The Daily - Trump Wanted to Scrap Obamacare. His Party Didn’t.
Episode Date: April 3, 2019President Trump has backed away from his call to replace the Affordable Care Act with a Republican alternative. Why did his own party talk him out of it? Guest: Alexander Burns, who covers national po...litics for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily News.
Today, President Trump has backed away from his call
to replace the Affordable Care Act with a Republican alternative.
Alex Burns on why the president's own party talked him out of it.
It's Wednesday, April 3rd.
So last week was as close to a moment of total happiness as President Trump has had in a long time.
in a long time.
President Trump's legal team,
as well as many of those who are close to the president,
are saying they feel
the Mueller report
fully vindicates the president.
There's no way to take this letter
other than a huge win
for the president.
To say White House officials
are happily telling
the American people,
I told you so,
well, that would frankly
be a bit of an understatement.
And after three years of lies and
smears and slander, the Russia hoax is finally dead. The collusion delusion is over.
That's what makes it all the more surprising that his administration decided to dive
right back into one of the most politically damaging fights of his whole presidency,
which is health care.
The Trump Justice Department just announced a major reversal on Obamacare.
Today, he called the Affordable Care Act horrible and is mounting a push to kill it off.
Fresh off his Mueller investigation victory,
some of his biggest supporters are questioning the timing.
Here you have a huge messaging win
for the president and the White House
with this Mueller summary.
Why now? Why do this?
Why now? Maybe even why at all?
And how does he dive back into that politically damaging fight?
He directs the Justice Department to take sides in a lawsuit that has been making its way through the federal courts.
It was brought by Republican legal officials in a number of states.
It has been ruled on by one judge in Texas that the Affordable Care Act is invalid.
A federal judge in Texas has just struck down Obamacare.
True story. Judge Reed O'Connor says the individual mandate, the part of the law that requires you to participate,
is unconstitutional. And because it cannot be separated from the rest of the law, which it
cannot be, the entire law is invalid. It is seen as a really long shot challenge to the Affordable
Care Act, something that in all
likelihood will probably not result in the law being struck down as a whole. But the White House
was going to have to decide at some point whether they were going to defend the ACA at the highest
levels of the legal system or whether they were going to take sides against a law that's on the
books that Congress failed to repeal when it had the chance.
And that's what they did.
We think it'll be upheld and we think it'll do very well in the Supreme Court.
And if the Supreme Court rules that Obamacare is out, we will have a plan that's far better than Obamacare.
And my sense is that under normal circumstances, the White House almost reflexively defends laws put on the books by Congress.
It's a pretty extraordinary step for the president to take sides,
not just against a law that's already on the books,
but really the biggest piece of social legislation that's been passed in recent history.
And he does it at the urging of some of his most conservative advisors in the White House,
including the chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney?
And it's hard to know where to begin when you're talking about how bad the current health care legislation is for small business.
Who, before he was a member of the Trump administration, was a hardliner in the House of Representatives, waging war on the Affordable Care Act from Capitol Hill.
Care Act from Capitol Hill. It's almost as if the folks who wrote this piece of legislation last year either have no idea how small business works or they don't care how small business works.
Either way, the current health care legislation is a complete disaster for small business.
The argument that Mulvaney and others make is that if the president is going to run for
re-election, as a guy who made promises and kept his promises, especially to conservative voters who still care a lot about getting rid of Obamacare, he's got to take every chance he has to go against it.
And given the dynamics of Congress, this is perhaps his best chance.
Maybe his only chance.
Because Democrats now control the House, there is really no shot for Republicans to pass a bill repealing the Affordable Care Act.
So if they're going to take it down, they're going to take it down in the courts.
OK, well, what is the response to this announcement?
Well, Democrats are totally elated.
This is actually an opportunity for us to speak to the American people with clarity.
It's a stark reminder of the difference between our two parties.
Democrats are fighting to expand and improve health care coverage and lower costs,
while Republicans are trying to take it all away and raise costs.
They have spent, at this point, several days on the defensive about some of the claims that they made
about what was likely to be in Robert Mueller's report.
They are desperate to get away from their own divisive fights about the nature of liberal
health care policy you have had in the presidential primaries, in the House of Representatives,
even in the Senate where Democrats aren't in control. Just endless tugs of war between
moderate liberals, very liberal Democrats, far-left Democrats over what kind of health
care system the country ought to have in an ideal world. Should it be European-style single-payer health care?
Should it be a system that just totally does away with private health insurance?
All these kinds of divisive debates on the left that have had Democrats tripping over each other.
But President Trump weighs in the way he does on the Affordable Care Act,
and all of a sudden, all those conflicts hit pause.
Oh, yeah, please.
Happy birthday to you.
And the timing on the Democratic side is sort of comical in that it is literally Nancy Pelosi's
79th birthday.
Happy birthday to you.
The morning after this Justice Department announcement comes out, and when you have
Democrats singing happy birthday to her, there was this sense in
the caucus that she had gotten the best gift a president could have given her.
What is the reaction from Republicans in Congress?
Well, real dismay and surprise and sort of horror.
Even Republicans appear bewildered by President Trump's promise to make the GOP the party of
health care. And not just from the few remaining relatively moderate Republicans.
Some Republicans are nervous about that, including House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy.
According to Axios, McCarthy called the president and told him the decision made no sense,
saying the health care battle helped Democrats win the House and several state capitals last year.
Every Republican analysis of the midterm elections concluded that they lost the House
because of health care more than any other individual policy issue.
So if you are Kevin McCarthy, the new House minority leader, you are just appalled at
the idea that your members are now going to have to have this fight all over again.
Right.
We talked about this with you during the midterms, that there had been this huge public shift
on Obamacare and that voters
who might have previously been against it now do not want it taken away.
That's right. It was less of a thank you to Democrats than a punishment for Republicans,
that Democrats never got the political boost back in 2010, 2012, 2014, that they hoped they would
get for passing a big new social benefit. But what they did ultimately
get was the benefit of voters turning against Republicans who wanted to take those benefits
away. So Obamacare as a term, as a law, is still kind of a mixed bag politically, but there are
elements in that law like protections for people with pre-existing medical conditions that are
enormously popular. And Republicans look back on the last campaign,
the one that ended really rather badly for them, and see that as more than anything else,
the fatal political mistake they made. So why would President Trump, the leader of the Republican
Party who had to have watched that same midterm that you're describing, why would he do this if
the takeaway of that midterm is that the Affordable Care Act is no longer toxic and
might even be liked by a wide cross-section of Americans? In the president's public statements,
and as far as we can tell based on his personal thinking, he recognizes that health care is a
huge political vulnerability for Republicans, that the last thing they did on health care,
that big repeal drive, was politically devastating to them.
And his proclamation that they need to become the party of health care clearly reflects an understanding that a problem needs to be fixed.
So we're going to get rid of Obamacare.
And I said it the other day, the Republican Party will become the party of great health care.
It's good. It's important.
I guess I can see President Trump's argument there.
It feels kind of legitimate.
Wouldn't it be smart for Republicans heading into the next presidential election, 2020,
to recognize that there are things that voters like about the Affordable Care Act,
but in order for it to be a benefit for the Republicans and not the Democrats,
they need to convince voters that the Democratic plan is a bad one and that Republicans will give them a better one.
Right. But giving voters a better version of health care provided by the Republican Party has always had to mean more than just getting rid of the system that currently exists.
to mean more than just getting rid of the system that currently exists. It's this strange kind of bifurcated mental space that Republicans have been living in politically, where they want to run
against Democrats for trying to blow up the health care system and replace it with single payer.
And on the other side, they want to get rid of much of the existing health care system and replace it
with something to be named later. In other words, they don't really have a plan to replace it.
They don't.
And they kind of never have.
Not a consensus plan that's supported by a broad cross-section of the party and voters.
And that's why when the president came out with this position through the Justice Department
and then suggested that Republicans in Congress ought to come up with something great, the
backlash from Republicans at the highest levels of the congressional party
was swift and severe.
The view among congressional Republicans
was that this was just sort of a total fantasy
coming from the president.
The idea that they would not only come up with a plan
and come up with a plan that would be popular
and meet the standards that the president
has laid out in rally after rally,
but that they would do it within a year
and then run on it in
2020 just seemed like it was cut from whole cloth. Is there also a feeling among Republicans toward
the president along the lines of, dude, we just want to stop calling attention to this issue.
It's a losing issue for us. Stop drawing attention to it. Oh, absolutely. And if the concern among
folks like Mick Mulvaney is that walking away from the fight looks like surrender,
the view from a lot of Republicans on the Hill is they've already lost, they can talk about how they lost, or they can talk about other stuff.
And the president is choosing to talk about defeat.
Right.
Instead of talking about what I had imagined Republicans will be talking about for the next couple of months and maybe even the next year, which is the Democratic fight over Medicare for all, the Democratic fight over whether private insurance should even exist.
I had expected that that would be the consuming discussion in the political world and in the political campaigns to come when it came to health care.
So did I. And I think so did a lot of Republican candidates down the ballot preparing for 2020.
There was always going to be tension in the Republican message about Democratic radicalism on health care, because if you are running in 2020 on the idea that Democrats are going to
blow up the current system and replace it with European-style medicine, you're kind of
implicitly defending the status quo system as it exists under Obamacare. It's an extraordinarily
awkward position for Republicans to be in. Can you be opposed to Democratic proposals to make
the healthcare system even more liberal, even more regulated or structured by the government without essentially
defending the system that Barack Obama put in place. We don't know how they're going to walk
that line. We don't know to what extent they'll even try. But the president's current approach,
which is to say that Democrats will do something drastic and bad to your health care,
and I'm not quite going to tell you what I'm going
to do yet, doesn't seem sustainable. So what happens in the last 24 hours or so to this
Trump-led project to try to strike down, repeal, and replace the Affordable Care Act?
After days of other Republicans expressing public discomfort with where the president was headed.
So I made it clear to him we were not going to be doing that in the Senate.
Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader,
conveyed in no uncertain terms to the White House
that this was a non-starter in the Senate,
that the president was free to do what he wanted to do on health care,
but that Senate Republicans were not going to be taking the lead on this.
It was not a fight they wanted, period, full stop.
So we don't have a misunderstanding about that.
We'll not be doing comprehensive in the Senate.
The president seems to have gotten the message.
President Trump on the retreat.
No, I wanted to delay it myself.
I want to put it after the election.
And his response was to go onto Twitter and to declare that they are totally going to do all the things that he said they were going to do, but at a much later date after the 2020 election.
Right. He cited the date 2021.
We will do all this right after the election.
Right after an election when, in his construction, he would be reelected, Republicans would hold the Senate, and they would take back control of the House.
So that's not just a delay of game.
That is setting a whole bunch of other conditions on what would need to happen to get
there. Were you surprised, Alex, that the president backed down on this so quickly? I was surprised by
how fast it happened. I wasn't surprised that he sort of came up with a really big theory of what
should happen next and then eventually let it disintegrate because we've seen that pattern a number of times. But to pick a fight this big and to stick with it for so little time is the definition
of politically counterproductive.
So now we are basically back where we started.
The Affordable Care Act is likely to remain the law of the land.
So what did we learn from this week-long ordeal?
Well, the biggest thing we learned is that the politics of health care have been turned on their
head in the last couple of years, and that the Affordable Care Act is no longer a liability for
Democrats, and that Republicans, whether they want to acknowledge it or not, have largely abandoned
the fight. The fact that you had the senior-most members
of the congressional party saying so clearly to a president
they helped elect and have loyally supported,
we don't want to touch health care,
it would have been sort of unimaginable to someone five years ago
that that would happen with a Republican president in office.
five years ago that that would happen with a Republican president in office.
Alex, thank you very much.
Thank you. Tomorrow's my birthday, so this is like a little birthday special.
Is that on the mic?
Happy birthday tomorrow.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
Despite the best efforts of MPs,
the process that the House of Commons has tried to lead
has not come up with an answer.
So today I am taking action to break the logjam.
In her latest attempt to rally support for Brexit
after a series of embarrassing setbacks,
British Prime Minister Theresa May
said she would seek a new delay for leaving the European Union and would begin negotiating a
Brexit plan with her political rivals in the Labour Party. I'm offering to sit down with the
leader of the opposition and to try to agree a plan that we would both stick to, to ensure that
we leave the European Union and that we do so with a deal.
The attempt to work across the aisle with the Labour Party
suggests that May cannot win enough support within her own Conservative Party to pass her Brexit plan.
The ideal outcome of this process would be to agree an approach on a future relationship
that delivers on the result
of the referendum that both the leader of the opposition and I could put to the House for
approval and which I could then take to next week's European Council. Unless May secures another delay,
Britain is currently scheduled to leave the EU without a negotiated plan on April 12th.
That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.