Notice Anything Regarding All These Angry, Miserable White Liberal Women?
CNN's Top Legal Analyst Was Blunt About the Minnesota Dems' Outrageous Anti-ICE Lawsuit
Fox News' Greg Gutfeld Has an Exercise That Makes the 'Fake Empathy Liberal...Return...
About That Sonic Boom Weapon We Reportedly Deployed During Trump's Venezuela Raid...
Do You Think Liberals Know They're Wrong About the ICE Shooting in Minneapolis?
Is Trump Souring on Pam Bondi?
Dilbert Creator Scott Adams Has Died at 68
Here's the Insane Reason a U.K. Asylum Seeker Was Spared Jail Despite Sex...
Trump to Iran: Help Is on the Way
Flashback: There Was a Time Democrats Were Okay With Separating Illegal Immigrant Families
Trump Administration Makes Another Big Move to Deport Somalis
ICE, ICE Baby?
The Left Is So Desperate to Defend Their Minneapolis Narrative, They’ve Hit a...
A Chicago Man Was Brutally Attacked in the Loop. Guess How Many Times...
The December Inflation Report Is Here, and It's Good News
Tipsheet

Romney to Obama, 2009: Embrace the Individual Mandate

Throughout his campaign, Mitt Romney has tried to defend the individual mandate he signed into law in Massachusetts by claiming that such an approach to healthcare is acceptable on a state, but not a federal level. But a recently discovered USA Today op-ed, dated July 30, 2009, contradicts the presidential hopeful's current line of argument. It seems he took to the papers to urge President Obama to adopt the same approach to healthcare nationally.

Advertisement

As Rick Perry once said, "Oops."

The op-ed -- no longer avaiable on USA Today's site, only a Romney fan site -- tells President Obama, "[T]he lessons we learned in Massachusetts could help Washington find" the solution to the healthcare dilemma.

One of the most damning paragraphs reads,

Our experience also demonstrates that getting every citizen insured doesn’t have to break the bank. First, we established incentives for those who were uninsured to buy insurance. Using tax penalties, as we did, or tax credits, as others have proposed, encourages “free riders” to take responsibility for themselves rather than pass their medical costs on to others. This doesn’t cost the government a single dollar. Second, we helped pay for our new program by ending an old one — something government should do more often. The federal government sends an estimated $42 billion to hospitals that care for the poor: Use those funds instead to help the poor buy private insurance, as we did.

How does he explain this away? In debates, Romney defended his plan as "right for Massachusetts, not for the country at large," and often, he'd turn his answer into a defense of federalism. Yet here, while the healthcare bill was still under construction, he urges the president to embrace the individual mandate -- an idea that Obama had vehemently opposed during his own run for the presidency.

Advertisement

Related:

HEALTH CARE

Furthermore, how would he run against Obama on this issue in the general election? How will he defend his state's use of the individual mandate if he urged the president to enact the same on a national scale? Nearly 60% of Americans oppose the individual mandate, and yet Romney would be unable to champion that position -- he already championed the other side.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement