A couple of weeks ago, President Obama gave a speech in Maryland, mocking Republican apoplexy surrounding the Affordable Care Act. He quoted one state lawmaker in New Hampshire comparing the law to the Fugitive Slave Act, causing the audience to audibly gasp.
It was an understandable reaction. What kind of person thinks of the Fugitive Slave Act when discussing a moderate health care law? What’s that, George Will? You have something to contribute to this?
Conservative columnist and pundit George Will on Wednesday compared Obamacare to the Fugitive Slave Act and segregation to demonstrate the “bruising, untidy, utterly Democratic” process of changing laws.
In an interview with NPR’s “Morning Edition,” host Steve Inskeep asked Will about President Barack Obama’s argument that Republicans are short-circuiting the system by using government funding and the debt ceiling as leverage to dismantle Obamacare, rather than repealing the law outright.
“How does this short-circuit the system?” Will said. “I hear Democrats say, ‘The Affordable Care Act is the law,’ as though we’re supposed to genuflect at that sunburst of insight and move on. Well, the Fugitive Slave Act was the law, separate but equal was the law, lots of things are the law and then we change them.”
Sigh.
Now I realize, looking at the quote, that the conservative pundit didn’t say the Affordable Care Act and the Fugitive Slave Act are literally moral equivalents, but Will is nevertheless drawing a needlessly provocative parallel. Indeed, if health care for working families causes someone to immediately think of slavery and segregation, there’s a problem with this brand of political punditry.
But on a more direct level, Will seems to think the Affordable Care Act’s proponents consider it and all laws inviolate and untouchable. He’s confused. What matters is not whether Republicans want to change or destroy the law, but how they intend to go about completing their task.
It amazes me that conservatives are so often baffled by this.
Will contends that “lots of things are the law and then we change them.” That’s certainly true, though there’s an obvious follow-up question: by what process should they be changed?
In the United States, we’ve spent about a quarter of a millennium relying on something called the legislative process — lawmakers have an idea, they introduce a bill, it goes through committee, it’s subjected to debate, etc. It’s a long, difficult process, filled with many choke points, and the vast majority of bills fail.









