The reaction of the Republican Party to the Supreme Court’s upholding of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) has been, in a word, petulant. Yes, that will continue when House Republicans inevitably stage a meaningless vote to repeal the law. But forget about the bluster coming from Washington conservatives for a moment. The real whining is being done by states with Republican leadership.
Melissa and her guests accounted for the number of Republican governors (including Wisconsin’s Scott Walker and Florida’s Rick Scott) who, at the time of our Sunday broadcast, were opting out of the Medicaid expansion in the law, and choosing not to enforce it altogether in their states. Why not?
For his part, Maine governor Paul LePage today said it’s about taxes, warning against paying the “new Gestapo” — the Internal Revenue Service — then compounded that bit of irrationality by Not-Apologizing, saying, “It was never intended to offend anyone and if someone’s offended, then they ought to be goddamn mad at the federal government.” And as Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal put it only slightly more sanely on Meet the Press, the priority shouldn’t be the law which could aid thousands of the residents of his state — one of the poorest in the country — afford health insurance. No, their priority should be electing Mitt Romney.
Rhetoric like that is par for the course with Jindal, who years ago dissed the stimulus all while he was busy handing out jumbo-sized ceremonial stimulus checks to communities all throughout Louisiana, smiling, and taking the credit. That hypocrisy hasn’t slowed him down in the least, but Jindal’s lack of shame pales in comparison that displayed yesterday by Texas governor Rick Perry. At lease Jindal seems to think that there is a health care problem, and that Romney can magically fix it by repealing the ACA. Perry doesn’t seem to believe there’s a problem at all.
Perry announced yesterday that he is rejecting the Medicaid expansion, and refuses to implement the insurance exchanges the ACA mandates. He said in a statement about the officially constitutional “Obamacare”:
“I will not be party to socializing health care and bankrupting my state in direct contradiction to our Constitution and our founding principles of limited government.”
Yeah, forget what the Supreme Court says, right? This is particularly egregious, not because Perry is making up what is in the Constitution, what is socialism and what isn’t. Forget the mildly amusing alarmist rhetoric — this political decision being made by Perry is newsworthy given that Texas is uniquely horrible at providing health care for its residents, and this law could help. Per Talking Points Memo:









