In Friday’s Washington Post business section, columnist Steven Pearlstein — who last week condemned the conservative “
fantasy” that raising taxes is damaging to the economy —
blasted Republicans as “
political terrorists” who are “
poisoning the political well” by peddling “
lies” about liberal health care plans, lies that are “
so misleading, so disingenuous, that they could only spring from a cynical effort to gain partisan political advantage.”
"As a columnist who regularly dishes out sharp criticism, I try not to question the motives of people with whom I don't agree," Pearlstein claimed before warning: "
Today, I'm going to step over that line."
But the “facts” Pearlstein uses to slam the anti-ObamaCare “terrorists” line up better with Democratic talking points than the analysis of non-partisan sources such as the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). For instance, Pearlstein claims it is a lie that the Democratic bills would push people out of private insurance, that it is a lie that the price tag is $1 trillion, and trumpets “offsetting savings” as bringing the cost down to “less than 1 percent of a national income that grows at an average rate of 2.5 percent every year.”
Going in reverse order, Pearlstein's “cost savings” argument is highly dubious. As ABC’s “
The Note”
blog reported July 16, the head of the CBO, Doug Elmendorf, “does not
see health care cost savings in either of the partisan Democratic bills
currently in Congress.”
And looking at the
Congressional Budget Office’s estimate of the annual cost,
which Pearlstein claims would average “about $140 billion [a year],
when things are up and running,” the CBO analysis reveals that average
is artificially low because the plans wait until 2013 for the big
spending to kick in; later years show the cost soaring to $250 billion
per year and growing.
As for the idea that “the vast majority of Americans who are not old
or poor will continue to buy health insurance from private companies,”
the
Lewin Group’s mid-July review
of Democratic legislation estimated that the changes would push more
than 80 million people — about half of us — from private insurance to
the public plan:
“If fully implemented in 2011, we estimate that about
103.9 million people would become covered under the newly established
public plan. Coverage under private insurance would decline by 83.4
million people. This is a 48.4 percent reduction in the number of
people with private insurance (currently 172.5 million people).”
Maybe Pearlstein comes up with different numbers when he analyzes
the data, but to smear Republicans as liars and political terrorists
speaks to a thuggish mindset of someone who refuses to debate the data,
but would rather discredit the critics.
Some excerpts from the hyperbolic August 7 piece, “
Republicans Propagating Falsehoods in Attacks on Health-Care Reform”:
As a columnist who regularly dishes out sharp
criticism, I try not to question the motives of people with whom I
don't agree. Today, I'm going to step over that line.
The recent attacks by Republican leaders and their ideological
fellow-travelers on the effort to reform the health-care system have
been so misleading, so disingenuous, that they could only spring from a
cynical effort to gain partisan political advantage. By poisoning the
political well, they've given up any pretense of being the loyal
opposition. They've become political terrorists, willing to say or do
anything to prevent the country from reaching a consensus on one of its
most serious domestic problems.
There are lots of valid criticisms that can be made against the
health reform plans moving through Congress -- I've made a few myself.
But there is no credible way to look at what has been proposed by the
president or any congressional committee and conclude that these will
result in a government takeover of the health-care system. That is a
flat-out lie whose only purpose is to scare the public and stop
political conversation.
Under any plan likely to emerge from Congress, the vast majority of
Americans who are not old or poor will continue to buy health insurance
from private companies, continue to get their health care from doctors
in private practice and continue to be treated at privately owned
hospitals....
By now, you've probably also heard that health reform will cost taxpayers at least a trillion dollars. Another lie.
First of all, that's not a trillion every year, as most people
assume -- it's a trillion over 10 years, which is the silly way that
people in Washington talk about federal budgets. On an annual basis,
that translates to about $140 billion, when things are up and running.
Even that, however, grossly overstates the net cost to the
government of providing universal coverage. Other parts of the reform
plan would result in offsetting savings for Medicare: reductions in
unnecessary subsidies to private insurers, in annual increases in
payments rates for doctors and in payments to hospitals for providing
free care to the uninsured. The net increase in government spending for
health care would likely be about $100 billion a year, a one-time
increase equal to less than 1 percent of a national income that grows
at an average rate of 2.5 percent every year....
Health reform is a test of whether this country can function once
again as a civil society -- whether we can trust ourselves to embrace
the big, important changes that require everyone to give up something
in order to make everyone better off. Republican leaders are eager to
see us fail that test. We need to show them that no matter how many
lies they tell or how many scare tactics they concoct, Americans will
come together and get this done.
If health reform is to be anyone's Waterloo, let it be theirs.
—Rich Noyes is Research Director at the Media Research Center.