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by: Bill Moyers and Michael Winship,
Push finally came to shove in Washington this week as the battle for health
care escalated from scattered sniper fire into all-out combat. If it all
seems to be getting more and more confusing, join the club. It's hard to see
what's happening through all the gun smoke.
The Republicans have more than health care reform in their bombsights - they
want a loss for Obama so crushing it will bring the administration to its
knees and restore GOP control of Congress after next year's elections. In
the words of Republican Senator Jim DeMint, "If we're able to stop Obama on
this, it will be his Waterloo. It will break him."
The "Waterloo" of DeMint's metaphor, of course, is not the 1974 Abba hit but
the battle in 1815 that ended Napoleon Bonaparte's rule as Emperor of France
- a humiliating defeat and a turning point in European history.
Right-wingers like Glenn Beck see Obama as Napoleon incarnate, a popular
emperor who must be stopped.
Here's what Beck said on his television show Monday, July 20: "I'm telling
you, this guy is dangerous. He's never lost before. He won't understand ...
like, 'Who are you to question me?' I mean, this guy is practically an
imperial President now. When he starts to lose and people start to question
him and push him back against the wall, he's not gonna know how to react."
The Republican strategy is almost identical to the way they turned health
care into Waterloo for Bill and Hillary Clinton in 1993. Back then, one of
their chief propagandists, William Kristol, urged his party to block any
health care plan for fear that Democrats would be seen as "the generous
protector of middle class interests." Now he's telling the GOP to "go for
the kill ... throw the kitchen sink ... drive a stake through its heart ...
We need to start over."
So in lockstep are the Republicans that when strategist Alex Castellanos
issued a memo outlining their battle plan, party chairman Michael Steele
parroted large sections of it word for word in a speech at Washington's
National Press Club. Asked a health care-related question that took him off
script, Steele replied, "I don't do policy."
As the Republicans fired away, big business stepped up the attack too, their
lobbying and advertising guns blazing. The Chamber of Commerce, for one,
announced a major campaign of rallies and print and Internet ads to crush
the White House plan for a competitive public option allowing consumers to
choose between a government plan and private health insurance. In key states
where members of Congress remain on the fence, the airwaves are vibrating
with television commercials aimed at shifting hearts and minds away from any
change that might threaten profits.
President Obama rejected the Republicans' Waterloo metaphor and mounted a
massive media counteroffensive of his own. But the President has already run
into booby traps of his own making and minefields laid by members of his own
party, exacerbated when the Congressional Budget Office reported that reform
plans, instead of controlling costs, would send the national debt further
into the stratosphere.
Meanwhile, supporters who want to scrap the present system for fundamental
change are staring glumly though the fog of war at a battlefield in total
disarray. They fear that in the White House's desire to get a bill - any
bill - passed by Congress, it will have been so compromised, so bent to
favor the big interests, that it will be less Waterloo than watered down, a
steady diluting of the change they had hoped for and that America needs.
The big drug companies are already so pleased with what they've been
promised that they've brought back Harry and Louise - the make-believe
couple who starred in TV ads that helped torpedo the Clinton health care
plan - but this time they're in favor of reform.
According to The Associated Press, the drug industry's trade group PhRMA
(the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America) and the drug
company Pfizer "reported spending more money than other health care
organizations on lobbying in the second quarter of this year" - $6.2 million
from PhRMA, $5.6 million from Pfizer.
"Including its latest report, PhRMA has now spent $13.1 million lobbying so
far this year. Pfizer has reported $11.7 million in lobbying expenses for
2009."
This is part of the reason, as Alicia Mundy and Laura Meckler recently wrote
in The Wall Street Journal, that "the pharmaceuticals industry, which
President Barack Obama promised to 'take on' during his campaign, is winning
most of what it wants in the health-care overhaul."
Their story describes "a string of victories" plucked from the Senate
Finance Committee by drug company lobbyists, including no cost-cutting
steps, no cheaper drugs to be allowed across the border from Canada, and no
direct Federal government negotiations with the pharmaceutical companies to
lower Medicare drug prices.
And that's not all. The Senate Health Committee is giving the biotech
industry monopoly protection against competition from generic drugs for 12
years after they go on the market.
No wonder the cost of reform keeps going up and up and up. Could it be that
Harry and Louise are happier because, this time, they're in on the deal?
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