Towards the end of his remarks at the National Press Club yesterday, House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) condemned a single-payer health care system as a “singularly bad idea.”
The retiring GOP leader added, “It all brings to mind what Margaret Thatcher once described as the problem with socialism: ‘Eventually, you run out of other people’s money.’ And it just shows how today’s Democratic Party has gone further left to the fringes, and further back to discredited ideas.”
It was an odd remark for an ostensible policy wonk. Single-payer isn’t socialism; the U.K. doesn’t have a single-payer system; and Thatcher’s health care policy is further to the left of anything Republicans or Democrats have proposed.
While we’re at it, single-payer isn’t a “fringe” idea — it exists throughout much of the Western world and polls suggest most Americans like the model — and it hasn’t been “discredited.”
Soon after, at the same event, Ryan turned his attention to the forces that are driving “tribalism and identity politics.” Mother Jones noted:
House Speaker Paul Ryan lamented the increasingly personal tone of American politics at a National Press Club event Monday. “I worry about this a lot,” he said. “The incentive in politics is invective; it’s outrage; it’s hysteria.”
He ought to know. Ryan’s super-PAC, the Congressional Leadership Fund, has spent the run-up to the 2018 midterm elections churning out attack ads — some featuring barely disguised racism — that rely on those exact ingredients.
Quite right. As much as the House Speaker wants to be seen as above the petty “hysteria” that drives too much of contemporary politics, the fact remains that Ryan’s association with “invective” tactics is hard to ignore.
This isn’t necessarily new. The Wisconsin congressman, whose career on Capitol Hill has spanned nearly two decades, has long been one of the House’s most bitter partisans. Indeed, Ryan’s rise to power has been fueled by “invective” and “outrage: he’s not only condemned Social Security as “a collectivist system,” he blasted Social Security’s Democratic champions as “collectivist, class warfare-breathing demagogues.”
Ryan also famously divided the public into what he saw as two camps: “makers” and “takers.”
But we don’t necessarily have to look to the past to appreciate the hypocrisy of the message Ryan pushed yesterday. We need only to turn on our televisions in swing districts. As Politico reported:









