While rolling out a faux health care plan three weeks ago, Donald Trump boasted that he’d soon send $200 drug-discount cards to 33 million Medicare beneficiaries. “Nobody has seen this before,” the president said. “These cards are incredible.”
Even by 2020 standards, it was a brazen move. The White House’s plan is to move billions of dollars out of Medicare trust funds, without congressional approval, using taxpayer funds — in a legally dubious way — as part of an unabashed election-season scheme. Polls show Trump losing his advantage among seniors, so his team got to work on a plan in which the administration would effectively send them Trump-branded, taxpayer-financed gift cards ahead of Election Day.
Making matters just a little worse, the scheme was hatched in a decidedly post-policy way. Politico reported that administration officials weren’t notified in advance that the president would promise to send seniors these cards: “Trump and his advisers were searching for proposals to tout as health care accomplishments and latched onto the drug-discount cards just hours before the president’s scheduled address, leaving the health department scrambling to justify the idea.”
The article quoted one HHS official saying, “It’s turning into this last-minute, thrown-together thing” — which necessarily helped bolster allegations that the administration’s scheme was a corrupt gambit to help Trump’s re-election bid.
But there’s a problem with “thrown-together” policies that haven’t been properly planned: they often don’t quite work. The Wall Street Journal reported overnight:









