Posted by David Hyman:
The Perils of High Public Office: II
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_08_16-2009_08_22.shtml#1250802875


   National Review Online [1]just posted a piece that I did on the
   Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act, and its implications for our
   latest efforts at health (insurance) reform.

   Here's the conclusion of the piece:

   No one can predict whether the latest effort at health-care reform
   will meet a similar ignominious defeat. But this story does hold
   lessons for the current debate.

   First, health care is personal. If you mess with people�s health
   coverage, they won�t just write a nasty letter to the editor. They
   will show up at demonstrations with home-made signs, scream at you,
   chase you down the street, and maybe vote you out of office. So you�d
   better have a good reason for doing what you�re doing, and a
   compelling explanation of how your plan would personally benefit your
   constituents.

   Second, framing is critical. The Obama administration has shifted
   ground several times, trying to find a frame that will persuade
   voters. It remains to be seen whether the latest frame � it�s about
   providing people with insurance; insurers are evil, and the reforms
   will make them behave � will stick. Update: today's [2]new framing is
   that health reform is "a core ethical and moral obligation." 

   Third, don�t assume that people who disagree with you are stupid,
   misinformed, greedy, or evil. They may just have different preferences
   about health insurance, taxes, income redistribution, or the role of
   government in health care. If preferences differ, telling people they
   can�t understand the complexities won�t help matters. Such
   condescension just makes aggrieved citizens angrier.

   Fourth, be lucky. The administration had better hope that the elderly
   don�t figure out that reform will be paid for, in part, with hundreds
   of billions in �savings� from cutting Medicare. (In past years,
   Democrats routinely savaged Republicans for proposing far smaller
   Medicare cuts.) If seniors figure this one out, support from AARP�s
   national office won�t be any more help this time than it was last time
   � even if AARP stays on board, and there are already indications that
   it won�t.

   Finally, embrace your sense of humor and irony. The administration of
   a former teacher of constitutional law complains about Americans
   exercising their constitutional right to petition the government for
   redress of grievances. A party that elected a community organizer
   president complains about organized communities. One of the architects
   of the Democrats� current health-care strategy (Rep. Jan Schakowsky)
   is the very community organizer responsible for the horde of seniors
   that surrounded Rostenkowski�s car. Last year, dissent was the highest
   form of patriotism. Now, dissent is un-American, and reporting dissent
   is suddenly patriotic. Who knows what fresh irony tomorrow will bring?

References

   1. 
http://healthcare.nationalreview.com/post/?q=MTk4OTBkMmM5Zjk4MjRkNWI1OTE1MDdkYzIzMGRmZTQ=
   2. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/20/us/politics/20obama.html

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