Peggy Noonan, a prominent Republican pundit at the Wall Street Journal, ran into a little trouble last week trying to discuss health care policy she mistakenly thinks she understands.
Indeed, as Ezra Klein explained yesterday, “Noonan’s column is a beautiful example of a writer so intent on criticizing Obamacare that she’s missed the fact that the law is doing precisely the thing she wants done. A reasonable reader of Noonan’s column would end up loathing ‘Obamacare’ and hoping for a replacement that looks like, well, Obamacare.”
At issue is something called Community First Choice, a new part of Medicaid that expands access to at-home care for the disabled. It’s a major breakthrough, which Noonan thinks she doesn’t like, but when she fleshed out her concerns, it sounded like Nooan was calling for changes that are already in the law.
Indeed, as it turns out, Community First Choice is all over the news, and Noonan isn’t the only one whose opposition isn’t quite as consistent as previously thought.
Gov. Rick Perry wants to kill Obamacare dead, but Texas health officials are in talks with the Obama administration about accepting an estimated $100 million available through the health law to care for the elderly and disabled, POLITICO has learned.
Perry health aides are negotiating with the Obama administration on the terms of an optional Obamacare program that would allow Texas to claim stepped-up Medicaid funding for the care of people with disabilities.
The so-called Community First Choice program aims to enhance the quality of services available to the disabled and elderly in their homes or communities. Similar approaches have had bipartisan support around the country. About 12,000 Texans are expected to benefit in the first year of the program.
Now, the knee-jerk reaction to this is probably to accuse Perry of simple hypocrisy — he claims to be disgusted by the Affordable Care Act, and yet here he is seeking funds through the federal system he holds in contempt.
On this angle, I’m inclined to cut the Texas governor some slack. Federal officials are making resources available to states, and it’s tough to blame Perry for thinking to himself, “Well, if the money is just sitting there, I might as well help some of my constituents, whether I like the law or not.”
But there’s another angle to this that I find more problematic.









