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Mitt Romney Flip-Flops on ObamaCare--But So Does Everybody Else

Yes, Mitt Romney has shown incorrigible inconsistency on the mandate. Question is: Why should he be any different?

A. Barton Hinkle | 7.9.2012 12:00 PM

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You know it's a slow week when a flip-flop by Mitt Romney leads the news. It's like reporting that somebody posted a status update on Facebook. On any given issue, Romney has more positions than a Craftmaticadjustable bed.

His latest tergiversation concerns health care. Again. This time he says the charge imposed by the Affordable Care Act on individuals who do not purchase insurance is a tax, not a penalty, because the Supreme Court says so. And he doesn't approve of that sort of thing, not one bit.

This is rich coming from Romney – who imposed in Massachusetts the very same insurance requirement he now denounces, using the very same arguments about personal responsibility that Democrats have been deploying the past few months.

Romney might have gotten his mandate idea from the Heritage Foundation, which first floated the idea in 1989, back when Barack Obama was still in law school. Many right-wingers later glommed onto the proposal as an alternative to Hillarycare. Some of them might even have thought it was a good idea at the time. Nothing like hearing your enemies adopt your position to make you change your mind.

Lately liberals have been heaping scorn on conservatives for their about-face on the mandate. This is further evidence that the team-sports approach to politics is largely an exercise in patting yourself on the back by punching the other guy in the face. After all, it's not as though the port side of the political spectrum has been a paragon of intellectual consistency either. In one breath, Democrats are praising the high court for upholding the mandate as a tax – and insisting it is not a tax at all in the next.

On Thursday, The New York Times reported that "the Obama campaign seized on Mr. Romney's words, calling it a glaring contradiction" of his previous stance. This is rich, too. Two seconds on Google will bring up video clips of candidate Barack Obama condemning the individual mandate as unworkable. If it were such a good idea, he scoffed in 2008, then we could solve homelessness simply "by mandating that everybody buy a house." Now the mandate is the cornerstone of his proudest first-term accomplishment.

But wait, it gets better. The Obama administration defended the constitutionality of the mandate under the Constitution's necessary-and-proper clause. The mandate was necessary, the administration argued, because without it people would wait until they got sick to buy insurance (since other provisions of the law guaranteed they could not be turned down). If that happened, then premiums would skyrocket, more people would forgo insurance until they got sick, and the industry would enter a death spiral. In short, the mandate was absolutely essential to making the other provisions of the ACA work.

The administration then turned around and said the mandate was not essential at all. One question before the Supreme Court asked whether the mandate was severable: that is, whether the rest of the law could remain standing if the mandate were struck down, or if the entire law would have to be discarded. The administration argued that the mandate it had just described as crucial to the law's function was indeed severable, and could be struck down without taking the rest of the ACA with it.

Since the Supreme Court upheld the mandate, that issue did not come up. But in upholding the mandate, the five-justice majority applied its own double standard.

The first question the Supremes had to answer asked whether the lawsuit to overturn the health-care law was premature under the Anti-Injunction Act. The  act stipulates that you cannot sue to prevent the collection of a tax; you can sue only after a tax has been imposed. But the mandate does not go into effect for another two years.

The court majority said the charge imposed by the mandate does not qualify as a tax. "The text of the [Anti-Injunction Act] applies to suits 'for the purpose of restraining the assessment or collection of any tax'," wrote Chief Justice John Roberts. "Congress, however, chose to describe the '[s]hared responsibility payment'… not as a 'tax,' but as a 'penalty'." And "that label is fatal to the application of the Anti-Injunction Act."

Then the high court turned around and said the individual mandate was a proper exercise of power under – wait for it – the congressional taxing authority. "It is of course true that the Act describes the payment as a 'penalty,' not a 'tax.' But while that label is fatal to the application of the Anti-Injunction Act … it does not determine whether the payment may be viewed as an exercise of Congress's taxing power." Oh.

During oral arguments, Justice Samuel Alito got a laugh when he needled the Obama administration's lawyer for pulling this very stunt. "Today you are arguing that the penalty is not a tax," Alito said to Solicitor General Donald Verrilli. "Tomorrow you are going to be back and you will be arguing the penalty is a tax." Well,Verrilli must be the one laughing now. It worked.

So, yes, Mitt Romney has shown incorrigible inconsistency on the mandate. Question is: Why should he be any different?

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A. Barton Hinkle is senior editorial writer and a columnist at the Richmond Times-Dispatch.

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  1. sarcasmic   13 years ago

    firstieth!

  2. Enjoy Every Sandwich   13 years ago

    This is a prime example of why I laugh out loud whenever anyone insists that the two "major" parties are different. Any differences are superficial at best. The parties are the same in their moral bankruptcy and intellectual vacuity.

    1. Dylan   13 years ago

      Come on... red and blue are totally different colors.

    2. sarcasmic   13 years ago

      One outwardly despises economic liberty while giving lip service to personal liberty, and the other outwardly despises personal liberty while giving lip service to economic liberty.

      They're like totally different and stuff, you know?

      1. alan_s   13 years ago

        One of the problems is that people separate personal liberty and economic liberty as if they're distinct.

    3. poguemahoney   13 years ago

      Exactly right...

  3. Mr. Soul   13 years ago

    again we're talkin about flip-flopping as if it were a bad thing. If O would have flipped on Ocare, he'd be a shoe-in for re-election.

    I am for Mitt because he will do what is in his political interest, not because he has a steadfast agenda. If the tea party puts up a Congress that cuts spending, he'll read the polls and sign the cuts.

    1. Lisa   13 years ago

      exactly. Pragmatically speaking, the important thing is...who is more likely to get rid of Obamacare? In the end, the consistency of the person's actions don't matter as much as whether the legislation GOES AWAY. If Obama got rid of it, great! But he wouldn't.

  4. Registration At Last!   13 years ago

    I think there is a difference between "flip-flopping" on one hand, and "Schrodingering" or "quantum-fielding" on the other.

    Obama flip-flopped on the mandate. He was against it before he was for it, to paraphrase Sen. Kerry.

    Mitt flip-flopped on abortion. But on the mandate, he has not really flip-flopped from one position to the opposite. He actually tries to maintain two contradictory positions at once. It's a tax, and not a tax, at the same time. It's the Death of Freedom, and totally not the death of freedom.

    Mitt is trying to pleasure the American voter much the same way that Dr. Manhattan tried to pleasure Silk Spectre, and it could be with similarly disappointing results.

    1. Moogle   13 years ago

      +1

      Gotta love a political site with Watchmen sex references.

    2. poguemahoney   13 years ago

      But that SIlk Spectre was just impossible to please!!!

  5. CampingInYourPark   13 years ago

    And exactly what difference does it make what you call the taxalty? Just call it bad policy and get rid of the POS

    1. Loki   13 years ago

      It's not a taxalty, it's a penaltax.

      1. R C Dean   13 years ago

        See, folks, that's how you tow the lion.

      2. Moogle   13 years ago

        Penaltrix is more fun. Will Obamacare cover my therapeutic sessions with my dominatrix?

        1. Mr. Soul   13 years ago

          Not sure on that but it will cover visits to the analrapist.

  6. Juice   13 years ago

    Whether it is a tax or not is actually irrelevant.

    Congress does not have the authority to regulate what it is regulating using the mandate.

    If it doesn't have the authority to regulate it, then it can't use any means at all to regulate it, whether it's a tax or a fine or whatever.

    The penaltax is being used to regulate what Congress can't regulate.

    The Supreme Court decision is in all ways a pile of shit.

  7. Moogle   13 years ago

    Oh well. Better vote for Obama. Oh, wait...

  8. LimpoSimpo   13 years ago

    lol, dude you gotta just love those bought and paid for politciains.

    http://www.Big-Anon.tk

  9. Loki   13 years ago

    Mitt Romney: the Republican Bill Clinton.

    Like Clinton he will say anything, do anything, pander to anyone if it means getting even one more vote. The only difference is that unlike Bubba Clinton he won't fuck everything that walks upright and has a vagina.

    1. Moogle   13 years ago

      Romney has a vagina?

      Archer: "Phrasing"

  10. Nike air max womens   13 years ago

    This is rich coming from Romney ? who imposed in Massachusetts the very same insurance requirement he now denounces, using the very same arguments about personal responsibility that Democrats have been deploying the past few months.

    1. poguemahoney   13 years ago

      You have to give it to him though, he does it all with a lack of conscience that would do a psycopath proud.

  11. tee shirt pas cher   13 years ago

    After all, it's not as though the port side of the political spectrum has been a paragon of intellectual consistency either. In one breath, Democrats are praising the high court for upholding the mandate as a tax ? and insisting it is not a tax at all in the next.

  12. poguemahoney   13 years ago

    Reason Magazine...arm of the Romney administration. One way you can always tell a real Libetarian: They don't support Mitt Romney!!!!!!! This article is unadulterated feces...Ron Paul is the closest thing we have to a Libertarian, real Libertarians should be supporting him!!! Romney is just another priveliged plutocrat who wants to stifle the free market to favor his class,

  13. Lisa   13 years ago

    We can't do anything about Romneycare and it doesn't matter as much to the rest of the country. That is the beauty of doing things on the state level. Obamacare, on the other hand, is a big deal for everyone in the country. I will be voting for Romney because anyone is more likely than Obama to get rid of the thing.

  14. Lisa   13 years ago

    Honestly, I don't know why everyone is so much harder on republicans. I would be thrilled if a democrat flip-flopped once in awhile. It would be a nice break.

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