On Tuesday, Mother Jones’ Kevin Drum—taking a cue from Washington Post columnist and msnbc contributor Ezra Klein—asked whether the individual mandate provision in the Affordable Care Act even mattered. According to a segment on that night’s edition of The Last Word, the answer is a resounding “no.”
“The individual mandate is now simply a mirage,” said host Lawrence O’Donnell. “It is only a mandate on paper.”
The reason why, he said, was that it had been so thoroughly watered down since it was originally conceived as to be functionally irrelevant. That was not because of Republican objections, he said, but because liberals were “angry at the notion that poor people who could not afford insurance would be ordered by the government to buy it, and then be sent to jail if they didn’t.”
As a result, the penalties attached to not buying insurance were continually reduced, until they had neutered the policy entirely.
“In the final draft, the fine for not purchasing health insurance is so low—less than a hundred dollars for some people—that the level of fine provides absolutely no financial incentive to buy a product that costs thousands of dollars,” said O’Donnell. “And that’s what the fine is supposed to be: an incentive to buy the product.”
He went on: “Many rational people who want health insurance will still not be able to afford it, even with the government subsidy, and so will rationally choose to suffer the very, very low fine of a hundred dollars.”
Some people might not even pay that. As it turns out, the language of the Affordable Care Act seems to specifically forbid the federal government from enforcing the penalty.
“There you have it,” O’Donnell said. “the only tax provision in which the IRS is forbidden from using any of its tools to actually collect that little, tiny tax.”








