Friday
Digest
October
18, 2013
THE FOUNDATION
"Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have
this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the
more glorious the triumph." --Thomas Paine
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS
ObamaCare's Third World Experience
Closer examination of the design and implementation of the
ObamaCare enrollment website reveals a long list of mistakes
that could have been avoided, but instead were compounded by
politically motivated decisions made by the Obama
administration. And problems likely won't be resolved for
months.
Late in the design phase of the exchanges, the Department
of Health and Human Services removed fundamental elements of
the site that would have allowed consumers to actually see the
cost of insurance so as to reduce "rate shock." It had become
apparent even to the true believers that ObamaCare wasn't
affordable or flexible in its options. The truth would have
led to reduced enrollment, so HHS opted to reject transparency
for the sake of political expediency -- and they still got low
enrollment. HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius still refuses to
reveal the true number of enrollees, which private sources
estimate is a paltry 20% of the government's target for
October.
The administration, fearing Republican and public
criticism, opted to keep the construction and testing of the
website in-house with trusted campaign tech gurus. Major
decisions were made behind closed doors without oversight,
like granting the no-bid contract to CGI Federal to build the
site. CGI Group, the Canada-based parent company of CGI
Federal, was fired by the Canadian government in 2012 for
missing three years of deadlines and developing a substandard
product that proved unworkable. It will now take several
months of continuous patches to a half-billion-dollar website
built with decade-old
technology and rife with security problems just to gain
basic functionality -- like providing the correct
information to insurers.
What was it Henry Chao, the government's chief technical
officer in charge of establishing the exchanges, said earlier this
year? "Let's just make sure it's not a third-world
experience." So much for that.
But the problem is deeper: ObamaCare as a whole is
ill-conceived and unworkable, on top of being unconstitutional
-- regardless of what the Supreme Court ruled.
Speaking of legal challenges, there is also a lawsuit
moving its way through the courts in Oklahoma that strikes at
the heart of the law. The state's attorney general is filing
suit alleging that the federal exchanges are wrongfully
extending subsidies and tax credits, a power the law
explicitly leaves only to the states. If the court agrees that
the IRS illegally stretched the power of the government to
extend subsidies and tax credits, the whole law could be
undone. Wouldn't that be a pity?
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Silver Linings on the CR and DC Debacles
For complete coverage of the beginning, middle and end of
the government shutdown, and what opportunities it presents
going forward, don't miss Mark Alexander's essay on Great News for
Conservatives.
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