Happy President’s Day all. An abbreviated holiday post today. Sending along a few things I thought you would enjoy:
Democrats Keep Winning, Republicans Keep Struggling - Visit here for links to my recent political writings, interviews and the talk I gave Thursday night on 2024 with special guest Tom Suozzi. Remember:
Joe Biden is a good President. The country is better off. The Democratic Party is strong and winning elections across the US. And they have Trump, the most unfit person to ever run for President in all of our history.
Great New Biden Ad. Please Share Through Your Networks - I wrote about Trump’s ongoing betrayal of the country in this recent post. This powerful new ad from the Biden campaign goes hard on this theme. Please watch, share.
Washington Post: “Obamacare worked. The nation should double down” - From the Washington Post editorial board:
After President Barack Obama and a Democratic Congress shepherded the Affordable Care Act into law 14 years ago, Republican critics portrayed it in almost apocalyptic terms. One member of the House called it “the most dangerous piece of legislation ever passed in Congress.” A presidential candidate called it “the death knell for freedom.” Even now, the GOP has not entirely given up on bashing the law known as Obamacare. Former president Donald Trump has said he will “seriously look at alternatives” because, as he put it, “Obamacare sucks.”
No, it doesn’t. To the contrary, it’s kind of incredible how badly those initial Republican prophecies of doom have aged. On its key objective — reducing the rate of uninsured Americans — Obamacare has been a clear success. Whereas 18.2 percent of non-elderly Americans lacked health coverage in 2010, only 9.2 percent were without it in the first three months of 2023, according to U.S. government survey data. The Biden administration announced last month that a record 21 million Americans have enrolled in health-care insurance plans through Obamacare’s marketplaces. Government subsidies ensure that none of these enrollees pay more than 8.5 percent of their household income for a decent health plan; many qualify for plans at low or no cost to themselves. The premium volatility that defined Obamacare’s early years has settled. Meanwhile, the law’s expansion of eligibility for Medicaid has covered millions more people.
And the law has reshaped Americans’ expectations about their health-care system, enabling young adults to stay on their parents’ health plans up to age 26, providing coverage for people with preexisting conditions and reducing the risk that leaving a big employer means losing health insurance. By cutting “job lock,” it has the long-term potential to boost entrepreneurship and risk-taking.
Granted, getting here was hard. Marketplace premiums initially bounced around. HealthCare.gov, the federal portal for Americans to buy Obamacare insurance plans, was at first nonfunctional. A 2012 Supreme Court ruling enabled states to choose whether to expand Medicaid within their borders, and 10 still have not done so, leaving many people in those states without coverage.
But those who counseled patience, arguing that the most ambitious health-care reform in a generation would eventually succeed, turned out to be right. Obamacare, which polled badly in its early years, in part due to partisan GOP condemnation, has become quite popular: 59 percent of adults favor it, according the most recent data.
Still, risks lie ahead. Even if a reelected Mr. Trump were to try and fail at repealing and replacing Obamacare, as he did during his presidency, a second Trump administration could still undermine the law by executive action — as he also did while in the White House. Perhaps more important, leaving the status quo intact could result in disruption, no matter who wins the 2024 election. The federal subsidies that help Americans afford Obamacare marketplace plans are set to partially expire in 2025. Without them, many people — particularly those in their 50s and 60s, whom insurers may still charge more for coverage — would see their costs spike. Some would risk going uninsured rather than pay higher premiums.
Meanwhile, some 2 million Americans fall into the “Medicaid coverage gap” in states that still refuse to expand Medicaid. A quirk in the Affordable Care Act denies them federal subsidies to buy private insurance on Obamacare marketplaces. Most of these are working, low-income people — cashiers, cooks, waiters, house cleaners and janitors, according to KFF, a nonprofit organization that researches health-care issues. States gain nothing from holding out on this vulnerable group; KFF projects that non-expansion states could actually realize fiscal benefits from expanding Medicaid to cover them, because doing so would bring a large influx of federal money.
As experience continues to show what a mistake it has been not to expand Medicaid, pressure could mount on Republican state leaders who still refuse to do it. But it might fall on Congress to finish the job, by boosting the incentives for holdout states, or by helping affected people buy private plans. While lawmakers are at it, they should address the most significant area in which the law has fallen short: controlling high national health-care spending. The law’s drafters included measures to cut the national health tab, such as a tax on high-value “Cadillac” health-care plans. Congress eliminated the Cadillac tax years after the law passed. At a time of high national deficits, and in a country in which the health sector accounts for more than 17 percent of gross domestic product, Congress should reconsider — indeed, expand on — Obamacare’s full promise.
These continuing challenges should not obscure the big picture, though. For all the haranguing, hyperbole and hand-wringing, Obamacare is a policy success.
The ACA has been one of the most successful major policy initiative of the last several generations of American politics. It’s another reason I am proud of my party, proud of my President and always proud of my country.
Will be back at it at full strength tomorrow. Keep working hard all - Simon
I am not going to do a formal response to Ezra, at least not tomorrow. But like many other commentators I think he is dramatically overstating Trump's strength. The core of my election narrative is that Trump is weak, not strong; we keep winning elections everywhere of all kinds; Joe Biden is a good President, the country is better off and we have a very strong case for re-election. To me the likely scenerio this year is a strong Democratic win. For more read my posts, watch my latest video, listen to my interview with Ezra for a few weeks back. It's all there for you in every possible media format. And we need to do more, worry less, and just go out and win the election with the team we have as we've been winning all these other elections in recent years. If we do more and worry less we should have the election we all want to have this year. There are going to be good days, and bad days. Don't get blown around - stay grounded, help tell our story and all of us need to not get so blown around by things like Ezra's article. It's self-indulgent. We don't have time for it. Head down, do the work, spread good news or ads like today through your networks. DO NOT GET BLOWN OFF COURSE.
Love the ad. Also happy to see Governor Evers in Wisconsin signed into law new legislative maps today to help even the playing field there. As the Wisconsin Democratic Party says, "This was only possible because of the tireless efforts of grassroots activists, organizers, and democracy-defending leaders." Bravo to all!
Re Ezra Klein in the Times - I wrote another Letter to the Editor yesterday:
To the Editor:
With democracy at a crossroads at home and abroad, the NY Times appears relentlessly driven each day to undermine President Biden. Ezra Klein’s latest piece continues the pile-on. It's especially troubling to see the Times make light of the reality that legislatively and economically, Joe Biden has been the most successful American president since FDR. Even Klein admits, "I am convinced he is able to do the job of the presidency. He is sharp in meetings; he makes sound judgments. I cannot point you to a moment when Biden faltered in his presidency because his age had slowed him.” Additionally, concerned pundits cite small sample polls predicting a Trump victory while turning a blind eye to the fact that Democrats continue defying expectations in actual elections since Dobbs. Biden also enjoys overwhelming strength among 2024 Democratic primary voters; he even beat back challengers by over 40% in New Hampshire where his name wasn’t on the ballot.
The choice for voters in November will be stark: democracy or dictatorship. Whatever the president's age, we know democracy continues if America re-elects Joe Biden, and a Constitutional succession plan remains in place. Meanwhile the crazed, elderly Republican alternative faces 91 felony counts, owes over $500 million in penalties for fraud, defamation and sexual assault, encourages Russia to “do whatever the hell they want” to our NATO allies, is reportedly considering Tucker Carlson as his VP, and promises to be a dictator ("but only on day one"). Not a hard choice - I'm proudly with Team Biden-Harris and the Democratic Party in the existential fight for freedom over fascism.
Sincerely,
Jon Bierman