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http://www.wsj.com/articles/trumps-obamacare-silence-1475797216" Trump’s ObamaCare Silence "
" The failing health law should be his best weapon, but he seems unable to wield it. "
By KIMBERLEY A. STRASSEL
" There is such a thing as a political goof. It should not be confused with a cosmic political error, mind-boggling in its inanity, inexplicable on any level, the electoral equivalent of stuffing your opponent’s ballot box.
An example of the latter is Donald Trump’s failure to jump on ObamaCare as an excellent path to the White House.
We are one month from an election, and President Barack Obama’s signature achievement is cratering, destroying millions of pocketbooks in its wake. States are reporting premium increases of 60%, 70%, 80%. Insurers, sagging under losses, are fleeing. Nearly a third of U.S. counties are now down to a single ObamaCare plan. Seventeen of 23 ObamaCare co-ops have imploded. Tennessee’s insurance commissioner warns her state’s exchange market is “very near collapse.”
The law’s supporters are flailing, incapable of defending it during this public death spiral. Ezekiel Emanuel, the physician who was one of the architects of the law, was left stammering on Megyn Kelly’s Fox News show this week. Dr. Emanuel said that these premium increases are a one-time “correction.” He hilariously blamed Republicans for refusing to bail out the system. Bill Clinton, who is becoming ever more honest in his dotage, went on an extended riff about how his party’s health-care system was the “craziest thing in the world.”
Hillary Clinton has no such out, having fiercely embraced ObamaCare. She owns it, every bit as much as the president, having pledged to “defend and expand” it. Only this week Mrs. Clinton’s campaign chairman, John Podesta, reiterated that she views the law as a “success” and plans to “build on it.”
Were she required to explain how to fix it—an obvious question never asked of her—she would nonetheless be forced to propose: a) more bailouts and subsidies; b) more coercive ways of forcing people into the system; or c) a government-run public option. Or all of the above. All of these choices are implicit acknowledgments of the program’s failure, and dead losers with voters.
For Republicans, ObamaCare has proved to be a political winner. The revolt against the law in 2010, back when it was not even real enough to have failed, propelled one of the greatest GOP gains in the House and the state legislatures in history. This is not some peripheral policy question—fracking, labor law, trade. Health care is the daily concern and frustration of nearly every American voter, right up there with paying the mortgage, the grocery bill and the IRS.
Yet Mr. Trump is almost entirely, and eerily, silent on the topic. In his prepared speeches, he gives ObamaCare a rote and glancing reference, part of a promise to repeal it. Trump news releases fly daily about the Clintons’ corruption and the problems with the North American Free Trade Agreement. But there is nary a whisper about the health-care system that is melting down across the country. Where are the ads? Where is the big speech?
Mr. Trump’s running mate, Mike Pence, appears to be warming to the issue. He at least warned during Tuesday’s vice-presidential debate that a Clinton White House would build ObamaCare into a socialist, “single-payer” system. He has been reassuring conservative voters that a Trump administration would scrap the law’s contraceptive mandate. Asked about Mr. Clinton’s “craziest-in-the-world” judgment, Mr. Pence quipped that “sometimes with the Clintons, even the truth happens.”
Those eight words were eight more than Mr. Trump devoted to ObamaCare during his first debate with Mrs. Clinton. During that face-off, the Republican nominee spent a full minute giving the ins and outs of the leverage on his business. He failed to mention the failing health law even once.
Mr. Trump’s quiet is so pronounced as to seem almost intentional. The Republican primaries showed that he is uncomfortable talking about health-care reform. ( Marco Rubio once accused him of having no plan other than to get rid of the insurance “lines around the states.”)
The Republican nominee might be wary of being drawn into a debate on a topic he seems to know little about. He also might be reluctant to field questions from the press about how he would handle the few popular aspects of the law—such as coverage for existing conditions. His website is relatively vague on what would replace ObamaCare, citing only broadly agreed-upon conservative ideas, such as creating more health savings accounts.
But Mr. Trump might consider that his silence is doing damage to more than simply himself. Across the country, Republican candidates are facing voters angry about health care. It would help immensely if they could argue that repealing ObamaCare would be the pressing priority of a Trump administration. After years of having President Obama halt every GOP attempt to patch the law’s holes, this is an extraordinary moment in which the party can tantalize voters with the hope that the nightmare might end.
But to do that, Mr. Trump has to capitalize on one of the greatest political gifts any presidential candidate has ever been given. "