Obamacare,  where the liberal dream crashes and burns  
 
_Margaret Wente_ (http://www.theglobeandmail.com/authors/margaret-wente)   
The Globe and Mail 
 
Published Saturday, Dec. 07  2013


 
 
 
On Wednesday afternoon, a bunch of twentysomethings were summoned to the  
White House to hear an infomercial from Barack Obama himself. He was pitching 
 health insurance. 
“The product is good. It’s affordable,” the President told them. “… We’
re  going to keep working through any glitches, problems that may come up.” 
He urged  them to spread the word. “So if you’re a student body president, 
set up a  conference on campus … If you’re a bartender, have a happy hour … 
Post something  on your Facebook or Instagram.”

 
Mr. Obama desperately needs healthy young people to sign on to Obamacare in 
 order to subsidize the old and sick. But the salesman-in-chief can’t close 
the  deal. His approval rating among millennials has sunk to a dismal 41 
per cent,  according to a _new  poll_ 
(http://iop.harvard.edu/blog/iop-releases-new-fall-poll-5-key-findings-and-trends-millennial-viewpoints?utm_source=ho
mepage&utm_medium=hero&utm_campaign=Fall2013Survey)  conducted by Harvard 
University’s Institute of Politics. More than half  of those under 25 would 
like to throw him out of office. Fifty-seven per cent of  millennials say 
they disapprove of Obamacare, and less than a third say they’re  likely to sign 
up. 
The Affordable Care Act was going to save the world. But now, the law’s  
supporters will be happy just to save the furniture. They used to talk about  
transformation. Today they’re simply hoping for survival.
 
 
The botched website was an unforced catastrophe. But that’s not the real  
problem with Obamacare. The real problem, as dozens of thoughtful 
commentators  have concluded, is the law itself. Obamacare is a massive policy 
experiment that  seeks to remake one-sixth of the U.S. economy – a body that’s 
so 
fantastically  complex, with so many players and so many moving parts, that 
nobody can possibly  understand how they all interact. Tweak one part, and 
other parts will behave in  unpredictable ways. Pull on a thread and half the 
sweater may unravel. Even Max  Baucus, the Democratic Senate finance 
chairman, has warned that implementing a  law so complicated could be a “train 
wreck.” 
The biggest threat to Obamacare is not Republicans. The biggest threat is  
Murphy’s Law, along with its corollary, the Law of Unintended Consequences.  
These are the most powerful laws in the world. They are even more powerful 
than  the Affordable Care Act, and they are the nemesis of all master plans. 
 Evidently, the President and his merry band of wonks had never heard of  
them. 
Mr. Obama is in a tough spot. It’s not just that he looks incompetent – it’
s  that he looks deceitful. He told people they could keep their plans, 
their  doctors and their hospitals, and that their insurance payments wouldn’t 
go up.  That turns out not to be true for a lot of people, who feel duped. 
If they’d  known what Obamacare would really mean, they wouldn’t have 
supported it. And the  worst isn’t over. Hundreds of thousands of employers 
still 
have to make  decisions about their coverage. And if the millennials don’t 
get on board,  prices will go up more.
 
 
But Obamacare is much more than a test of a presidency. It’s a test of  
whether big government can solve big problems. And so far, the answer is very  
bad for the entire liberal enterprise. As venerable left-leaning pundit 
Thomas  Edsall _wrote_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/20/opinion/edsall-the-obamacare-crisis.html?_r=0)
   in The New York Times, “Cumulatively, recent 
developments surrounding the  rollout of Obamacare strengthen the most damaging 
conservative portrayals of  liberalism and of big government – that on one 
hand government is too much a  part of our lives, too invasive, too big, too 
scary, too regulatory, too in your  face, and on the other hand it is 
incompetent, bureaucratic and  expropriatory.” 
This is a cautionary tale for Canada, where progressive politicians are 
fond  of big ideas that will fix (fill in social problem here). It should 
resonate  throughout Ontario, where the Liberal government’s two signature 
policies – to  transform energy and early education – have turned into 
expensive 
failures. It  should be studied very carefully by the two progressive 
federal parties, who may  find that voters are increasingly skeptical of 
government promises to cure  whatever ails us. 
The truth is that no matter how many smart people are in charge, 
governments  can’t run things very well. Here in Canada, they run 
education and health-care systems that are quite expensive, but no more  
than pretty good. (That’s the Canadian way. U.S. health care and education 
span  the extremes, from superb to awful, while we’re content to settle in the  
mediocre middle.) The basic difference between progressives and 
conservatives  (not Republican or Harper conservatives, but the Burkean kind) 
is that  
progressives are convinced that rational planners with good intentions and  
advanced degrees can transform society. Conservatives are more doubtful. They
’d  be happy if governments just collected taxes and fixed the roads.  
Mr. Obama lost the kids because he promised the moon and couldn’t deliver.  
The kids know that even Facebook and Instagram can’t fix what’s wrong with 
 Obamacare. So now he’s trying to change the channel. Now he’s going to 
tackle  economic inequality, which he calls “the defining challenge of our 
time.” But  this time, the kids have tuned out.

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