Saturday, March 18, 2017

The Evolution of the Political Spectrum

      The idea that Democrats represent the Left and Republicans represent the Right is even more ridiculous than the idea that the left-vs.-right political spectrum can explain politics. But of course, we all know this. However, what many of us don't know is how the traditional left-vs.-right “political spectrum” or “political compass” got the way it is, and exactly how and when it outlived its usefulness. Understanding the history of the spectrum, and how the modern two-dimensional square political spectrums developed, are vital keys to understanding what the real map of politics and anarchism looks like.


Figure #1: The Left-vs.-Right Model


      The concept of a linear, one-dimensional, left-vs.-right model evidently originated in the late 18th century in the French National Assembly, during the French Revolution (see Figure #1). It was the press who gave the “left” and “right” labels to the representatives, who were seated on the left or right of the chamber according to their support for either the monarchists and those loyal to the Ancien Régime (on the right), or the Revolution (on the left). This arrangement continued after the body's replacement with a Legislative Assembly, and through a National Convention, to today. In the mid-19th century, influential economists Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, and Claude Frédéric Bastiat sat on the left of the chamber at the same time.
      Today in the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives, Democratic Party representatives sit on the left, while Republicans sit on the right. It's similar, but that does not necessarily mean that Republicans are more likely to support monarchy, nor Democrats revolution. And it certainly doesn't mean that the Republican Party is conservative, nor that the Democratic Party is Leftist. Additionally, the existence of totalitarian socialists and libertarian and “anarcho-” capitalists show that the old left-vs.-right paradigm is no longer relevant.
      But that was true back when Proudhon and Bastiat both supported the French Revolution. That's because according to the modern, common perception, Proudhon is regarded as a Mutualist of the left, while Bastiat is considered a classical liberal of the right. Bastiat influenced Belgian economist Gustave de Molinari, the author of The Production of Security, and the first person to articulate what is now called “market-anarchism”. The Molinari Institute bears his name, and many self-described libertarians, anarcho-capitalists, and Agorists are influenced by Molinari, including self-described Aristotelian objectivist Roderick T. Long, who has written on the difficulty of classifying anarchists on the traditional left-vs.-right spectrum.
      After the Paris Communes of 1848 and 1871, and the careers of Marx, Proudhon, Bastiat, and Molinari, the early 20th century saw the rise of synthesis-anarchism; people like Rudolf Rocker and Voltairine deCleyre wanted individualist anarchists, socialists, and anarcho-communists to work together to fight capitalism and the state. Some modern variants of “Anarchy Without Adjectives” integrate the most anti-capitalists elements of libertarian-leaning anarchism, such as contributions from left-Rothbardianism and left-wing market-anarchism, mutualist anarchists, Geo-anarchists (anarchist students of Henry George), and others.
      In the mid-20th century, the rise of Hitler, Mussolini, Franco, Japanese imperialism, and the U.S.S.R. gave rise to Horseshoe Theory (see Figure #2). The pre-WWII Molotov-Ribbentropp treaty (to carve-up Poland between Germany and the U.S.S.R.) and the late 20th century Stasi of East Germany, showed the public that liberalism is a moderate center, while the extreme left of communism and the extreme right of fascism met at an evil authoritarian center. However, Horseshoe Theory only goes so far; it only shows the top half of the political compass, leaving anarchism out of the mix (see Figure #3). Thus, anarchism is considered “fringe” by most Americans, and even as “extreme” as totalitarian systems (partially owing to the widespread perception of anarchism as necessarily chaotic or violent).


 Figure #2: Horseshoe Theory



Figure #3: The Full 2-D Political Spectrum


      It's not entirely accurate to describe Adolf Hitler as a socialist snowflake art student who hated privilege and capitalism, nor Barack Obama as Adolf Hitler. Nor is it accurate to describe Nazism as socialism just because “National Socialism” has “socialism” in the name. It's also inaccurate to describe Gregor and Otto Strasser as Nazis, because although they were the Nazi Party's socialist propaganda arm, they were betrayed and assassinated by the party's leadership. Just as National Socialism was capitalist, today the closest descriptor for Strasserism that we have is “social-nationalism”, which makes it sound more nationalistic than National Socialism. But the Strassers were to the left of the larger segment of the Nazi Party that betrayed them; the Strassers were German socialists who opposed both Jewish and German capitalism, and they were more socialist than the National Socialist German Worker's Party (Nazis).

 
      The work of the Strassers – as well as that of Egoist Max Stirner, Ernst Junger, Charles Maurras, Georges Sorel, Austromarxist Otto Bauer, Nestor Makhno, Enver Hoxha, the National Bolsheviks and national communists, other “proletarian nationalists”, and patriotic socialists - only compound the difficulty of mapping all political philosophies on the traditional left-vs.-right axis (especially authoritarianism and fascism and their variants). This difficulty owes itself to the existence of nationalist-leaning communist and socialist philosophies on one hand, and progressive and Marxist-influenced philosophies oriented towards markets and free enterprise (such as those of Adam Smith, the Physiocrats, and the Chicago School) on the other. The difficulty of mapping all the strange and new philosophies – often bearing such absurd names as “National-Anarchism”, “Anarcho-Fascism”, “Anarcho-Monarchism”, “Anarcho-Statism”, and the bizarre Marxist-Stirnerite philsophy of “EGO DIKism” which perhaps unintentionally synthesizes the post-Left with the alt-Right - prompts us to look at politics in a new way.

      In middle school biology, we were taught to use Punnett squares (named for Reginald Punnett, who devised them). A Punnett square is a variation of the Pournelle chart; it it used to predict the chance that certain dominant or recessive genetic traits would be inhereted by offspring. This is done by displaying two aspects of one parent's genes on the X-axis, against the other parent's genes on the Y-axis (see Figure #4). We can do the exact same thing with anarchism and totalitarianism on one axis, and communism and capitalism on the other. The result is the two-dimensional development of the one-dimensional left-vs.-right axis; the “Nolan chart” (see Figure #5), popularized by Libertarian Party co-founder David Nolan in 1971. In the previous several years, similar political spectrums had been published by Maurice C. Bryson and William R. McDill (in their article “The Political Spectrum: A Bi-Dimensional Approach” in The Rampart Journal of Individualist Thought in 1968), and Stuart Christie and Albert Meltzer (in The Floodgates of Anarchy in 1970).




Figure #4: A Punnett Square



Figure #5: The Nolan Chart

 
      However, the two-dimensional map does not fully solve our problem. If we consider that we have communism on the left and capitalism on the right, and totalitarianism on top and diffusion of power and chaos on the bottom, then there's no reason why we can't have a third dimension. Why not moderate compromise vs. radical discord? After all, the goal of anarchism is, more or less, to work together, and if we can't, then for different anarchist schools to leave each other alone. If anarchists can live with only working together when we agree, then not only does that make sure nobody is harmed when people voluntarily cooperate, it also shows that what the anarchists want is the opposite of the goal of politics.

      Of course, what politicians want is compromise by any means necessary. But moderate compromise has not worked for us. That's why the “radical center” has emerged, and so has the “progressive-libertarian alliance” that began ten years ago between Ron Paul, Ralph Nader, Dennis Kucinich, Mike Gravel, and others. With the third dimension of moderate political compromise vs. radical (whose Greek root radix means “root”) centrism, we can now show how where the East German Stasi are in relation to market-tolerant Anarchists Without Adjectives. My 62-sided, color-coded, three-dimensional political spectrum – which my friend Charles Poston named “the Politosphere” (see Figures #6 and #7) - attempts to map these three dimensions onto a globe.


Figure #6: The Politosphere (View from Top)


Figure #7: The Politosphere (View from Bottom)

      Anyone interested in finding out more about political spectrums can visit politicalcompass.org, Jacob Asplund's asplundchart.blogspot.com, or iSideWith.com; Google-search “The World's Smallest Political Quiz”; read the Wikipedia article “Left-right politics”; or go to my blog www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com and type “political spectrum” into the search field on the top-left. You may also wish to look for the three-dimensional cubic political spectrum at NationStates.net, the site of an online video game that allows players to make political decisions to run their own fictional e-nations, complete with flags and mottos.

      The discovery, delineation, and enumeration of economic schools of thought bearing implications in politics as well as anarchism make it possible to expand the number of economic categories which may be shown on any particular spectrum (see Figure #8), for, as anarcho-syndicalist Rudolf Rocker explained, anarchist tendencies are “only different methods of economy”. But the left-vs.-right economic axis aside, tools like those listed in the above paragraph will help make it possible for more people to understand that we live in a three-dimensional political continuum, not a black-and-white, left-vs.-right false dichotomy. Venn diagrams and Euler diagrams are also helpful learning tools (see Figure #9).


 Figure #8: A Political Spectrum with
12 Economic Categories and 5 Power Categories


Figure #9: An Euler Diagram of
Statism, Socialism, and Capitalism



      Not only that, these tools will make it possible for more people to fully understand anarchism and totalitarianism, and it could also enable collaborative efforts to create more detailed political spectrums, perhaps even with radically different axes and shapes from the figures shown here.






Written on March 18th and 19th, 2017

Figures #1-#4 and #6-#9 Created by Joseph W. Kopsick

between 2011 and March 19th, 2017

Figure #5 came from
http://nolan.jimeyer.org/nolan_example.php

Friday, March 10, 2017

Thursday, March 9, 2017

Alternatives to Obamacare (Part 2: A 12-Point Plan to Replace)


Abstract / Summary

      POINTS #1-5: CHANGES TO OBAMACARE: Repeal the individual and employer mandate, and other mandates. Repeal Obamacare in its totality, and replace it on the same day. Repeal the provision of Obamacare that lets people stay on their parents' insurance plans until they turn 26. Allow total state control over Medicaid and Medicare, advocating significant means-tested tax credits that are refundable for those living in poverty.
     POINTS #6-7: INCREASED ACCESSIBILITY OF INSURANCE: Expand health savings accounts. Make health insurance portable by addressing employer- and location-based discrepancies in coverage. Legalize the interstate sale and purchase of non-group and small-group health insurance. Account for the resulting need to increase policyholders' price leverage by allowing people to join into group insurance pools, including on the basis of profession or trade. De-link employment from insurance by keeping all types of health insurance taxes low, and dismantle health firms' privileges in order to curb cronyism.
      POINTS #8-12: INCREASED AFFORDABILITY OF CARE: Liberalize drug importation by reducing tariffs and patent protections. Repeal taxes on the sales and profits of medical devices to increase affordability and diminish the apparent necessity of tort reform. Repeal the Obamacare provision that prohibits denial of care on the basis of pre-existing conditions. Address the resulting pre-existing conditions coverage gap by encouraging state solutions, incentivizing free care through non-refundable tax credits, and allowing the implementation of professional consequences for breaking promises to never deny care on the basis of inability to pay.



The 12 Points

      1. REPEAL THE MANDATES: Stop playing political games, solve the issue already, and repeal all of the Obamacare mandates. Repeal the individual insurance purchase mandate, the employer-sponsored insurance purchase mandate, the minimum coverage standard mandate, and the benefit mandate in-full. Also address community regulations and the manner in which health insurance plans are categorized.
      2. FULL REPEAL, & REPLACE SAME-DAY: Repeal each of the even key provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. Repeal the entirety of Obamacare, and on the same day, replace the rest of Obamacare with Points #2-12.
      3. REPEAL THE 26-YEAR-OLDS PROVISION: Repeal the provision of Obamacare that requires health insurers offering family coverage to allow young people to stay on their parents' health insurance plans until they turn 26. Oppose Paul Ryan's proposed tax credits that benefit the elderly and married people, providing tax credits on a different basis.
      4. STATE MEDICAID SELF-DIRECTION: Oppose extending the expansion of Medicaid; but choose block-granting Medicaid to the states over reforming Medicaid at the national level. Allow states to reinstate Title 1 of Obamacare, and / or any other provision of the A.C.A. they wish. Allow and urge states to self-direct their own health policy and health plans. Urge states to explore private and non-profit solutions, as well as community-, worker-, and consumer-oriented solutions.
      5. STATE CONTROL AND TAX CREDITS: Allow states to choose whether to replace their Obamacare subsidies to extend Medicaid with state-level tax credits. Urge states to consider means-tested tax credits – deductions for health insurance premium expenses, as well as care-related expenses - refundable up to $5,000 annually for people who are living below the poverty level, regardless of whether they work, earn income, or are required to pay taxes, and regardless of their age or marital status. Federal and state poverty levels should also be raised significantly, so that refundable tax deductions may reach the lower middle class as well as the poor.
      6. EXPAND HEALTH SAVINGS ACCOUNTS: Make contributions to health savings accounts completely tax-free, and remove limits on the amount of money which can be donated to H.S.A.s. Make health savings accounts inheritable, accessible to families, and able to be rolled-over to family members. Make it possible for H.S.A.s to follow people throughout their lives, even from state to state and job to job; and allow people with H.S.A.s to enroll in lower-deductible plans.
      7. LEGALIZE INTERSTATE INSURANCE: Make health insurance portable for people who move to new states, lose their job, travel for a living, and are unemployed and non-employed. Legalize the interstate purchase and sale of small-group and non-group non-employer-sponsored health insurance, as well as small-workplace employer-sponsored insurance. Account for the resulting need to increase policyholders' price leverage by allowing people to join into group insurance pools, including on the basis of profession or trade. De-link / de-couple employment from insurance not by beginning to tax employer-sponsored insurance, but instead through lowering taxes on non-employer-sponsored insurance through means-tested refundable individual tax credits for health care and insurance expenses. Additionally, dismantle taxpayer-funded privileges and supports for health care and insurance companies, and restore the Enumerated Powers, in order to remove the temptation to pass mandates that let companies get away with high prices.
      8. LIBERALIZE DRUG IMPORTATION: Remove tariffs on, and barriers to, the importation of pharmaceutical drugs; lower importation fees will mean lower drug prices for patients. Give the Food and Drug Administration thirty days to approve Rx drugs that have been approved in other industrialized countries. Reduce the duration of time for which medication and medical device patents are enforced; this will help swiftly end prohibition on cheap knock-offs that may be safe alternatives to expensive name-brands. Oppose any and all measures which would aim to establish price transparency through compulsory means; instead, urge insurers to be more transparent about their prices and rates, and allow states to enact price transparency laws.
      9. REPEAL MEDICAL DEVICE TAXES: Repeal taxes on income, sales, etc.; replacing them with Land Value Taxation, in order to reduce tax burdens on ordinary people, including health care workers and patients. Most importantly, on hospitals that are trying to affordably purchase medical devices. Repeal taxes on the sales of medical devices and equipment, and repeal taxes on profits therefrom, in order to decrease prices. When hospitals can afford up-to-date equipment, they can diagnose diseases earlier. Oppose efforts to enact tort reform (medical malpractice reform); do not limit juries' abilities to award damages for non-medical traumas through legislative means. Instead, repeal medical device taxes, in order to help hospitals avoid medical negligence lawsuits brought on grounds that a practitioner's lack of up-to-date equipment impaired or hindered a proper diagnosis.
      10. REPEAL PRE-EXISTING CONDITIONS: Sick people primarily need care, not insurance coverage. Repeal the “consumer protections” provisions of Obamacare that prohibit health insurance companies from denying coverage on the basis of pre-existing conditions, and prohibits insurers from “overcharging” policyholders. Allow states to consider providing uninsured sick people with an 18- or 24-month transition period in which they can obtain coverage, or to consider prohibiting denial of coverage of afflictions which a health insurance customer does not already have. Don't prohibit denial of coverage; instead, increase sick people's ability to access care affordably by enacting Points #11 and #12.
      11. INCENTIVIZE FREE CARE: Health care workers don't show up at work because they look forward to denying people care; they want to do their job, and they want to help people. Allow doctors and nurses to decide whether to donate care for free, and enact non-refundable tax credits for health care workers who decide to donate care. Government doesn't get to tax or regulate a hospital if it doesn't generate any revenue. Let hospitals choose whether to operate on not-for-profit bases by refraining from charging people for, and profiting from, care. Do not subject non-profit hospitals to the same taxes and regulations that come with the territory of for-profit health care models.
      12: ADDRESS HIPPOCRATIC OATHS: If health care were free, then health insurance would be unnecessary. Make the health insurance industry obsolete, and health insurance coverage unnecessary, by allowing doctors and nurses to choose whether to submit to their Hippocratic Oaths. Urge health care network to implement guidelines that require the termination of health care workers who voluntarily vow not to withhold care on the grounds of inability to pay, but who then break their oaths by turning away people in need of treatment.




Written between March 7th and 9th, 2017

Edited March 10th, 2017

Wednesday, March 8, 2017

Libertarian Party of Chicago Vets Illinois Governor Candidates

Table of Contents

1. Introduction
2. Candidate Bios
3. Education and the Budget
4. Drugs, Gangs, Courts, and Jobs
5. Jon Stewart
6. Kash Jackson and Matt Scaro
7. Conclusion



Content
1. Introduction
     On the evening of Tuesday, March 7th, the Libertarian Party (L.P.) of Chicago held a gubernatorial candidates' forum and media event as part of a chapter meeting, at Will's Northwoods Inn at 3030 N. Racine Avenue. In attendance were the three candidates for the state L.P.'s nomination for governor, in the race to unseat incumbent Republican Bruce Rauner in 2018. The meeting, attended by about three dozen people, was called to order at 7:15 P.M. by Justin Tucker, chair of the L.P.'s Chicago chapter.
     Each candidate was given five minutes to make opening statements, which were followed by questions from guests and press. The first candidate to speak was retired Navy veteran Kash Jackson of Antioch, whose favorite founding fathers are Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin. He was followed by two-time local candidate and professional wrestler, and current automobile dealer, Jon Stewart of Deerfield, whose favorite president is Teddy Roosevelt. Finally, the audience was addressed by entrepreneur Matthew C. Scaro of Chicago, whose favorite constitutional amendment is the First Amendment.
     Other attendees of the event included 2016 state comptroller candidate Claire Ball, and two-time congressional candidate David Earl Williams III, who towards the end of the evening announced his candidacy for lieutenant governor. Williams read guests his seven-point plan to reduce gang violence in Chicago, which involved legalizing marijuana and concealed-carry, expanding school choice, giving former gang members a second chance through military and job opportunities, establishing economic freedom zones, repealing the estate tax, and abolishing civil asset forfeiture.


2. Candidate Bios

      Kash Jackson, a former Republican who is originally from rural Louisiana, told the L.P. he never imagined he would run for Governor of Illinois. He described himself as a family man who can relate to ordinary struggling people, and explained how his twenty years of service in the U.S. Navy taught him leadership skills. A fond traveler, Jackson recently trekked 3,000 miles across the country to spread awareness about family courts issues, as part of his Restoring Freedom Movement. He also told Tuesday night's audience that he circumnavigated the globe by circling the Arctic Ocean.
     Jon Stewart, a native Illinoisan who ran for the 11th District Illinois House seat and the 10th District U.S. House seat in the late 1990s, told guests that politics is about changing people's lives. He cites his experience in political campaigns, his track record of getting media attention, and his personal wealth and fundraising potential as assets that will help him build a successful campaign. Stewart said he joined the Libertarian Party in 2011; he was a Republican for at least 15 years prior to joining the L.P..
     Matthew C. Scaro (pronounced “SCAR-oh”) a traveler and self-employed entrepreneur who lives in Chicago, told the crowd that he wanted to run a principled, honest, optimistic campaign. He added that although he is not wealthy, he can relate to average citizens because he is one. His interest in finance showed when he focused on state budget reform during the event, calling it “the single largest issue facing the state”. Scaro recommended abolishing taxes on small businesses, as well as the income tax and the estate tax, also noted that he enjoys discussing the Federal Reserve and Austrian economics.


3. Education and the Budget

      The candidates addressed the need for budgetary and education reform. On education, Stewart suggested making investments in charter schools, and Scaro criticized Common Core, while Jackson focused on teachers and pensions. Neither of the candidates went so far as to endorse abolishing public schools altogether, and all three agreed that the state is in the midst of a serious budget crisis.
     Matt Scaro said when it comes to schools, we're not getting what our municipal property taxes pay for, and that he'll work with Chicago Public Schools and Mayor Emanuel to fix education. Kash Jackson said the best way forward on schools is to have an open, honest dialogue with voters and teachers, saying that “good teachers” won't let our property taxes go “through the roof”. Jackson also explained that there are over 9,000 state administrators who receive pensions on top of six-figure salaries.
     Jon Stewart expressed desire to end the state Democratic Party's control of the state legislature, and resolve and reforming teachers' pensions, saying he plans on meeting with a teachers' union representative soon to discuss the issue. Stewart drew attention to recent increases in the cost of attending private schools, and even more significant increases in costs of attending private schools.
On budgetary issues, Kash Jackson said we need to hold our elected officials accountable, mentioning Governor Rauner's office in particular. He said the working people of Illinois are ready for budget reform, and that voters and candidates need “third- and fourth-party” solutions.
     Matt Scaro said he'd propose a balanced budget, and demand information on every single line-item on it. He also said budgets aren't partisan or political; they should simply balance, and balance now. He added that reducing debt is essential, and called the pension system a liability. Scaro also said reducing debt rather than increasing it is essential. Scaro noted that the stake is not bankrupt, but it is insolvent.
Jon Stewart said neither one of the two major parties has a solution to Illinois's $13 billion in unpaid bills and $139 billion in unfunded pension obligations. Stewart emphasized that his fundraising potential puts him in a unique position to go to Springfield without buckling to special interests, nor to the orders of party leaders.

4. Drugs, Gangs, Courts, and Jobs

     All three candidates addressed drugs, gang-related crime, judicial corruption, family law reform, and jobs as an integrated issue. Each candidate stressed the importance of decriminalizing drugs, while reforming family courts to keep families together. The goal is to build more cohesive communities that will become safe enough to begin attracting jobs, increasing economic prosperity for residents. But there's no way that can happen until we stop enforcing prohibition of guns and drugs, and shift the focus of law enforcement onto apprehending people suspected of committing violent crimes like murder, rape, and theft (and we all know what theft is another word for).
     Each candidate advocated legalizing marijuana to bring revenue and tourism into the state. Stewart seemed the most enthusiastic about the idea, advocating “full, utter, and complete legalization”. He added that cannabis should be sold in gift shops and casinos throughout the state, including downtown Chicago. Stewart was the only one of the three candidates who went as far as to specifically recommend taxing marijuana sales, although Scaro and Jackson hinted at it when they mentioned the revenue that it would bring in.
     Kash Jackson described being in Seattle when Washington State legalized the recreational use of marijuana, and said pot smokers are “no threat to anyone”. Observing the effects of Washington's and Colorado's legalization, Jackson commented that ending arrests and prosecutions of cannabis users and other non-violent offenders would save taxpayers millions of dollars.
     Jon Stewart described the drug epidemic as an issue close to his heart, noting that his family-owned car dealership hires recovering drug addicts and homeless people. He also said that lack of jobs increases drug use, and suggested after-school and community programs for at-risk youth as solutions. Stewart also said the National Guard should be called in to do something about the “holocaust” that's happening on the West Side of Chicago.
     Expressing a desire to “eliminate red tape” on the issue of marijuana, Matt Scaro advocated full legalization of the plant in Illinois. He added that the fact that drugs are illegal is what allows the black-market drug trade to flourish, and said drug policy should focus on giving people entrepreneurial opportunities instead of encaging people who haven't harmed anyone.
     Additionally, each candidate explained, in his own way, how the drug and gang problems facing our communities are the result of too many households lacking fathers. Scaro noted that the social safety net incentivizes single-parent homes, while Stewart said bringing in jobs could help solve the problem. Kash Jackson, who has made family courts reform one of the central issues of his campaign, noted that state Social Security taxes give an incentive for judges to take custody of children, separating kids from parents.
     The candidates also weighed in on judicial corruption. Jackson said the public entrusts judges with the responsibility to uphold the laws that maintain our society. He described judges who break the law as traitors and felons, and recommended hard labor in jail for public servants who take advantage of judicial immunity to routinely violate our rights. Jackson additionally criticized state concealed-carry regulations.
     Stewart and Scaro both said they would incarcerate judges who break the law; with Scaro recommending addressing the root cause of the problem. Jon Stewart said our family court system is broken, we need to hold judges accountable, and nobody is above the law. Stewart said he supported a measure that would make minute-by-minute information about judges' meetings available on the internet for public viewing.


5. Jon Stewart

     Each candidate was asked to weigh-in on what their candidacy for the Illinois Libertarian Party's gubernatorial nomination brings to the table. Jon Stewart listed name recognition as an asset. “The Illustrious Jonnie Stewart”, as he was known during his professional wrestling days, was once invited to speak at a charter school in Utah because organizers thought he was the eponymous comedian and former host of Comedy Central's The Daily Show with Jon Stewart.
     Stewart also said attracting media attention is the only chance the party has to “break through”, and noted that he has experience doing that, having appeared on radio and in print media. Stewart has also appeared on M.S.N.B.C., as well as FOX News's The o'Reilly Factor and Hannity & Colmes. He plans to play up the “former pro wrestler angle”, which he says will resonate with the media.
     Stewart said that knowing automobile dealers will give him a fundraising advantage, and reiterated that this will insulate him from pressure from partyarchs and rent-seeking cronies. Stewart backed Donald Trump over Gary Johnson in 2016, saying that ordinary voters admire Trump's ability to resist special interests by self-funding. Stewart says he admires that about Trump too, saying that he thought Rauner was like Trump in that respect, but he's running for governor because Bruce Rauner disappointed him.
     During questions from the audience, Stewart addressed suggestions that he has never voted for a Libertarian Party candidate. He did not name names, but he did say he couldn't support the former New Mexico governor's presidential bid because he “couldn't support a guy who didn't know about the holocaust in Aleppo”. Stewart was referring to a fall 2016 installment of M.S.N.B.C.'s Morning Joe, in which Johnson asked “and what is Aleppo?” in response to a question about what to do about I.S.I.S. in the northwest Syrian city.
     To the surprise of attendees, Stewart also alleged that Gary Johnson “intimated oral sex on-camera”. Stewart was probably talking about a television appearance in which Johnson made a joke about “biting his tongue”. While being filmed talking to a female M.S.N.B.C. reporter Gary Johnson stuck his tongue out, bit down on it, and said (while still biting his tongue) that he could win a debate with Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton, even if he bit his tongue throughout the entire debate. The L.P.'s presidential nominee made no mention of sex during the interview whatsoever.
     During the Chicago L.P.'s event, Stewart called Bruce Rauner and Mark Kirk “friends” of his. In the interest of full disclosure, the L.P.'s vice-presidential nominee, Bill Weld, praised Kirk last year. That issue aside, hiring Kellyanne Conway to advise one of his campaigns in the late 1990s, and then supporting Trump over Johnson in 2016 as a five-year L.P. member, will not help him ingratiate himself to never-Trump Libertarians. Stewart's criticism of the L.P.'s nominee and his support of G.O.P. leaders might serve as baggage that could make it difficult for him to win the support of state L.P. delegates dissatisfied with Republicans.
     Although Mr. Stewart may have charisma and money on his side, his media accomplishments are somewhat dated, and party members might need some reassurance from Stewart on immigration policy and a few other issues that set Trump and Libertarians apart.


6. Kash Jackson and Matt Scaro

     As Matt Scaro noted, he doesn't have money on his side. However, he plans to draw on his experience running a door-to-door business, which he said equipped him to “get people out there” to “send messages”. It's worthwhile to note that Scaro is the only one of the three candidates who did not mention having a past Republican streak, although he didn't comment on his past political affiliations during the event. Scaro says breaking the 5% threshold in the gubernatorial election (which would prompt public funding of the L.P.) would be “the icing on the cake”, because he's “in it to win it” with a plurality of the vote.
     If Mr. Scaro is as ready to serve the people of Illinois as he says he is, then he should be able to retain his enthusiasm after weaning himself off of his sometimes noticeable reliance on written notes. If he can do that, and show that he's just as knowledgeable as Jon Stewart on the budget numbers (or more), then Scaro should be able to convince the party that he'll be worth the effort on fundraising.
     Libertarians believe that we're born free, and that our liberties are inherent in us. Things we can do without harming others are natural rights; rights that come from our humanity, or from “nature and nature's god”. This means Libertarians will want to hear a candidate say freedom of speech is the natural result of being born human, that government cannot and must not take it away from us, and that the inclusion of speech in the Bill of Rights in no way authorizes the federal government to legislate upon it.
     Kash Jackson arguably defended natural rights better than Matt Scaro did. In praising the First Amendment, Scaro said government “allows us” to have freedom of speech. It's difficult to tell, solely from this statement, exactly what Scaro's thoughts on natural rights are, but it couldn't hurt Scaro to explain to the L.P. where he thinks rights come from, and what he thinks about the Ninth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
     Kash Jackson, on the other hand, told the L.P. that public roads can interfere with natural freedoms. The comment seemed a little bit off-topic when Jackson said it, but as the public realizes that the newly adopted Safe Roads Amendment secures road construction contracts for years into the future, Jackson's transportation concerns will be proven valid, and Libertarians' oft-lampooned “hatred of roads” will slowly prove to be much more than just crazy talk. Additionally, although funding concerns surround Scaro, there do not appear to be such concerns about Kash Jackson's campaign.
     On social issues, Jackson said “I don't oppose” same-sex marriage, and said government should get out of marriage; this is a position most Libertarians can get behind. However, the fact that the party is split on the issue of abortion (perhaps 50-50, or two pro-choice members per pro-life member), a pro-life candidate might be something a liability. On the other hand, Jackson only briefly mentioned abortion, and no other candidate addressed the issue, so it wouldn't be appropriate to speculate on what Jackson meant when he described himself as “pro-life”. Of course, talking to the party about his views on the specifics of abortion policy would help the L.P. figure out whether Jackson equally values the right to life and the freedom to choose.
     On Tuesday night, Kash Jackson managed to allay fears that he is over-reliant, or perhaps even somewhat bitter about his own experiences, on his central issue of family courts reform. During a question about the heroin epidemic, he pivoted to the issue family courts unexpectedly, but he saved grace by explaining that kids whose families have been broken apart by courts are more likely to try drugs. Matt Scaro's and Jon Stewart's comments on those topics neither disputed nor detracted from Jackson's points; they only reinforced them.
     If Mr. Jackson - a veteran who traveled from coast-to-coast to talk to Americans about family courts reform, and stopped at Standing Rock on the way - could possibly make it any clearer that he's dedicated to the issue for everyone's sake and not just his own (and it's tough to say whether he can), then he'll get the support he needs. That is, as long as he continues to provide logistical assistance to local L.P. chapters, and puts a little effort into improving his ability to think on his feet, and into making sure he gets as much time to speak as the other candidates.


7. Conclusion

     All in all, we have three fine candidates, each with his own set of ideas, strategies, strengths, and weaknesses, and each of them a believer in entrepreneurial values. Two are self-employed, two are fathers, and two are former Republicans. And for the most part, not only are Stewart, Jackson, and Scaro the relatable, ordinary people they say they are; they are also the kind of receptive candidates we need to build public trust in the party.
     As long as Stewart delivers on his promise to “continue the friendship with my opponents”, and Scaro delivers on his similar promise to earn confidence without resorting to mudslinging, then the 2018 Illinois governor's race will be an amicable discussion of policy and strategy, rather than one mired in the controversial partisan politics which have regrettably spread from Chicago to the rest of the nation over the last fifty years.
     Even if we believe the election results show that pragmatism helped the Libertarian Party in 2016, we have no need to risk putting pragmatism over principle at a time when the L.P. is the fastest-growing political party in the nation. Choosing a candidate who supports the right principles and proposals would make for easy phone-banking, and turn fundraising into its own reward. After all, our pragmatic presidential ticket in 2016 may have broken party records with 3.25% of the popular vote, but we don't know whether Johnson and Weld got 3% because of their apparent pragmatism or in spite of it.
     The Libertarian Party is determined to choose the candidate who strikes a balance that optimizes viability and firm grounding in libertarian principles. If this race can be about ideas that save people's lives, not controversy and inanity, then Illinois Libertarian Party members can make an informed, educated, focused decision about who will be their nominee in the race for the governor's seat, and we can send someone to Springfield who will shake-up politics-as-usual. Only then will Illinoisans have a chance at seeing liberty in our lifetimes.



For More Information, Please See the Following Links:

Video from the Livestream of the Event

Libertarian Party of Chicago's Announcement of the Event

Information About Jon “Jonnie” Alan Stewart

Information About Matthew C. Scaro

Information About Grayson “Kash” Jackson



Written on March 7th and 8th, 2017
Edited March 8th to add details about the candidates' names

Monday, March 6, 2017

Alternatives to Obamacare (Part 1: What's in the Bill?)

Editor's Note:

      I completed this article at 5:15 P.M. CST on March 6th, 2017. Unbeknownst to me, at 5:00 P.M. EST – 75 minutes earlier – the Washington Post published the below article, reporting that the House Republicans had gone public with what, until then, had been their secret plan. Although I did not publish it immediately, I concluded my essay at 5:15, and discovered the Washington Post article at 7:00 P.M. CST.
      At the time of publishing – 9:00 P.M. CST on March 3rd – the Washington Post article displayed a publishing time of 7:17 P.M.; however, I first read the article around 7:15, when the article gave a publishing time of 5:00 P.M.
      I end this article by attempting to predict the contents of the once secret, now public House GOP health bill. See how you think I did.

                                                                                                                    - Joseph W. Kopsick
                                                                                                   9:00 P.M. CST, March 6
th, 2017
https://www.washingtonpost.com/powerpost/new-details-emerge-on-gop-plans-to-repeal-and-replace-obamacare/2017/03/06/04751e3e-028f-11e7-ad5b-d22680e18d10_story.html


Table of Contents

1. The Debate Over the Future of Obamacare
2. The State Lines Plan
3. No Plan to Replace?
4. The Cruz Health Care Choice Act
5. Rand Paul's Obamacare Replacement Act
6. Rand Paul and Health Savings Accounts
7. The Cassidy-Collins Plan
8. Other Republican Proposals
9. Who Might Be Behind the Secret G.O.P. Plan
10. What Might Be in the Secret G.O.P. Plan
11. Sources

Content


1. The Debate Over the Future of Obamacare

      The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (P.P.A.C.A., or simply A.C.A.) has failed to achieve its goal of getting the costs of health insurance under control.1 Barack Obama's signature health legislation, also known as Obamacare, has increased regulations and bureaucracy that stifle job growth,2,3 compounding the problem of affordability. Although more people are insured now than when Barack Obama took office,4 more than 7 million Americans lost their health care between 2009 and when the law rolled out in late 2013.4,5 Some Americans believe that the election of the current president was largely the consequence of that law's failure.6
      On February 28th, the night of Donald Trump's first address to a joint session of Congress, Senator Ted Cruz told PBS that Rand Paul's Senate “Obamacare Replacement Act” (and Mark Sanford's House plan, which mirrors it) were the only Obamacare repeal plans that Republicans were considering.7 But the next day, New York Magazine published an article about secret health talks.8 The article suggested that only Republicans were allowed to see the bill, and quipped that Ryan managed to stay true to his word about not meeting in a “back room” by meeting in a basement room instead.8
      The next day (March 2nd), Democratic Senate Minority Leader Steny Hoyer of Maryland live-streamed video of himself searching for the bill, and for information about congressmen may obtain it and read it.9 Hoyer searched in the office of Congresswoman Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-WA), which was a rumored location of the reading of the bill, but he was unable to find it.10
      Congressman Frank Pallone (D-NJ) searched for the bill in G.O.P. Senate Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy's office.11 Congressman Paul Tonko (D-NY) reported being told he had the wrong room, and that nobody would give him the correct room.10 That day, the Huffington Post reported that “Energy and Commerce Committee Republicans were allowed to review the health care bill – or at least a portion of the text – but Democrats were shut out, as were other Republicans.”10 Additionally, Senate Democratic Leader Hoyer and Senate Republican Leader McCarthy debated on the floor of the Senate about the alleged secrecy of the bill.10
      Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky tweeted that another alternative had been proposed in the House, and that congressmen and members of the public are not allowed to read it.12, 13 Senator Paul, who wants to repeal and replace Obamacare on the same day,14 believes that House leadership wants to sneak-in a plan that would look like “Obamacare lite”.12, 13 According to Paul, this means less than full repeal, with “new entitlements and extending [M]edicaid expansion”12.
      Whatever the plan is, it is hard not to be reminded of the way Obamacare was first pushed through: through back-room deals and procedural tricks.15, 16 For people of all political persuasions, whether they advocate full repeal or keeping the outgoing president's signature piece of legislation intact, the time to act on health policy is now, especially considering recent signals that the individual mandate is being weakened.17

2. The State Lines Plan

      Amid the transition from Barack Obama's administration to Donald Trump's, the fate of the Affordable Care Act (at least for the next four to eight years) may be sealed any day now. In his first address to Congress, the president called on the legislative body to “repeal and replace Obamacare with reforms that expand choice, increase access, lower costs, and at the same time provide better health care.”18 The day before the address, President Trump told a group of Republican governors that health care is “unbelievably complex”,19 saying “nobody knew healthcare was so complex.”20 And it is.
      Due to presidential reorganization authority in health affairs having been ruled constitutional, and due to the federal government's authority to regulate interstate commerce, health insurance policy is popularly viewed as a federal issue. However, it is really an issue of balancing state and federal authority, and one of interstate commerce. It is additionally a debate about what the very words “federal” and “regulate” mean in the first place. This is why the ongoing debate over the future of national health policy will always involve the question of whether Washington, D.C. should play a role in keeping competition open in the states, or whether it should instead dictate the states' health policy to them.
      Today, states may only regulate small-group and individual policies.21 Health insurance customers in Lake County, Illinois can choose between multiple insurance carriers in the Obamacare market, but other places are not so lucky. There are five entire states where residents have only one resort, eight states where two choices exist everywhere you go, and 21 states that have areas where only two choices exist.22 This is arguably the result of requiring insurers to comply with Obamacare, setting up state-run “marketplaces”, and the fact that 45 states prohibit the purchase of individual and small-group health insurance policies from across state lines.23 Under Obamacare, purchasing health insurance from other states is only legal if it complies with “consumer protections” which were implemented in 2014 to provide basic regulation of non-group and small-group insurance.21
      Although purchasing non-group and small-group insurance is only legal in five states, nine other states failed to pass similar legislation after Barack Obama took office.23 If it were legal for Illinois residents to buy individual and small-group policies from other states, then residents who are out of work would have the freedom to buy health insurance from nearby Indiana, or from Wisconsin, with which our county shares a border. In fact, people in any state would be able to do that, and moreover buy insurance from any state, since Obamacare's online exchanges and private insurers allow people to buy policies online.
      The new president's support of what we will call for the sake of simplicity the “State Lines Plan” could achieve his goal of increasing affordability and choice in health insurance, by introducing competition in non-group and small-group insurance, and increasing the degree of state sovereignty over health, while also (perhaps perplexingly) decreasing state regulations.


3. No Plan to Replace?

      Since the A.C.A. became law in 2010, the law's supporters have insisted that “nobody has a plan to replace Obamacare”,24 but in reality, they have every reason to let people believe that keeping the law (or segments of it) is the only option. They have routinely declined to admit that, since before Obamacare was even signed into law, Republicans and others have been suggesting alternatives and proposing replacements, such as the State Lines Plan.
      These repeated lies by the Democratic Party evidently proved frustrating to Americans who want a full, honest, and careful discussion about the road ahead on health insurance. So much so, evidently, that in 2010, Democratic political consultant Doug Schoen explained the Republicans' alternative to the American people. Schoen explained that Republicans want to make it legal to buy and sell health insurance plans across state lines, as long as the policies comply with state legislation concerning individual and small-group policies.25-29 This aspect of the plan could help states regain some authority to regulate health insurance, a policy that would be more in keeping with what is said on the matter in the Enumerated Powers of the U.S. Constitution.30 The plan has the potential of uniting the majority of conservatives, because it satisfies their desire for a platform that balances states' rights with free trade.
The idea of the proposal is to solve many states' problem of local insurance company monopolies on small-group and individual policies. The goal is to increase competition in the health insurance market, by fostering free flow of interstate commerce in insurance policies.31 Proponents hope that increasing consumer choice will increase affordability of premiums, and thus coverage.32 If successful, the proposal could also result in a wider variety of the types of health insurance policies which are available for purchase.
      The State Lines Plan is what now-President Donald Trump and Florida Senator Marco Rubio were arguing about when, at a G.O.P. presidential candidates' debate in Texas on February 25th, 2016, they repeatedly referred to “getting rid of the lines around the states”.33 At that debate, Trump said the plan would “increase competition”, and claimed that the plan was almost put into place. He has stated elsewhere that he believes competition will fix the current system of state-operated insurance markets, which he says “gives the insurance companies essentially monopolies”.34 When Rubio asked Trump, “What is your plan?”, suggesting that Trump didn't have a plan on health policy, Trump's response was that getting rid of the state lines would allow us to “have many different plans”.33

4. The Cruz Health Care Choice Act

      Both Trump and Rubio favor legalizing the interstate insurance trade, and so does Senator Ted Cruz of Texas.35 On March 3rd, 2015, Cruz unveiled his “Health Care Choice Act”, which would allow interstate purchase of health insurance policies, and repeal Title 1 of Obamacare, abolishing the individual mandate, subsidies, and state insurance marketplaces.36 The bill has not been re-introduced in the 115th Congress.
      At a January 2016 presidential debate in Iowa - the debate from which Donald Trump was notably absent - Senator Cruz voiced his support for “repealing every word of Obamacare”.37 He endorsed the State Lines Plan, saying that it would help make insurance “portable”, and that it would “create a true, fifty-state national marketplace, which will drive down the cost of low-cost catastrophic … insurance”.38 Cruz additionally suggested “de-linking” “insurance from employment, so if you lose your job, your … insurance goes with you”.38 Cruz also said he hoped to empower patients, keep government from getting between patients and doctors, and expand Health Savings Accounts.37
      Senator Cruz wants to address the tax exclusion for employer-sponsored health insurance,38 observing that it unduly inconveniences people who have to pay taxes on their insurance. They pay these taxes because they buy their insurance through non-employer avenues, such as individual and small-group plans.35, 39 This issue went unsolved for the eight years of Barack Obama's presidency, and Obamacare was supposed to address the issue of unemployed people struggling to get coverage, not allow it to get worse. It seems appropriate to deduce that this tax credit was likely the result of a flawed perception that you can cause more people to have jobs just by giving tax credits to businesses for sponsoring employees' health insurance; there is no evidence that that is the case.
      Cruz believes that integrating this “de-coupling”40 or “de-linking” insurance and employers idea into the State Lines Plan will help make insurance just as accessible and affordable, regardless of location and employment status.35 That way, if a person loses their job, or has to relocate to another state, or both, or gets a job in a new state, they can have many choices that are equally affordable, without the influence of government manipulation of prices through the employer-provided health insurance tax credit.
      “De-linking insurance from employment” could be accomplished either by approaching it as a tax loophole issue, or an issue of whether to tax health insurance to begin with. The secret Republican plan to replace Obamacare could involve beginning to tax “more generous employer-sponsored health insurance plans, which are now tax-exempt”.41 This would close the loophole; however, the loophole could also be closed through repealing taxes on non-employer-provided health insurance.
      Although Cruz has not explicitly proposed repealing non-employer insurance taxes, he has stated that he wants to keep contributions to Health Savings Accounts “pre-tax”, meaning exempt from federal taxation. Continuing to exempt the unemployed and people who are moving from health insurance taxes (in addition to exempting them from the individual purchase mandate) will help make it easier and more affordable for them to make contributions to Health Savings Accounts.39
      Either the State Lines Plan, or Senator Cruz's augmentation of it, would help establish a genuine interstate market in the trade of insurance. This would increase competition and choices, thus lowering premiums, increasing affordability and coverage, and at the same time providing tax relief and shrinking government. Still, taken as a whole, Cruz's health policy would be a viable alternative to Obamacare, and it would be one that uses market solutions and limited state sovereignty in the policy sphere of health, rather than government mandates and a tax code that discriminates against people whose employers do not provide them with health insurance.
      Cruz has not yet formally introduced a health bill in the 115th Congress. However, on January 5th of this year, Congresswoman Marsha Blackburn (R-TN), who sponsored Cruz's 2015 bill,42 introduced the identically-named Health Care Choice Act of 2017 (House Resolution 314). That bill would repeal the individual and employer insurance purchase mandates, and legalize interstate insurance purchase.43 Although this is identical Cruz's position (save for de-linking insurance from employment), it is unclear whether Cruz is currently involved in the drafting of Senate legislation which would mirror Blackburn's.
      It's possible that Cruz has declined to propose a Senate bill out of a desire to unite support behind a plan that Kentucky Senator Rand Paul wrote with South Carolina Congressman Mark Sanford.7 On January 27th, Blackburn introduced another health bill in the House; the Health Care Choices for Seniors Act.44 It's possible that, having worked with Cruz, Blackburn supports Paul's plan as well; after all, Blackburn's House bill isn't competing with Paul's Senate bill. It could be beneficial for Paul, Sanford, Cruz, and Blackburn to strengthen their solidarity with one another, in order to begin building a coalition that opposes both Obamacare and the secret Republican agenda.

5. Rand Paul's Obamacare Replacement Act

      Like President Trump,18 Senator Rand Paul favors repealing the entirety of Obamacare.45 Of course, they and most other Republicans (Senator Susan Collins of Maine included46) do not favor “replacing it with nothing”, despite what some have claimed.20 On January 2nd of this year, Senator Paul suggested replacing Obamacare with “freedom”47, and replacing it immediately. Paul favors repealing not only the individual and employer mandate, but also the guaranteed issue regulation and the community rating regulation.48
      In an op-ed from the day before the 115th Congress was sworn in, Paul called for the basic freedom “to choose inexpensive insurance free from government dictates”, and the freedom “to buy insurance across state lines”.47 Agreeing with Ted Cruz37, he called for freedom “to save unlimited amounts in a health savings account”47. Most importantly, he said individuals should have the freedom “to join together in voluntary associations to gain the leverage of being part of a large insurance pool”. 47
      Senator Paul would accept it being legal to deny coverage on the basis of pre-existing conditions.49 After all, sick people primarily need care, not insurance, and you can't insure against something that has already happened. However, Paul does not want to see people thrown off their insurance when and if Obamacare is repealed; instead, he wants to ensure a two-year period of uninterrupted coverage for policy holders with pre-existing conditions;50 “a two-year window for people with preexisting conditions to sign up for care.”51 Senator Paul is concerned that requiring insurance companies to issue policies to people with pre-existing conditions could cause "adverse selection" of insurance policies, which he fears could bankrupt the health insurance industry.52 That's why on January 24th, 2017, he introduced the Obamacare Replacement Act (Senate Bill 222).50, 53
      The Obamacare Replacement Act would allow people who work in similar professions, and groups of businesses that share common interests, to pool their money and resources together, through Association Health Plans (AHPs), in order to inexpensively purchase group health insurance policies.54, 55 This aspect of Paul's proposal could potentially help professional associations demand insurance policies that are customized so as to cover the unique and distinct health risks associated with particular industries and types of workplaces.
      The explicit purpose of allowing people to “join together in voluntary associations” is, as Paul’s press release stated, “to gain the leverage of being part of a large insurance pool”.50 The idea is to help policy holders gain collective buying power;56 in order to match, equalize, and balance-out insurance companies’ great selling power. When customers’ buying power increases, insurance companies’ power to set high prices declines in comparison.57 As a result, premiums decrease, helping working people afford coverage, leading to more people being insured.
      The Obamacare Replacement Act, which Rand Paul authored with South Carolina Congressman Mark Sanford in the House (introducing the bill as H.R. 1072 on February 15th58), intends to put to good use the natural market incentive which people have to join into large insurance pools in as numerous quantities as possible. The fact that this incentive exists, renders the idea of an individual purchase mandate completely unnecessary.
      That's because the group insurance provision of Paul's proposal directly addresses the concerns of opponents of the “state lines” plan. These critics say Paul's plan would fail because it would reduce the size of risk pools, thus reducing individuals' and small groups' leverage, and failing to give insurance companies any reason to expand their networks and begin to offer coverage in other states.59, 60 It's entirely possible that some insurance companies don't want to expand into other states because: 1) so few states would allow them to, 2) companies don't want to issue Obamacare-compatible policies, and / or 3) it could take a long time to build networks in new states, and an interstate network. But with a new and more rational health policy, and a little bit of determination to get more states on-board with the plan, building such networks would have effects on affordability and accessibility that would be well worth the effort.
      With a fully repealed individual insurance purchase mandate, state-run “public options” would be truly optional. Public options could potentially even compete in a truly free, open market in health insurance, alongside cooperative and public plans61 (although Senator Paul has not specifically proposed this). Paul's plan and Cruz's plan each offer tax relief and tax fairness. That's why either the Paul-Sanford Obamacare Replacement Act or a new Cruz Health Care Choice Act for the 115th Congress, would represent meaningful steps towards providing tax relief for people struggling with medical expenses, and establishing free trade of health insurance with perfect competition,62 while affording consumers as many choices as possible.


6.
Rand Paul and Health Savings Accounts


     Like Ted Cruz, Rand Paul wants to eliminate contribution limits for Health Savings Accounts (H.S.A.s). Senators Cruz and Paul want all Americans to be free to save unlimited amounts of money in H.S.A.s, without paying taxes on those contributions.61 Health Savings Accounts allow people to save money, tax-free, in order to pay for expenses that health insurance doesn't cover; namely, co-pays and deductibles.61
      Senator Paul also favors passing tax credits for insurance premiums,48 as well as an optional credit of up to $5,000 for contributions to H.S.A.s.48 However, not all congressional Republicans support tax credits. On March 3rd, Representative Raul Labrador (R-ID) told CNN that he considers tax credits for H.S.A. contributions the same thing as the Obamacare subsidies which 7.5 million Americans currently receive.36 However, Congressman Labrador was talking about refundable tax credits, while Senator Paul was referring to ending the refundability of those tax credits.
      A Libertarian might argue that subsidies and tax credits are only the same thing if it is fair assume that government may tax us out of as much of our property and money as it pleases. After all, once you've already stolen someone's money, it's hard to know whether what you're doing with it is right.
Paul's $5,000 H.S.A. tax credit only applies to the extent that a person is liable for five thousand dollars in taxes.48 Critics of Paul's plan argue that limited tax credits would only benefit the wealthy.41 On March 3rd, The Hill reported that a secret Republican plan may involve “means-tested tax credits”;63 measures to exclude the rich from receiving tax credits for H.S.A. contributions.41
      One solution to all this could be to take some inspiration from the Negative Income Tax72 and the Earned Income Tax Credit,73 and continue to apply those H.S.A. tax credits – in a way that's refundable - to people with tax liabilities below $5,000. However, that solution is precisely what Senator Paul views as the problem. That's because of debate over what is a tax credit versus what is a subsidy, and because some believe that people who have no income tax or payroll tax obligations should not be given “refunds” because they didn't earn anything to begin with.48 In 2015, author John C. Goodman described Marco Rubio's tax credit plans as a “financial mandate”.74
      On February 9th, Christopher Jacobs, writing for TheFederalist.com, criticized Senator's plan in an article entitled “3 Key Problems with Rand Paul's Obamacare Replacement Act.”48 Jacobs asserted that, rather than deal with the uncapped tax exclusion for employer-provided health insurance that already exists, Paul chose to instead create two new uncapped tax incentives, by providing tax credits for health insurance premiums and H.S.A. contributions.48
      Jacob argues that Paul's H.S.A. plan creates a new federal subsidy;48 essentially, that Paul has created the same kind of “new entitlement” he feared would result from the secret Republican health plan (Paul was referring to extending the expansion of Medicaid). Jacobs also worries that these proposed tax credits could be a slippery slope to a “major spending package in the form of tax credits”.48 Additionally, Jacobs wrote that Paul's bill would keep Obamacare's “new entitlement” in the form of subsidies resulting from “the massive Medicaid expansion to the able-bodied”, which he says Paul's plan would keep Obamacare taxes in place in order to fund.48

7. The Cassidy-Collins Plan

      Rand Paul and Ted Cruz are not the only lawmakers who want to expand Health Savings Accounts. Utah Senator and President Pro-Tempore of the Senate Orrin Hatch proposed the Health Savings Act,64 whose identically-named mirrors in the House are sponsored by Michael Burgess65 and Erik Paulsen.66 Senator Jeff Flake67 and Congressman Dave Brat68 are sponsoring the Health Savings Account Expansion Act.
      The Patient Freedom Act of 2017, which would also expand H.S.A.s,46 is sponsored by Senators Susan Collins of Maine, Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, and Johnny Isakson of Georgia. The bill, referred to as the Cassidy-Collins plan or the P.F.A. for short, was introduced on January 23rd.69, 70 That day, Senator Collins expressed her desire to repeal and replace Obamacare as soon as possible, and said that the intent of her bill is to prevent “needless and avoidable gaps in coverage”.71
      According to Susan Collins's Senate website, the bill (Senate Bill 19169) would repeal the individual and employer mandate as well as benefit mandates, while addressing the causes of high health costs for young people and the way insurance plans are categorized. The P.F.A. also intends to empower states by allowing them to design their own plans, or to keep the Obamacare mandates by reinstating Title 1. The bill would also keep some of the A.C.A.'s consumer protections in place, such as the provision that prohibits exclusion on the basis of pre-existing conditions.71
      In addition to the basic State Lines Plan (perhaps best represented by the Blackburn bill), the Paul-Sanford Obamacare Replacement Act, and the Cassidy-Collins Patient Freedom Act, there are literally dozens of Republican alternatives to keeping Obamacare in place that are currently being considered. There are plenty of proposed alternatives to Obamacare, replacements for Obamacare, and plans to repeal and replace on the same day.

8. Other Republican Proposals

      On March 1st, U.S. Representative from Texas Pete Sessions (not to be confused with newly confirmed Attorney General Jeff Sessions, the former senator from Alabama) introduced House Resolution 1275.75 The bill's stated goal is to expand, beyond Obamacare, the “choices in obtaining and financing affordable health insurance coverage”.75 H.R. 1275 intends to achieve this goal through eliminating the individual and employer insurance purchase mandates.75
      The Blackburn plan and the Cassidy-Collins plan address the concern articulated in the Sessions bill,46, 76 so it could be argued that those two plans go further. However, the simplicity of the Sessions plan is straight-forward, and not being weighed-down by too many riders, amendments, and frills could give it an advantage when it comes to attracting support.
      Other health bills proposed during this Congress include a bill by Kristi Noem to repeal Obamacare's annual fee on health insurance providers,77 and another bill that aims to achieve tax-free health insurance.74 Other proposals include a Middle Class Health Benefits Repeal Act,80 at least two bills concerning state health coverage flexibility,81, 82 and bills advocating reform83, 84 and increased competition,84 access,85 affordability,86 and opportunity.87 Yet other bills propose enhancing the health care safety net,88 guaranteeing coverage for pre-existing conditions,89 sustaining employee health benefits,90 many bills concerning women's health,91 and other proposals.
      To repeat, there are more health bills (on both sides of the aisle) that are up for consideration this Congress; so many that it would take days to name and summarize them all. With all of these bills, and and considering that there are dozens of issues within health policy to contend with - there is no limit to the number of combinations of health policies that could be created. Especially if we look at legislation proposed in past congresses, such as the “freedom option” for which former Texas Senator Phil Gramm advocated in 2015.92, 93 But unfortunately, looking at past health bills just might result in a perfect storm of bad health legislation. That brings us to the secret Republican plan leaked March 2nd.94


9. Who Might Be Behind the Secret G.O.P. Plan

      Since Barack Obama took office in 2009, now Speaker of the House Paul Ryan has worked on health policy with the likes of California Representative Devin Nunes, Oklahoma Senator Tom Coburn, and North Carolina Senator Richard Burr.
95, 96 Ryan also worked with Michigan Representative Fred Upton and former Minnesota Representative John Kline;97-100 on a plan that aimed to “protect people with existing conditions”. The plan would have allowed states to opt-out of the Obamacare mandates, implement the State Lines Plan, allow children to stay on their parents' plans until they're 26, and enact tort reform, among other measures.101
      Ryan, Kline, and Upton were all involved in a 2015 working group that was organized by the Republican Policy Committee and Senator John Barrasso of Wyoming.102 That working group also included Senator Orrin Hatch of Utah and Senator Lamar Alexander of Tennessee.103 Hatch, Alexander, and Barrasso on potential outcomes of the 2015 Supreme Court health case King v. Burwell, which dealt with subsidies under federal and state exchanges.63 The three congressmen also proposed repealing the individual mandate,104 and proposed providing financial assistance to “help Americans keep the coverage they picked for a transitional period”, and giving states “freedom and flexibility” to create insurance markets with more competition and choices.63
      Recently, Senator Ben Sasse of Nebraska has been working with Senators Hatch and Barrasso on health, and according to Hatch, Sasse has been providing good ideas. Sasse says he opposes “fixing” Obamacare, and instead wants immediate repeal, although he also says it's not necessary to have a replacement ready for the day of repeal. Sasse has proposed a 1-½-year period of coverage for people with pre-existing conditions,105 which is similar to Rand Paul's proposed two-year period.50 Lamar Alexander says that he and his colleagues won't release their plan until President Trump comes out with his.105
      On February 9th, New York Magazine published an article characterizing Utah Senator Mike Lee's desire to focus on repealing Obamacare as a tacit admission that what will replace it could be unpopular.106 On March 3rd, Senator Kevin Brady (R-TX) said that there was not yet a final health bill, and that they would keep working with the Congressional Budget Office before presenting anything.10
It seems fair to conclude that the main people behind the secret Republican health plan are (most likely): Paul Ryan,16 Kevin McCarthy,10 Orrin Hatch, Lamar Alexander, John Barrasso, Ben Sasse, and Greg Walden of Oregon.10 Other possible contributors could include Kevin Brady,10 Mike Lee,106 Tom Coburn, and Richard Burr in the Senate; and Fred Upton, Devin Nunes,70, 95 Michael Burgess65, Erik Paulsen66, and Chris Collins10 in the House of Representatives.
      We might be able to take some educated guesses at who's involved in putting the bill together. But is it possble that we may infer, from that information, what might be in the bill?


10. What Might Be in the Secret G.O.P. Bill

      On Monday, March 6
th, C.N.N. reported that “two key committees are expected to markup the proposal” to repeal Obamacare “starting as early as Wednesday” March 8th. C.N.N. Described the bill as an “Obamacare repeal bill that includes some replacement components”.107
      Despite the presence of all the alternatives enumerated above, it seems that the secret Republican plan is the one that is most likely to be passed. Although we don't yet know for sure what's in it – as sad as those two facts are to admit – there is hope. That's because we can infer that if a proposal has been rumored to be included in the new Republican health plan since the new Congress was sworn in, and it does not appear in other proposed bills, then it's probably safe to conclude that it will be in the secret G.O.P. plan.
      On March 2nd, Rand Paul tweeted his concern that the plan would rename and keep parts of Obamacare.12 It seems likely that some of Obamacare will be left in place, given that Paul Ryan101 and Ben Sasse105 both want to protect people with pre-existing conditions. The Cassidy-Collins plan would leave the same parts of the law in place.71 It's unclear whether the Cassidy-Collins plan or the secret G.O.P. plan would keep Obamacare in name, but it's probably fair to conclude that the pre-existing conditions provision will be part of the secret plan.
      Both Ben Sasse105 and Mike Lee106 support focusing on repealing Obamacare, and would appear to accept not having a replacement for the A.C.A. ready on the same day. This position sticks out because the Cassidy-Collins plan47 and Rand Paul's plan69 both advocate repealing immediately and replacing either “now”, “as soon as possible” or on the same day. Ambivalence on this point is unique to Sasse and Lee, which means the secret plan might repeal Obamacare without being ready to replace it.
      John Barrasso,92 Paul Ryan,101 and Fred Upton101 – as well as Lindsey Graham92 – have all supported allowing states to opt-out of Obamacare's individual and employer insurance purchase mandates. The Cassidy-Collins plan does this too,75 but it also allows states to design their own plans, and even lets them reinstate the mandates on the state level. So it's possible that the Cassidy-Collins plan is different enough from the secret G.O.P. plan that the secret plan's sponsors might prefer to end the mandates, but allowing states to self-direct.
      Paul Ryan101 and Fred Upton101 have favored the State Lines Plan in the past, and there may be a plan in the works to start taxing employer-provided health insurance.41 This, again, closes the loophole which is an obstacle to “de-linking” or “de-coupling” health insurance from employment, and but it closes the loophole by enacting a tax on employer insurance, not by repealing nor cutting taxes on small-group and non-group insurance. Of course, no one in Congress has proposed exactly that, and they'd be crazy to think such a bill would pass.
      That's why if any Republican lawmakers decide to push the State Lines Plan, it will probably happen only as long as employer insurance is taxed. Even if the State Lines Plan isn't included, employer insurance will probably be taxed. As in the example of states reinstating the Obamacare mandates and self-directing on health policy, the national Republican establishment has little reason to let the states experiment. The only alternative to avoiding the taxation of employer insurance is to satisfactorily address the issues of subsidies and tax credits.
      Orrin Hatch,63 Fred Upton,63 and others in the G.O.P.41 favor cutting off the wealthy from tax credits to people seeking health insurance by implementing means-testing.63 Hatch, along with Congressmen Michael Burgess and Erik Paulsen,64-66 also supports reform to Health Savings Accounts,64-66 as do Rand Paul and Ted Cruz.41 Means-testing tax credits could be a way to reduce the cost of the plan, but it's also possible that the bill's designers don't care about transparency or cost. Republicans probably wouldn't consider means-testing tax credits but keeping them refundable, but then again, considering Paul Ryan's interest in the Earned Income Tax Credit and the Negative Income Tax108, and given how unpredictable politics have been lately, there's an outside chance that Ryan could suggest this “progressive-conservative” proposal. But realistically, Republicans will probably make tax credits non-refundable, while also means-testing them, or if not both, then one or the other.
When it comes to Medicaid, Christopher Jacobs of TheFederalist.com characterizes the G.O.P. as being confused about whether to pursue reform or expansion.48 In 2011, John Barrasso and Lindsey Graham – both still sitting senators – supported expanding Medicaid.92 Today, some Republicans support phasing-out the expansion of Medicaid.41 Rand Paul, for example, opposes extending Medicaid expansion.48 With entitlements hawk Paul Ryan at the helm – if he is, indeed, at the helm of the secret plan – reform is the more likely outcome.
      It's possible that block-granting Medicaid to the states could prove a popular and pragmatic option. After all, both the President and the Speaker of the House supported block-grants in years past.109 The case can be made that block-grants would satisfy conservatives by helping to re-establish constitutional health policy, and that the plan avoids a contentious battle over Medicaid at the federal level. However, it can also be argued that block-grants “kick the problem to the states”, getting Congress off the hook for solving the problem. But on the other hand, this issue was supposed to be solved by the states in the first place. Thus, it seems safe to say that block-grants will probably appear in the secret bill.
      Other measures which could possibly make their way into the bill include: 1) allowing young adults to stay on their parents' health insurance plans until they reach the age of 26, 2) enact medical malpractice reform (that is, limit the amount of money juries can award for non-physical damages), 3) prohibit insurers from imposing lifetime limits on benefits, and 4) guarantee renewability for people already enrolled in a plan. Both Speaker Ryan and Congressman Upton supported each of these measures two years ago.101
      On March 2nd, Speaker Ryan said that the bill he was working on was inspired by a 2015 health plan proposed by then Georgia Senator Tom Price.9 Ryan added that Trump, the House, and the Senate were “in sync” about repealing and replacing Obamacare.9 Price, who now serves as the Secretary of Health and Human Services under President Trump, introduced the Empowering Patients First Act of 2015. The bill which would have repealed Obamacare, increased H.S.A. contribution limits, expanded tax-deductible contributions, allowed H.S.A.s to “pay some primary care fees”, and provided grants to states for high-risk pools.110
      Given Ryan's admission that Price influenced him, it seems fair to say that what is likely to end up in the secret bill is whatever President Trump and Secretary Price would accept. That's why it would be worthwhile to run through what the president wants on health. During a debate, Senator Marco Rubio accused Trump of supporting the individual mandate, a claim which Trump denied, advocating repealing Obamacare and replacing it with “something much better”.111 Trump also said health insurance companies and drug companies are making a fortune off of the American people, and that premiums and drug prices should go down.112 It's additionally worth noting that the health plan which Trump promoted in early 2016 had seven provisions: 1) completely repeal Obamacare, 2) legalize interstate insurance purchase, 3) allow people to deduct premium payments from their taxes, 4) make H.S.A.s tax-free, 5) demand price transparency from hospitals and insurers, 6) let the states handle Medicaid, and 7) make it easier to import drugs from overseas.113
      In summary, Republicans working in secret probably want to focus on repealing Obamacare, without any sense of full repeal or repealing and replacing immediately being the goals. They'll probably repeal the majority of Obamacare, while leaving in place a few “consumer protections”; probably the pre-existing conditions provision, but maybe the 26-year-olds provision instead. If they keep the 26-year-olds provision, then they will probably repeal the requirement to issue health insurance to people with pre-existing conditions, and instead support a plan to provide a one- or two-year transition period for such people to get insured. Whatever the case, these Republicans seem willing to accept letting Obamacare stay in place; at least in part, in name, and in the form of the pre-existing and / or 26-year-olds provisions.
      On the issue of the states, lawmakers behind the secret G.O.P. health plan will most likely allow states to choose whether to opt-out of Obamacare Title 1 and its individual and employer insurance purchase mandates. Although this provision may sound good, its inclusion in the final bill will almost certainly mean that allowing states developing their own health plans – and maybe even enacting the State Lines Plan as well – could be off the table. Establishment Republicans might be concerned that these two ideas could empower states and undermine federal authority; they won't tolerate either proposal without getting something back. That's why only one of the following measures – 1) tax employer insurance, 2) enact State Lines Plan, and 3) let states self-direct – will be on the final bill.
      If the State Lines Plan passes and the states can self-direct, then it probably means serious financial reform has taken place elsewhere. The secret plan will probably include either means-testing tax credits, ending their refundability, or both. The more likely that these lawmakers are to choose both, the more likely they will be to support measures that promote state direction, and the more likely they'll be to decline to start taxing employer-sponsored insurance. On one final state issue, Republican lawmakers working in secret will probably choose to block-grant Medicaid to the states, in order to avoid yet another expensive, protracted partisan battle.
      Additionally, the bill will probably expand Health Savings Accounts in at least two significant ways, and there's a possibility it could include tort reform. There's an outside chance that the individual mandate could be kept in place, while staying “optional” (really, only appearing to stay optional) due to the presence of tax incentives.
      Finally, there will almost certainly be no serious drug pricing or drug patent reform. Although the president thinks prices should be lower, these issues don't attract as much attention as issues like Medicaid, the State Lines Plan, Health Savings Account reform, or what to do about the two most popular provisions of Obamacare. Most likely, measures to address drug prices and patents won't make it into the final bill, unless they're provisions to either make it easier to import drugs or provide price transparency.


53. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/senate-bill/222/all-info?r=2
64. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/senate-bill/403/all-info?r=36
65. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/35/all-info?r=86
66. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/1175/all-info?r=29
67. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/senate-bill/28/all-info?r=91
68. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/247/all-info?r=92
72. https://thedailyhatch.org/2012/07/25/milton-friedman-explains-negative-income-tax-to-william-f-buckley-in-1968/
73. http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/briefing-book/what-earned-income-tax-credit-eitc
74. https://www.cato.org/events/better-choice-healthcare-solutions-america
75. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/1275/all-info?r=3
76. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/314/all-info?r=2
77. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/246/all-info?r=69
78. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/407/all-info?r=87
79. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/173/all-info?r=93
80. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/senate-bill/58/all-info?r=88
81. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/710/all-info?r=68
82. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/352/all-info?r=44
83. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/372/all-info?r=20
84. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/277/all-info?r=46
85. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/1156/all-info?r=30
86. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/552/all-info?r=83
87. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/208/all-info?r=72
88. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/548/all-info?r=84
89. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/628/all-info?r=76
90. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/1204/all-info?r=26
91. https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/656?q=%7B%22search%22%3A%5B%22health%22%5D%7D&r=75
113. http://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/donald-trump-elected-his-7-point-plan-healthcare


Portions of Section 1 and 5 Written and Edited
on February 10th, 16th, and 18th through 21st, 2017
Full Text Written on February 23rd and 27th,
and March 2nd through 6th, 2017

Edited March 14th, 2017

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