I will explain where I think Dems have a problem that they need to deal with.
In post number 13192 Y66 cites a NYT article that itself cites some sources on the Cadillac Tax, in particular an article by
Sarah Kliff Let's think a bit about this, going back to the claim "If you like the insurance you have, you can keep it." I don't think that there is any real doubt that this promise was part of the advertising for passing the ACA.
Of course there would be a caveat. You can keep it if your employer continues to offer it. Ok, fair enough, so far. But if we take the ACA as a whole, then the statement should have been
:
"If you like the insurance you have, you can keep it, providing that your employer continues to offer it and we are going to be doing everything that we can, including a 40% penalty, to get your employer to stop offering it"
Ok, politicians in general are very good at explaining why words that seem to have a clear meaning of course really, when properly re-interpreted by them, have an entirely different meaning. Here the meaning is that of the person happens to be working for an employer who is so generous ort so dumb. or maybe bound at least for a while by a union contract that s/he will continue to offer this health plan despite the best efforts of everyone in the administration get them to drop it, well the you can keep it. Quoting Ms. Kliff
"The whole point of the Cadillac tax was to push employers in the opposite direction, and offer their workers less robust benefit packages."
So here, as I understand it, is where this gets us. These very generous plans push the cost of medical care upward, the Cadillac tax was designed to deal with that, the Cadillac tax is so unpopular there is no chance it will every actually be implemented. All predictable.
The main point: The ordinary person, one who does not spend a lot of time thinking about the long term effect of the ACA, is very aware of being told first that he can keep his plan and then finding that he has to fight like hell to keep it. This does not inspire trust.
I regard myself as an ordinary guy, or close to it. This means that I am not an expert on health care, not an expert on immigration, not an expert on a lot of things, but I can tell when
"If you like the insurance you have, you can keep it." is not really a correct description of what is going on.
Here is a shorter version: When I get a bad result at bridge, I start by looking at my own choices to see what I might have done better. The Dems had a very bad result in the last presidential election. I strongly suggest that they try looking at the errors that they made. For one thing, correcting one's own errors is much more likely to be within the power of a person
than getting
others to act in your interests.