December.
To
follow the daily changing blips on the
health care radar
screen requires more attention and energy than most care
to invest. Keeping current on the inconsequential
Tiger Woods is
easier and has a
lascivious appeal so popular among many.
That's not to suggest that Americans were ever up to
speed on
health care.
Despite the consequences of a $1 trillion legislation
that would dramatically overhaul the
U.S. health care system
and extend coverage to millions of currently uninsured
with a mandatory (and
unconstitutional)
requirement for many to buy insurance, the subject is
simply too dense.
An
August
AARP commissioned
survey found that
only 37 percent
of all Americans could correctly define
"public option".
Of
those polled, 23 percent admitted that they have no idea
while another 26 percent thought it meant a health care
system similar
to Great Britain's. The remaining 13 percent
identified it as forming a series of cooperatives.
The correct answer, broadly, is that the public option
as defined by Democrats makes public health insurance
available alongside private plans for some
uninsured
Americans.
Allowing for
all the flaws and criticisms about polls and how their
questions are worded, the AARP results underline the
skepticism Americans have about any government managed
program.
Warning: The
following paragraph may be obsolete by the time you read
it.
The latest in the never-ending Senate saga came Tuesday
night when
Majority Leader Harry Reid
announce that he and 10 of his Democratic colleagues
reached "a broad agreement" to resolve a dispute over a proposed
government-run health insurance plan, which has posed
the biggest obstacle to passage of sweeping health care
legislation.
Predictably,
Reid provided no details.
The Senate
cannot come to grips with two crucial public option
questions.
First, how
many Americans would sign up for the public option
however it may ultimately be defined? Second, would it
lower or raise insurance premiums for other Americans?
In
all the months that have passed since
debate began, an
interesting, unintended development may have boxed the
Democrats into a corner from which they have no escape.
When
health care legislation
was first proposed months ago, polls indicated that most
Americans supported the measure. At the same time,
Obama's popularity ratings were high.
Now however,
only 38 percent
of Americans support health care while Obama's approval
rating has dropped
to -10, his
lowest since his inauguration.
Indicators
suggest that both health care and Obama will continue to
lose popularity as time drags on.
What started out as legislation that
the Democrats perceived
as one the nation favored, and that could become Obama's
signature domestic achievement, may turn out to be one
that Americans oppose and could spell
major Congressional defeats
for the Democrats.
If
Obamacare fails,
Americans will correctly ask why Congress wasted so much
time and taxpayer money on doomed legislation.
And should it pass, voters might demand to know why the
government forced horrendously expensive health care
down their throats.
The lose-lose scenario could haunt Obama all the way to
2012.
Joe Guzzardi [email him] is a California native who recently fled the state because of over-immigration, over-population and a rapidly deteriorating quality of life. He has moved to Pittsburgh, PA where the air is clean and the growth rate stable. A long-time instructor in English at the Lodi Adult School, Guzzardi has been writing a weekly column since 1988. It currently appears in the Lodi News-Sentinel.