Is it improper to criticize Obama for breaking his promises?
I certainly don’t think so. Strong criticism might make him think a little harder before making a promise. Jon Walker at Firedoglake:
Gerry McEntee is president of the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME). He leads the largest union in America and has been one of the most vocal advocates for progressive health care reform. He is one of the few establishment figures willing to openly challenge Obama for repeatedly breaking his word in regards to health care reform.
Apparently, demanding that someone at least attempts to keep his promises is an unacceptable slight, according to a cowardly anonymous “senior White House 0fficial.”
We have had just about enough of his gratuitous slaps,” said a senior White House official Friday, calling the politically charged language “outrageous and unacceptable” from an ally — even from one that had, the official noted, devoted substantial resources to health care efforts.
“He’s doing his members a real disservice,” said the official, who said that while all other labor leaders had been careful to keep their opposition to elements of health care proposals modulated and largely inside the tent, McEntee was “beyond the pale.”
That’s interesting because the progressive community thinks Obama’s broken promises and secret deals are the real gratuitous slaps. Having a top progressive reform priority, allowing Medicare to save billions by directly negotiating drug prices, sacrificed in a backroom deal for campaign ads from PhRMA is beyond the pale.
Looking back at Obama’s campaign health care plan, it is shocking how many promises he broke without a fight. Obama promised:
- A new national health exchange open to all Americans
- A new public plan available to all Americans to compete with private insurance
- An employer mandate to provide health insurance
- A minimum medical loss ratio for insurance companies
- To allow people to import cheaper drugs from Canada or Europe
- To repeal the ban that prevents the government from directly negotiating with drug companies
Note none of these promise are part of the Senate Finance Committee bill. Obama has made no effort to fight for the inclusion of some of these (public option, employer mandate, minimum medical loss ratio) and months ago even made secret deals vowing to actively work to kill drug re-importation and direct drug price negotiation.
During the election Obama actively campaigned against two policies. One was …
Continue reading. Obama is breaking too many promises without a fight.
