Democrats Use Stealth Tactics on Healthcare
Bill
By Ernest Istook
They
still don’t listen.
Citizens
cried out this summer for Congress to “read the bills” and understand the
consequences of healthcare legislation before deciding and voting.
But Senators are refusing not only to read the details, but even to
put them in writing before a committee vote. Leaders in Congress are trying
to fast-track healthcare “reform” while slow-tracking the details. And the
Obama administration is trying to silence those who dare to
criticize and oppose its plans.
It’s part of an unhealthy pattern of stealth tactics, made
worse by the push to rush things faster than public awareness can catch up.
Those
pushing must have seen the recent Washington
Post poll showing 54 percent of Americans agree that, “The more I hear
about the healthcare plan, the less I like it.” The obvious conclusion is that
backers fear an informed public, lest support will sink faster and farther.
Given
the opportunity to inform the public about the fine print of Senate Finance
Committee deliberations, Senators voted “no.” The committee rejected this
transparency proposal from Sen. Jim Bunning, R-KY.: “That before the Finance
Committee can vote on final passage of ‘America’s Healthy Future Act of 2009,’
the legislative language and a final and complete cost analysis by the
Congressional Budget Office must be publicly available on the Finance
Committee‘s Website for at least 72 hours.”
All
Republican Senators plus Sen. Blanche Lincoln, D-AR., supported Bunning’s idea;
all other Democrats voted against it.
So
those who want to read the bill cannot — because there is no bill. Instead,
Senators are working from a mere outline (if 200 pages can be called “mere”) by
Sen. Max Baucus, D-MT., plus 564 “conceptual” amendments. Only after Baucus’
committee approves it would staff be instructed to go back and write a bill
that had already been approved! That could run to at least 1,500 pages.
It’s
a crafty solution to the problem described by Rep. John Conyers, D-MI., “What
good is reading the bill if it’s a thousand pages and you don’t have two days
and two lawyers to find out what it means after you read the bill?”
Democrats
such as Sen. Kent Conrad, D-ND., claim that it’s better to work from a “plain English” outline rather than the arcane
language often found in complex legislation. But how would Senators be certain
that the ultimate gobbledygook is a correct translation if they don’t review it
before voting? In essence, Senators are denying lay citizens and learned experts the ability to monitor the work, to help
avoid unintended consequences and to blow the whistle on intended ones.
Told that it would take two weeks to comply with the Bunning
amendment, Sen. Olympia Snowe, R-MN., said, “If it
takes two more weeks, it takes two more weeks. I don’t understand, what
is the rush?”
Yet
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-NV., wants the bill on the floor by the
start of October and says he’s willing to cancel the Oct. 10 Columbus Day
recess to move the bill. In the House, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-CA., is talking
about similar quick action.
By
controlling both the calendar and the available information, proponents try to
control communication, public awareness, and the all-important political spin.
There’s
also the Obama administration’s effort to silence
critics. It goes beyond the president’s claim that he would “call out” the
opposition.
The
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has sent a warning letter to
Humana Insurance, telling companies (who would take a huge hit from the
legislation) to stop “misleading” and “confusing” mailings. The official letter
said, “We are instructing you to immediately discontinue all such mailings and
remove any related materials from your websites.” They added a threat of
“investigation,” plus “enforcement actions.”
Humana’s crime? It had written customers in its Medicare
Advantage Program that under healthcare reform, “millions of seniors and
disabled individuals could lose many important benefits and services.”
The
HHS letter is a scary parallel to how leaders in the House tried to muzzle
members of Congress who criticized the bill in mail sent to their constituents.
Those
who oppose the plan are also put down as know-nothings. As HHS Secretary
Kathleen Sebelius told angry citizens at Sen. Arlen
Specter’s town hall meeting, “The Senate bill isn't written so don't boo the
senator for not reading a bill that isn't written.” So why is her side now
supporting phantom legislation?
Keeping
the opposition in the dark while you move in fast is not the way to run our
Republic. Stealth is a tactic that should be reserved to America's military,
for use against our enemies. It shouldn’t be used by America's politicians
against our own people.