One of the striking things about Sen. Rick Scott’s new policy blueprint is its scope: It’s one thing for a Republican to roll out a handful of vague, pleasant-sounding ideas; it’s something else when a sitting GOP senator unveils a 31-page document, chock full of right-wing elements.
Josh Barro joked, “The whole Rick Scott document has a hilarious ‘back of a napkin’ feel, like they had a brainstorming session, and then instead of talking to the pollsters or the bean-counters about the ideas they came up with, they just dumped everything on the whiteboard into a PowerPoint.”
Quite right. The Florida senator took a kitchen-sink approach, throwing together ideas related to education, race, crime, immigration, the economy, culture-war issues, the budget, and on and on.
But Scott’s plan didn’t mention health care.
There were no references to the Affordable Care Act. “Obamacare” went unnoticed. The Republican senator wants to pursue an almost cartoonishly reactionary agenda on a wide range of issues, but repealing the ACA didn’t make the cut.
Literally the only reference to “health care” in the entire 31-page document was a passing reference to giving veterans more private-sector choices. That’s it. That’s the contribution Scott’s lengthy blueprint makes to the debate over health care policy.








