Mitt Romney’s healthcare hypocrisy and the GOP base
Just four years ago, conservatives saluted him for signing a healthcare law that's very similar to ObamaCare
Topics: Mitt Romney, Healthcare Reform, News
It’s not news when man bites dog, so why should it be any different when Mitt Romney makes a brash and insincere pronouncement?
And yet there was the one-time Massachusetts governor forcing his way into Monday morning’s headlines with what may have been the most over-the-top of all of the over-the-top Republican reactions to the House’s passage of Barack Obama’s healthcare plan.
“An unconscionable abuse of power,” Romney declared while asserting that the president “has betrayed his oath to the nation.”
When Mitt starts talking like this, it’s usually because he knows his own past record makes him vulnerable on the issue at hand.
And when it comes to healthcare, his hypocrisy is particularly galling. Romney is actually the only governor in American history ever to impose an individual health insurance mandate on his citizens. And an individual mandate, of course, is at the heart of Obama’s reform package.
Nor is the mandate the only common ground between RomneyCare and ObamaCare; the Massachusetts plan that Romney signed into law in 2006 is essentially the blueprint for Obama’s plan. Both rely on the same basic formula: a requirement that everyone purchase insurance and government assistance for those who can’t afford it.
But Romney can never admit this. He’s the early front-runner for the 2012 GOP presidential nod and the party’s base is convinced that Obama’s reform package represents some kind of Marxist plot. So Romney must be against it — really against it. It’s as if he believes the combination of heat and volume in his response to the House vote will cause Republicans to ignore his own Massachusetts record.
It’s worth remembering how Romney got himself into this pickle in the first place, because it says a lot about the irrational nature of the GOP opposition to Obama’s healthcare push.
In the spring of 2006, Romney and his office worked closely with Massachusetts’ Democratic-dominated Legislature to craft the state’s new healthcare law — individual mandate and all. Romney’s motives had nothing to do with currying favor with the state’s left-of-center electorate. He had long since shifted his attention away from the Bay State and to the national stage. He switched his position on abortion and announced he wouldn’t seek a second term in 2005, and by ’06 he was spending nearly as much time out of the state as in it — never missing a chance to warm up national conservative crowds with cracks about his home state.
Steve Kornacki writes about politics for Salon. Reach him by email at SKornacki@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @SteveKornacki More Steve Kornacki.





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