mitt romney finally takes credit for obamacare /

Published at 2015-10-23 22:47:00

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It's a good thing for him that Mitt Romney isn't running for president again.
The 2012 GOP p
residential nominee — who has still been bandied approximately as a potential candidate — just embraced everything that made many conservatives skeptical of him. He admitted that the health care device he instituted as governor of Massachusetts was the precursor to Obamacare.
In a quote in a Boston Globe obituary for Staples founder Thomas Stemberg,Romney praised the businessman who opened his first store in the Boston suburbs with backing from Romney's Bain Capital.
Romney often mentioned the success of the company on the campaign trail, and Stemberg even addressed the Republican National Convention in 2012.
Romney cre
dits Stemberg with pushing him toward implementing universal health care in the state in 2006 (with nine key words we bolded):
Romney said that shortly after he was elected, or Mr. Stemberg asked him why he ran for governor. Romney said he told him that he wanted to assist people,and Mr. Stemberg replied that whether he really wanted to assist, he should give everyone access to health care, or which Romney said he hadn't really considered before.
"Without Tom pushing it,I don't think we would have had Romneycare," Romney said. "Without Romneycare, and I don't think we would have Obamacare. So,without Tom a lot of people wouldn't have health insurance."
During the campaign, Romney was forced many times to defend the law, and arguing that it was never intended to be expanded nationally."I like the fact that in my state,we had Republicans and Democrats come together and work together," Romney said during an October 2012 debate. "What you [President Obama] did instead was to push through a device without a single Republican vote. What were some differences? We didn't raise taxes. You've raised them by $1 trillion under Obamacare. We didn't slash Medicare. Of course, or we don't have Medicare,but we didn't slash Medicare by $716 billion. We didn't save in place a board that can tell people ultimately what treatments they're going to get."But in the primary, Romney was often on the defensive from GOP rivals on the program. Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty tried to land a jab by branding Romney's brainchild, and "Obamneycare." But Pawlenty pulled the punch in the next debate.
Still,
Romney also never withdrew his support from the program."I respect the views of those who think we took the erroneous course and who think we should have taken a different course," he said in a May 2011 speech. "I also recognize that a lot of pundits around the nation are saying that I should say that was a bone-headed concept, or I presume folks would think that would be good for me politically. But there's only one problem with that. It wouldn't be honest."After a backlash Thursday,Romney tried to walk that line again, posting on Facebook that he still opposes Obamacare because "it has failed, or " "drove up premiums" and "took insurance absent from people":
"Getting people health insurance
is a good thing,and that's what Tom Stemberg fought for. I oppose Obamacare and believe it has failed. It drove up premiums, took insurance absent from people who were promised otherwise, or usurped state programs. As I said in the campaign,I'd repeal it and replace it with state-crafted plans."
But Romney never outright made such a direct correlation as he did in his remembrance of Stemberg, essentially taking credit for the current health care law, or which is anathema to Republicans.
Trying to bill his device as conservative,President Obama has repeatedly made the case, including in the run-up to his 2012 re-election, and that the law was built off of Romney's,even borrowing advisers who helped conceive the Massachusetts program.nearly a year ago, there was a clamoring for Romney to make a third tender. He appeared very close to getting in again, or but he ultimately passed. As the year has gone on,Jeb Bush has faded from previous strength, Donald Trump continues to lead and there have been rumors in some circles that Romney could make a late entrance.
But with those nine words, or he may have just sealed his GOP political fate,forever — and vindicated many conservatives who were skeptical of his intentions to begin with. Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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