Mitt Romney and the Nuance Trap

One advantage the GOP had in the health debate was its total disregard for nuance when it came to messaging. Again and again, Republicans over-simplified provisions in the Democratic plan and convinced a lot of Americans that reform was bad in the process. They said the bill would gut Medicare by slashing half a trillion dollars in funding. That sounded pretty bad to a lot of seniors, especially those who didn’t hear Democrats explain that much of the cuts would come from subsidies to private insurers in Medicare Advantage and wouldn’t have any effect on federally mandated benefits. No, slashing Medicare is a much easier sell. Republicans also said the bill would raise taxes. Yikes – in this economy? That sounded pretty bad too, especially to those who didn’t hear Democrats explain that additional payroll taxes would only affect the rich and taxes on expensive health plans wouldn’t kick in for years and could actually result in higher wages, according to some health care economists. Yeah, higher taxes is a more potent message.

Well, now Mitt Romney – who some believe is the front runner for the Republican nomination in 2012 – finds himself in the same conundrum the Democrats were in throughout the past year. He’s trying to explain the gritty details of how the health reform he implemented as governor of Massachusetts is different than the one President Obama just ushered in on a national scale.

Romney is and will continue to have a hard time with this task. For starters, the Massachusetts plan is structurally the same as the federal plan – the federal plan was, in fact, modeled on the Massachusetts plan. Anyone who says this isn’t true is not being honest. Without wading too far into the policy details, let’s just say that federal health reform is a stool with three legs: subsidies, an individual mandate and an insurance exchange. The Massachusetts stool has the same legs. Jonathan Gruber, the MIT economist who helped design the Massachusetts plan with Romney and who has worked as a consultant for Congress and the White House, said this week that the former governor “is in many ways the intellectual father of national health reform.’’ That wasn’t a dig – it’s true.

But yet out of political necessity, Romney has been stumbling around trying to distance himself from “Obamacare.” His PAC has launched a campaign called “Prescription for Repeal” that will donate to the campaigns of candidates “who will work to repeal the worst aspects of Obamacare and restore commonsense principles to healthcare.” Romney also told the Boston Globe his plan and Obama’s plan are “as different as night and day.”

But they’re not night and day. There are differences sure – the Massachusetts employer mandate is different and the plan didn’t affect Medicare, as Romney eagerly points out – but these differences are nothing compared to the similarities. And if Romney keeps trying to highlight these differences, he’s going to get sucked into the same trap the Democrats fell into with the Medicare cuts and taxes – the nuance will get lost in the shuffle. Romney’s opponents will say he cleared the way for Obamacare. Romney will try to explain wait a minute, actually the Massachusetts plan didn’t raise taxes, at least not directly, and the employer mandate is different and…what’s that, already lost you?

Probably the most effective message for Romney – who’s surely hoping health care will not be the most important issue in the 2012 campaign – is to draw a line between state and federal reform. He’s doing this, saying his approach allowed a single state to implement reforms best for its own unique situation, while federal reform is a “one-size-fits-all plan.” But in practically the next breath, Romney’s saying things like this:

“We passed in Massachusetts a health care bill that makes sure, that if you lose a job or change a job, you won’t lose your insurance. Everybody in Massachusetts is able to keep insurance throughout their life. It’s not taken away from them. So it’s portable.

“No. 2, you can’t be cancelled if you have a pre-existing condition or if you become ill once your insured. So everybody’s insured. Ninety-eight percent of the citizens in our state are insured. So in that respect, it’s very similar.

“We also have an individual responsibility. We have an incentive – a mandate, if you will, to say we need everybody insured. The reason we did that was pretty simple. We had a lot of people showing up at the hospital without insurance – people who had the money or funds to buy insurance, who said, ‘I got no insurance. I’m real sick. Take care of me.’

“And the government was paying for those people. That’s what’s happening here, and in the other states in the country. There are people who — we call them free-riders — who say ‘I’m not going to be insured. I can’t pay my own way. If I have an accident or have a heart-attack, the government will pay for me.’ We say no more. You’ve got [the] responsibility, a personal responsibility, to get insured.”

Sound familiar?

Related Topics: 2012, Barack Obama, boston globe, health reform, Massachusetts, mitt romney, Uncategorized
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  • spob

    There’s also a difference–in Mass. the voters wanted RomneyCare.

  • nflfoghorn

    Irony’s not lost on you, huh Spoob?

  • mycophile

    spob, could that be because opponents of the Romneycare didn’t so so effectively exaggeratingly demonize it?

    You aren’t seriouisly going to argue that voters are well-educated with extremely verifiable facts when they make up their minds at the polls, are you?

  • m0mentom0ri

    You’d almost think Mass voters are better educated:
    .
    Educational achievement by state, High School graduate or higher:
    Mass: 80.0%
    Texas: 72.1%

  • fhmadvocat

    spob,

    You are right, there is a difference. In Mass, the people voted for RomneyCare, in the case of 2008, the voters in the United States voted for ObamaCare. They did so by electing Obama, giving him a Democratic House and then a filibuster proof Democratic Senate.
    And I have to wonder, did Romney campaign for RomneyCare, because Obama certainly campaigned for ObamaCare. if Romney did not campaign on universal coverage, the voters got something they didn’t expect.

    Now some people will say that Scott Brown was elected to defeat ObamaCare. However, Scott Brown was elected by the people of Mass, not the rest of the country. And the people of Mass, did not need ObamaCare, because they already had RomneyCare.

  • apr2563

    spob: Seeing now, in your opinion, lack of support for “Obamacare” that Brown and Romney will now call for the repeal of Massachusett’s “Romneycare”?

  • tarfunk

    A disingenuous pol is not news, but Mitt’s fall is particularly deserved. He started out as a reasonable, moderate conservative with economic credibility, but sold his soul in an attempt to get the right’s backing. They didn’t buy his conversion, either, and went with less qualified players with a more mainstream religion. That’ll continue to be the case for him in 2012.

  • http://patricksartor.wordpress.com patricksartor

    Romney was so unsuccessful as governor that he ended a sixteen year streak of Republican governors.

    I moved away after fifteen years (of my adult life – I am not from there) there before this was passed.

    The Massachusetts Republicans, co-opting fiscally conservative Democrats were so extreme that they canceled all dental care for people on welfare outside of an oral surgeon to extract teeth with no bridges.

    So, before this, if you were on welfare and had a cavity, you could ignore it or spend the rest of your life with a big gaping hole between your teeth.

    He had to come up with something progressives wanted for needy and came up with health care reform.

    He managed to continue the Massachusetts Republican legacy of bringing Massachusetts from the highest taxes state taxes in New England to the second lowest.

  • sacredh

    “Well, now Mitt Romney – who some believe is the front runner for the Republican nomination in 2012″

    This alone has many of us democrats salivating. He ran such a galvanizing 2008 campaign that we’re quaking in our boots. I’m sure the southern evangelicals are anxious to go door-to-door and put all of their time and money into electing a Mormon for president. Romney is their A-Game? Different candidate, same result.

  • mscott987

    Another difference – if Mass. citizens didn’t like it, they could leave. No escaping Obamacare if you want to stay an American citizen.

  • textee

    Was this press release written by Time magazine personality Kate Pickert for the Democrat party or was this press release written by the Democrat party for Time magazine personality Kate Pickert?

    Check out this leftist fantasy: “Republicans also said the bill would raise taxes. Yikes – in this economy? That sounded pretty bad too, especially to those who didn’t hear Democrats explain that additional payroll taxes would only affect the rich and taxes on expensive health plans wouldn’t kick in for years and could actually result in higher wages.”

    Other than Time magazine personality Kate Pickert, who is stupid enough to believe Democrats, who Pickert asserts “explain” (ROTFLMAO!), “that additional payroll taxes would only affect the rich and taxes on expensive health plans wouldn’t kick in for years and could actually result in higher wages.”

    Is Time magazine personality Kate Pickert stupid enough to believe that the Obamacare socialized medical scheme will “result in higher wages”? Does Time magazine personality Kate Pickert still believe Obama’s claim that Obamacare will reduce “insurance premiums” by “3000%” (“THREE THOUSAND PERCENT”!)?

  • http://patricksartor.wordpress.com patricksartor

    Rom-ney, Rom-ney, Rom-ney!
    .
    I think Democrats should donate money to the Tea Party in any place where the Republican is in trouble so that the Tea Party can split the vote and then, on a presidential level, support Mittens Romney for the white house.
    .
    Republicans will drive themselves off of a cliff with that kind of insanity.

  • http://patricksartor.wordpress.com patricksartor

    Textee,
    This plan should cover your meds.
    .
    With the right psychiatric supervision you may stop hallucinating.

  • mfbattle

    I always thought Romney has too much MA baggage to be the GOP nominee. I remember when he was on Meet the Press after he had started his presidential run and was asked about abortion and stem cell research, and how he had changed his position from when he was running in MA (when he supported abortion rights in 1994 and 2002), and he answered by saying that he never really thought about abortion before. I had to laugh!

  • http://flounder73.wordpress.com pafro

    I think it is great that president Obama keeps teabagging Republicans by thanking Mitt Romney and the Heritage Foundation for getting the ball rolling.
    You can see another of Romney’s hairs turn gray every time it happens.

  • shepherdwong
  • apr2563

    msscott: you couldn’t escape to any other industrialized, 1st world country to avoid universal health care. Even Rush can’t escape to Costa Rica because it has universal health care.
    Well, there is always Somalia.

  • deconstructiva

    Textee, leave the disrespect of poor Kate to Rusty. Paraphrasing “Erin Brockovich”, did they teach you how to disparage women journalists at militia camp? ‘Cause you suck at it.

  • http://forgottenlord.livejournal.com forgottenlord

    I’ve lost track of the number of stats that basically said that 70% of voters wanted either ObamaCare or something MORE Liberal. Sure, only 45% wanted ObamaCare, but another 25% were against it because it wasn’t Liberal enough.

  • maverick2k9

    textee.. Swampland is an opinion blog. KT can write whatever she damn wants.. if you don’t like what you see, change the channel. .
    .
    i.e. get lost and go somewhere else.. BTW, good bye and good riddance.

  • firebatfox

    Romney will not be the GOP candidate in 2012. He’s only viewed as the frontrunner by beltway Democrats, who see him as such because they lack insight into Republican politics, most particularly what motivates a conservative primary voter when choosing between candidates. (For the same reason, I wouldn’t put any stock in, say, Charles Krauthammer’s ruminations on a Democratic primary. He doesn’t understand what it is to be a Democrat, so he can’t meaningfully prognosticate on whom Democrats will choose in an intramural competition.) Palin, fortunately, will not be the nominee either, because a sizeable plurality of conservatives really do understand that she’s as mad as a March Hare, even if she does annoy all the right people. If I were to bet money today, I would bet it on John Thune.

    For the record, though there are doubtless some small-minded conservatives who wouldn’t consider Romney because of his religion, that’s not why he’ll lose. He’ll lose because he’s changed his tune too many times on too many things to be trusted, and because he signed RomneyCare into law. So Democrats ought not waste time salivating over how vulnerable Romney will be to this line of attack in the fall debates against Obama in 2012. That’s Maginot Line thinking.

  • http://erieangel.wordpress.com erieangel

    Get real textee. We all know when Obama said 3000% he’d misspoken. He meant to say $3000–which is what the average health care policy savings are supposedly going to be in time—HOPEFULLY, though I duobt this will happen. I think costs will do nothing but continue to raise with all the sick people the insurance companies will be forced to carry.

    The only true reform that will tackle cost would be Single Payer.

  • kbanginmotown

    When all is said and done, as of 31Mar10……………………. it’s a crapshoot, isn’t it?
    .
    Seriously.
    .
    Two years ago the MSM was agog over *frontrunner* Rudy Gulliani (and his anticipated death-match with HRC!).
    .
    Times change. Polls change. The MSM finds a new shiny object.
    .
    I’m with firebatfox: John Thune it is.
    .
    P.S. Who the f@ck is John Thune?!?

  • http://patricksartor.wordpress.com patricksartor

    I came back post-Rudy.
    .
    I got an earful about him:
    .
    First two years, used Clinton’s federal money and the work done by the previous (and, now current – he came back post-Rudy) police commissioner’s ideas and cut crime down. It helped that the drug crack had killed off most of the street thugs, gotten most of the rest of them in jail and the lucky few in a good rehab by that time.
    .
    Second two years, imposed big fines for not cleaning the sidewalk in front of your store or apartment building.
    .
    Third two years, stopped artists from selling art they had made themselves on the street in front of Museums and would not issue them licenses.
    .
    Personal life: cheated on first two wives and was running off with a third.
    .
    Got thrown out of the Mayor’s residence (Gracie Mansion is the Mayor what the White house is to the president) in divorce due to his cheating and moved in to a spare bedroom of an apartment with two gay men. (Not homophobic, but, confusing to people who do not know that almost everybody in Manhattan needs a roommate to cut back on rent expenses.)
    .
    When police commissioner got picture on Time instead of him, he fired his police commissioner.
    .
    Made driver in charge of NYC jails.
    .
    When 2nd police commissioner died, replaced him with commissioner of prison, his former driver.
    .
    Secretly former driver got his house fixed up for free from the mafia in exchange for a construction project.
    .
    Former police commissioner Bernard Keric got sent to what was called the day before the Bernard Keric detention facility.
    .
    Do’h.
    .
    High point: great 9/11 speaches.
    .
    Two months later, NYC remembered something temporarily forgotten: they didn’t like Rudy.
    .
    He would have gotten almost no NYC support if he had been the Republican nominee.

  • http://consrepublicans.wordpress.com consrepublicans

    The copy/paste theory just doesn’t fit. Romney’s bill was 70 pages. Obama’s bill is 2,700 pages. What’s in that extra 2,630 pages? Did they use larger print just so people would READ THE BILL?!

    The foundation is similar, but ObamaCare uses those extra 2,630 pages to create new taxes, add new bureaucracy, dis-incentivize doctors, take away our freedoms, reduce our choices, lay the foundation of a single payer system, and more.

    Romney’s plan essentially redeployed existing state and federal resources to solve the Massachusetts health care problem and encourage individual responsibility. Obama’s plan puts a one to two trillion dollar burden on businesses and taxpayers, not only in this generation but future generations to pay for what…bureaucracy and union benefits.

    Romney follows mainly free market principles, although Dems did get a few things in there that he initially vetoed but were overridden. The thrust of ObamaCare is to set the stage for a government takeover, including govt being able to set doctor fees across the board and essentially a single payer system. ObamaCare is about government responsibility and decision making, not citizen responsibility, choice, and support.

    Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes said in 1963, “The State [is not a mutual insurance company] and the prevailing view is that its cumbrous and expensive machinery ought not to be set in motion unless some clear benefit is to be derived from disturbing the status quo. State interference is an evil, where it cannot be shown to be a good. Universal insurance, if desired, can be better and more cheaply accomplished by private enterprise.”

    To me, that definition would promote the Romney plan over an Obama plan.

  • http://patricksartor.wordpress.com patricksartor

    consrepublicans,
    .

    “…create new taxes, add new bureaucracy, dis-incentivize doctors, take away our freedoms, reduce our choices, lay the foundation of a single payer system, and more.”
    .

    “Romney follows mainly free market principles, although Dems did get a few things in there that he initially vetoed but were overridden.”
    .

    “Obama’s plan puts a one to two trillion dollar burden on businesses and taxpayers, not only in this generation but future generations to pay for what…bureaucracy and union benefits.”
    .
    Okay consrepublicans, you have gone over almost every talking point less founding fathers and an interpretation of Christianity which involves making people wait for a kind person to pay for your open heart surgery.
    .
    The general consensus here existing mostly of liberals and a few moderates is that Republicans wanted to sacrifice our health care and that of our next generation for political gain and Romneycare is this bill.
    .
    Please, do the following:
    .
    1) Cite specific differences which do all of the evils you claim it has.
    .
    2) Explain why Republicans were not simply participating in cutting the bill down to this.
    .
    3) If Romneycare is in line with conservative principals and delivers health care better than pre-Romneycare, please explain why a 70 page bill was not proposed and passed between 2000 and 2006 when Republicans had complete control. In a good way, this would have given Republicans a strategic advantage in 2006 and 2008, since people do not vote for the love of the letter D over the letter R but due to who offers what we believe government needs to do.
    .
    It is my belief that, if Obama stood before either house and said “good morning” the Republicans would try to pass a non-binding resolution to say that it is a terrible morning and that the president was wrong for making a wish that we have a good morning.

  • http://patricksartor.wordpress.com patricksartor

    consrepublicans,

    .
    “…create new taxes, add new bureaucracy, dis-incentivize doctors, take away our freedoms, reduce our choices, lay the foundation of a single payer system, and more.”

    .
    “Romney follows mainly free market principles, although Dems did get a few things in there that he initially vetoed but were overridden.”

    .
    “Obama’s plan puts a one to two trillion dollar burden on businesses and taxpayers, not only in this generation but future generations to pay for what…bureaucracy and union benefits.”
    .
    Okay consrepublicans, you have gone over almost every talking point less founding fathers and an interpretation of Christianity which involves making people wait for a kind person to pay for your open heart surgery.
    .
    The general consensus here existing mostly of liberals and a few moderates is that Republicans wanted to sacrifice our health care and that of our next generation for political gain and Romneycare is this bill.
    .
    Please, do the following:
    .
    1) Cite specific differences which do all of the evils you claim it has.
    .
    2) Explain why Republicans were not simply participating in cutting the bill down to this.
    .
    3) If Romneycare is in line with conservative principals and delivers health care better than pre-Romneycare, please explain why a 70 page bill was not proposed and passed between 2000 and 2006 when Republicans had complete control. In a good way, this would have given Republicans a strategic advantage in 2006 and 2008, since people do not vote for the love of the letter D over the letter R but due to who offers what we believe government needs to do.
    .

    It is my belief that, if Obama stood before either house and said “good morning” the Republicans would try to pass a non-binding resolution to say that it is a terrible morning and that the president was wrong for making a wish that we have a good morning.

  • http://patricksartor.wordpress.com patricksartor

    Sorry,
    I thought my entry was eaten the first time, copied it just in case and it came up twice.
    .
    Answering the questions just once is fine.

  • oizydoizy

     
    It’s not often that you see a politician trying his hardest to disavow what may eventually be remembered as his finest achievement. Nevertheless, it’s fun to watch.
     
    That poor crypto-Democrat has his work cut out for him.
     

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