Just after that happened, Pres. Barack Obama
visited the state and there proclaimed that he would authorize the period in
which the federal government picks up all reimbursement costs of expansion
(Louisiana still will have to fork over several million dollars extra the first
half of the next fiscal year to cover administrative costs) to the first three
years of it for a state, not in the 2014-2016 period as the law reads. As it
currently stands, Louisiana would receive total reimbursement for care costs only
during the first six months of its next fiscal year.
Keep in mind that Obama typically operates
in a dictatorial mode whenever Congress insists on following the Constitution
in its power to make law by refusing to pass Obama’s requests; he responds by issuing
extra-constitutional executive orders and signing statements to attempt to
bypass the rules by which this representative democracy exists, so he has
gotten into the habit of saying he will make things happen that constitutionally
he cannot. The fact is, he can promise only to put this idea into the budget
for the Republican-led Congress to do with it whatever it sees fit.
The New Orleans Times-Picayune subsequently produced an article
wondering if the move presented some kind of “trap” for the state’s Republicans
in Congress. Apparently without jest, it speculated that they would feel
pressure to go along with this proposal. I imagine my professional colleague
when asked to comment about the notion for the article had to keep from
laughing as he gave input regarding this ridiculous presumption. And others of the state's media, while not going this far, actually seemed to treat seriously the thought that this additional money could come Louisiana's way.
Let’s see, so some doubt unbelievably remains
that the majority of GOP congressmen from Louisiana who have voted dozens of
times to get rid of the misnamed Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (“Obamacare”)
that includes expansion, and of whom all within the last month voted to send a
budget bill that included
eliminating Obamacare to Pres. Nyet who vetoed it, would approve of a budget
designed to encourage the failing law’s adoption in the states? That they would
support a plan to spend more money to produce worse health outcomes?
Simply put, this speculation has
nothing to do with the real world. Obama’s request on this score is dead on
arrival in that, on pragmatic policy grounds, every Republican would vote to
amend out that provision in the budget they send to him, Louisianans included. My
Advocate colleague Stephanie Grace seems
a bit puzzled by that forecast reaction, with her observation
that this cooperation should come, because “Whether or not they like the health
care law, it’s the law of the land, and there are strong arguments in favor of
helping to ease the cost of complying with it in a state that’s facing a
massive budget shortfall.”
Except that, odds are, two years
from now Obamacare with its Medicaid expansion component, battered by its continually
escalating costs now double the original laughable predicted amount, no
longer will exist in its present form as law of the land. As providers continue
to lose money with the expanded population compared to treating them as
uncompensated care patients and with expansion forcing higher private insurance
premiums, the unsustainable
system born broken (perhaps intentionally, following a familiar Obama
tactic of taking a problem, making it worse, then blaming it on anybody else
and suggesting more of the same will solve the problem his less-intense
application exacerbated) will not survive – especially as chances increasingly favor
continued Republican control of Congress and retaking
of the White House.
That’s the path the Louisiana GOP
members will follow – tear down the entire rotted structure of Obamacare and
replace with something like Sen. Bill Cassidy’s demonstrably superior Patient
Freedom Act. And they should, for this represents the best path to stopping
deleterious Medicaid expansion in Louisiana in its tracks.
Ultimately, any discussion of
Louisiana receiving three years’ worth of full reimbursement from the federal government
on Medicaid expansion flees from reality if it does not acknowledge that
existence of any such opportunity ranges from extraordinarily unlikely to not a
chance in the real world.
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