But on the Republican side all those critics of Obamacare, especially the tea party types, who said the new Medicaid would be a “big government” calamity, have yet to step up and admit they were wrong. Very, very wrong.
Susan Demas, a columnist for MLive, points to the impressive numbers associated with Medicaid access for the working poor and concludes that
this program, known as Healthy Michigan, is “one heck of a success story.”
In her column this week Demas notes that the Medicaid
program and Obamacare overall have cut the state’s uninsured rate in half, from
14 percent to 7 percent. Some 600,000 signed up for the Healthy Michigan coverage and hundreds
of thousands of people have received medical care, particularly preventive
care, that previously was unattainable.
Here’s how Demas sees it:
“The 600,000 figure is pretty impressive. But it's even
more so when you consider that Gov. Rick Snyder initially predicted that 470,000
Michiganders would gain coverage by 2021.
“Yes, Michigan beat that goal six years early.
“… And Snyder deserves credit. He fought for months with
members of his own party. With the ascent of the tea party in Republican
politics, any kind of a government expansion was going to meet resistance.
“But because the Medicaid expansion is a key part of
Obamacare, which Republicans regard as the work of the anti-Christ, many
lawmakers went ballistic (Sen. Joe Hune, R-Hamburg, memorably railed
against it as "nauseating"
and "garbage.")
It’s important to point out that, under the Michigan
rules for Medicaid expansion, the coverage is not free. Each recipient
chips in, based on their ability to pay. So, a federally funded program that
costs the state very little – and actually saves money in the long run – while making
people healthier and free of devastating medical bills is a big success.
Sounds like those tea party predictions were "garbage.”

This statement by former Congressman Davy Crockett would surely stick in Susan Demis' craw ----
ReplyDelete"We have the right as individuals to give away as much of our own money as we please in charity; but as members of Congress we have no right to appropriate a dollar of the public money." - Davy Crockett