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One News Now:
PERSPECTIVES: Great Scott!
by Thomas Sowell - Syndicated Columnist
OneNewsNow.com
January 26, 2010
Some of the
most melancholy letters and e-mails that are sent to me are from people
who lament that there is nothing they can do about the bad policies that
they see ruining this country. They don't have any media outlet for their
opinions and the letters they send to their congressmen are either ignored
or are answered by form letters with weasel words. They feel powerless.
Sometimes I remind
them that the whole political establishment -- both Democrats and
Republicans, as well as the mainstream media -- were behind amnesty for
illegal immigrants, until the public opinion polls showed that the voters
were not buying it. If politicians can't do anything else right, they can
count votes.
It was the same
story with the government's healthcare takeover legislation. The Democrats
have such huge majorities in both houses of Congress that they could
literally lock the Republicans out of the room where they were deciding
what to do, set arbitrary deadlines for votes, and cut off debate in the
Senate. The mainstream media was on board with this bill, too. To hear the
talking heads on TV, you would think it was a done deal.
Then Scott Brown got elected to the "Kennedy seat" in the Senate, showing
that that seat was not the inheritance of any dynasty to pass on.
Moreover, it showed that the voters were already fed up with the Obama
administration, even in liberal Massachusetts, as well as in Virginia and
New Jersey. The backtracking on healthcare began immediately. Politicians
can count votes. Once again, the public was not helpless.
One seat did not deprive the Democrats of big majorities in Congress. But
one seat was the difference between being able to shut off debate in the
Senate and having to allow debate on what was in this massive legislation.
From day one it was clear that concealing what was in this bill was the
key to getting it passed.
That is why there had to be arbitrary deadlines -- first to get it passed
before the August 2009 recess, then before Labor Day, then before the
Christmas recess.
The president could wait months before deciding to give a general the
troops he asked for to fight the war in Afghanistan, but there was never
to be enough time for the healthcare bill to be exposed in the light of
day to the usual congressional hearings and debate. Moreover, despite all
the haste, the healthcare program would not actually go into effect until
after the 2012 presidential election. In other words, the public was not
supposed to find out whether the government's takeover of medical care
actually made things better or worse until after it was too late.
Although even the members of Congress who voted on this massive
legislation did not have time to read its thousands of pages, just the way
it was being rushed through in the dark should have told us all we needed
to know. For many voters, that turned out to be enough.
Even after Scott Brown came out of nowhere to make a stunning upset
election victory, there were still some cute political tricks that could
have been pulled to save the healthcare bill. But enough Democrats saw the
handwriting on the wall that they were not going to risk their own
re-election to save this bill that Barack Obama has been hell-bent to
pass, even when polls showed repeatedly that the public didn't want it.
President Obama's desire to do something "historic" by succeeding, where
previous presidents had failed, was perfectly consistent for a man
consumed with his own ego satisfaction, rather than the welfare of the
country or even of his own political party.
As for the public, it doesn't matter if your congressman answers your
letter with a form letter, or doesn't answer at all. What matters is that
you let him know what you are for or against and, when enough people do
that -- whether in letters, in polls or in an election -- politicians get
the message, because they know their jobs depend on it.
As for what is likely to happen to healthcare, neither the bill passed by
the House of Representatives nor the Senate bill can be expected to be
enacted into law. Meanwhile, Obama's reaction to his political setback has
been to respond rhetorically and to call on the political operatives who
helped engineer his successful election campaign in 2008. But the public
did not know him then, and his rhetoric may not fool them again, now that
they do.
COPYRIGHT 2010
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Thomas Sowell is a
senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, Stanford, CA
94305.
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