Politics

Does the Case Against Obamacare Come With a ‘Dose of Myth-Making?’ The AP Thinks So

Editor’s Note: The following “fact check” was composed by the Associated Press (not the Blaze). Below, find the inconsistencies the AP claims to have found regarding GOP candidates’ comments on “Obamacare.” Tells us what you think about the piece in the comments.

WASHINGTON (AP) — To hear some Republican presidential candidates tell it, the president’s pen is a magic wand that can make “Obamacare” vanish in one day and sweep in cheaper health care, economic growth and lots of jobs in businesses freed from the health care law’s heavy hand.

But there is no such fairy dust in Washington.

AP Fact Checks GOP Candidates Statements on ObamaCare

Mitt Romney

Across the board, the contenders pledge to repeal the health law they denigrate as “Obamacare.” In doing so, some are more realistic than others about what they can achieve and how fast.

The Republican case against the law comes with a dose of myth-making that may raise false hopes among voters who wish it could, in fact, simply go “poof.” If the overhaul is to fall, it won’t happen overnight with a new GOP administration. Any dismantling promises to be just as much of a slog as was its creation.

Mitt Romney has been the most persistent in claiming that as president, he would free states from the law’s requirements with an executive order on his first day in charge, even though he would have no authority to do so. Rick Perry has held out the prospect of lower health insurance premiums once the law is gone, citing research that actually tells a mostly different story.

Herman Cain would like to turn repeal into a birthday present of sorts. He says if Congress moves fast enough he’d sign the repeal March 23, 2013 – his son‘s birthday and the third anniversary of the law’s signing.

All place the law’s repeal as a chief component of their plans to grow the economy and jobs, rightly noting the overhaul’s myriad regulations but overselling the ability of one act of legislative subtraction to lift all boats.

A look at some of the claims in the Republican campaign and how they compare with the facts:

ROMNEY: “One thing I‘d do on Day One if I’m elected president is direct my secretary of health and human services to put an executive order granting a waiver from Obamacare to all 50 states. It is bad law. It will not work. And I’ll get that done on Day One.” – Claim in Sept. 7 debate, which he echoed in most other debates.

PERRY: “And I’ll promise you, on Day One, as the president of the United States, that executive order will be signed and Obamacare will be wiped out as much as it can be.” – Sept. 7 debate.

CAIN: “I’m going to un-pass it on my son’s birthday.” – Nov. 2 forum with the GOP’s Congressional Health Care Caucus.

AP Fact Checks GOP Candidates Statements on ObamaCare

Michele Bachmann

MICHELE BACHMANN: “With all due respect … issuing an executive order will not overturn this massive law.” – Sept. 7 debate.

THE FACTS: Bachmann is right, and it’s not the first time she corrected her rivals on the matter.

A president cannot overturn a law with an executive order. Moreover, the health law lays out an onerous process for letting individual states off the hook from its requirements; that process cannot begin until 2017.

For a state to be granted a waiver, it must show that it will provide coverage that is at least as comprehensive and affordable as under the federal law. Also, a state has to insure a comparable number of its residents, and its plan must not add to the federal deficit by shifting costs to Washington. Finally, a state has to enact its own health law setting up the system envisioned in its waiver request.

Romney’s assertion also implies that all states would want to get out of the health care law. That’s a doubtful proposition for Democratic-leaning states.

Cain recognizes that for the law to be repealed, Congress must act. But presidents don’t set the congressional calendar, and even if Republicans can secure a 60-vote majority that gives them control of the Senate, the train of legislation seldom runs on schedule.

ROMNEY: “On Day One, granting a waiver to all 50 states doesn’t stop in its tracks entirely Obamacare. That’s why I also say we have to repeal Obamacare, and I will do that on Day Two with a reconciliation bill, because, as you know, it was passed by reconciliation, 51 votes. We can get rid of it with 51 votes.” – Oct. 11 debate.

THE FACTS: This is a strategy to undermine the law by starving it of money. Its only real chance is if Republicans win congressional majorities as well as the presidency or at the very least a rash of improbable Democratic defections in Congress.

Although not a single-day project, it represents one threat to Obama’s law, if one with political risk and tough odds. Some core parts of the law are not dependent on annual budgeting.

Going beyond the budget process to repeal the law in full is an even steeper climb. It would require a larger Republican congressional majority to move forward and to clinch 60 votes in the Senate – all this as the law increasingly takes root in the nation’s medical and insurance system.

The law extends coverage to uninsured citizens and legal immigrants by providing tax credits to help middle-class households buy a policy and by expanding Medicaid for low-income people. It would require almost all people to carry health insurance, either through an employer, a government program or by individual purchase. It would set up health insurance markets in every state to make it easier for individuals and small business to buy coverage. It’s financed through tax increases and Medicare cuts.

AP Fact Checks GOP Candidates Statements on ObamaCare

Rick Perry

PERRY: “According to CBO’s own calculations, repealing Obamacare will reduce the cost of health insurance premiums and reduce federal spending on health care.” – His economic plan.

THE FACTS: No one can be sure what would happen with premiums absent the health care law, but Perry’s use of a Congressional Budget Office analysis was selective, at best.

The nonpartisan congressional accountants forecast that repeal of the law would raise premiums for people who get coverage from large-employer plans, not lower them, and that premiums could go either way for small-employer plans. About half the population is covered by such work-based insurance.

The CBO says repeal of the law probably would result in lower premiums in the individual insurance market, which covers about 4 percent of the population.

But there are important caveats. Many policyholders would probably end up paying more because they would not get the insurance subsidies provided under the law, the analysis says.

Individual insurance policies on average would provide fewer benefits, and cover less of an enrollee’s health care expenses, than will be provided by the insurance exchanges coming into effect under the law.

The analysis also projected that repealing the law would increase the federal deficit.

Comments (13)

  • Cold War Vet
    Posted on November 4, 2011 at 2:39am

    The same AP that told us Obama’s approval rating was 60% after the Osama Bin Laden lie-fest. They later admitted to unfairly beefing up those figures. I don’t take anything they say seriously, without critical judgement. They have proven themselves to be unreliable liars. Along with most of the mainstream media. Liars.

    Report Post » Cold War Vet  
    • pamela kay
      Posted on November 4, 2011 at 4:35am

      This is so true. They can not be trusted, however I am afraid they could be right unless the insurance companies agree to keep the costs down and allow people to go across statelines to purchase their coverage. That would help as far as the companies would have to compete and costs would perhaps go down. Obama care would be the ruin of these companies and bargaining would at least keep them in business.

      Report Post » pamela kay  
  • dbuitt22
    Posted on November 4, 2011 at 12:12am

    If we want Obamacare to go away in 2012 then the house & Senate must all go Republican and the Whitehouse must be filled with a Republican and for some reason the American People were led to believe we were going to take the Senate & the House in 2010. We got half of it done. Now I can’t think of a better thing to happen is to fire Obama and clean out the House & Senate too or USA will be destroyed by Obama and everyone one who supports and loves him. God help us all if Obama is elected again.

    Report Post »  
  • lukerw
    Posted on November 3, 2011 at 11:47pm

    As a Senior Citizen… I want a unified Administration and Congress… to remove every detail of ObamaCare from the Books… and start over. I would rather have nothing… than live in a Nazi State.

    Report Post » lukerw  
  • paulusmaximus
    Posted on November 3, 2011 at 8:44pm

    A president cannot overturn a law with an executive order. ( Obama did!) From this phrase on AP fills the rest of the paragraph with an innuendo of muddled half truths which rest on the assumption that the health insurance act will still be in effect, including that the congress and Senate will not act, the supreme court will make no ruling inhibiting the act and that the majority of state will not in-act opposing legislation. For my thought the AP needs to stick to lost puppy stories!

    Report Post » paulusmaximus  
  • sarnold51
    Posted on November 3, 2011 at 5:06pm

    Moreover, the health law lays out an onerous process for letting individual states off the hook from its requirements; that process cannot begin until 2017.

    If this is true then how did the dims allow some states to be exempted???

    Report Post » sarnold51  
  • BurntHills
    Posted on November 3, 2011 at 4:47pm

    all we know is the vile communist animal obama has half-murdered this family’s Christian American Republican elderly already, their union notified them via a shiny slick brochure that the retiree health insurance (they’ve paid 45 years of dues for) gets dropped next year because of the escalating cost of obamacare.
    ANYONE BUT obama 2012.
    and we’ll stand there waving American flags and applauding when obama is tried for treason and sent to the gallows in the Public Square.

    Report Post » BurntHills  
  • idafleetdoc
    Posted on November 3, 2011 at 4:23pm

    Why bother repealing the law. We, the people as a group can refuse to play the game. Send me to jail along with several million other people. Free healthcare, a cot and three squares a day. I will even get cable TV again. There is a problem with lack of freedom, but that would be our choice. Vote all of our elected officials out and start over and continue until they get the message that We are the boss.

    Report Post »  
  • Blackhawk1
    Posted on November 3, 2011 at 4:16pm

    Notice how the left-wing state controlled media says getting rid of Obamacare won’t be easy. Sure it would with a conservative run Senate and House and White House. First get rid of Health and Human Services Dept, (no one to implement it). Then cut all funding for it. The same can be done with Both DOEs (Energy and Education), EPA, and all the other useless money pit Departments in our Government. Just go to USA.gov and see how many pages of useless agencies and Departments the taxpayers fund. It will make you sick!

    Report Post » Blackhawk1  
  • Founding Father2
    Posted on November 3, 2011 at 4:11pm

    WaPo is the best spin doctors. There is one thing that is not a myth… If the GOP takes the White House each candidate will try to repeal the bad bill: Bachmann, Romney, Santorum, Gingrich, Perry, and Cain.

    And if we get the Senate then there is no myth that IT WILL BE DONE…

    Sadly it has made its way out of interviews with the candidates. Look at Rick Perry’s, Hannity barely even spoke on it. ( http://www.thedailycandidate.com/video/2011/nov/perry_hannity_interview.html ) It needs to be item number 1.

    Report Post »  
  • TheBurningTruth
    Posted on November 3, 2011 at 4:11pm

    However fast or slow any repeal is, it will still occur faster than President Marxist’s closing of Gitmo.

    Report Post » TheBurningTruth  
  • NeverSurrender
    Posted on November 3, 2011 at 4:04pm

    The AP is out of its mind if it thinks an executive order can’t rewrite law. At the very leasy all a republican president has to do is refuse to prosecute people for not purchasing insurance and refuse to prosecute anyone who does not follow the law. It can use the reason of finding the law unconstitutional. Our current president all set precedent for this act by refusing to follow and prosecute DOMA. Thanks Obama! He is also setting precedent for writing budgetary law from the executive branch by passing his jobs bill via executive order, so the AP is incorrect according to their leader.

    Report Post »  

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