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Newt Gingrich: We get last word on health care reform

By: Newt Gingrich
Examiner Columnist
September 4, 2009

A headline in The Washington Post following the announcement of next week's big presidential speech on health care said it well: "Address to Congress is effort to seize control of the debate."

The White House's arrogant belief in the power of Obama the Orator is contradicted by the two greatest American orators of the last 80 years, Franklin Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan. Both these leaders knew that in a free society, presidents can shape and guide debate, but they can't "control" it. The danger for a president who seeks to control the debate is that the country will ultimately repudiate him.

Such is the situation President Obama finds himself in now.

His speech next Wednesday is the most consequential of his presidency since the inaugural. Eight months of a non-stimulative $787 stimulus bill, a budget that will double the national debt in the next five years, and a high-tax, big bureaucracy cap-and-trade bill have translated into a 12-point drop in Democratic party affiliation, according to one poll.

Obama is facing a huge tidal wave of American opinion away from bigger government and toward solutions we can understand and believe in. Riding this wave is still possible. Controlling it is a losing proposition.

And so the President faces an historic choice.

One option is to use his speech next week to cleverly repackage the current, 1,000-plus page, liberal health care bill; to try to control the debate by wrapping the same old, big-government plan in prettier rhetorical paper.

But the history of health care reform so far - party line votes and demonizing opponents - doesn't bode well for this strategy. If Obama thinks he can use his cleverness and his oratory to make Americans think he is backing away from a big-government plan when he's not, he should think again.

In the age of the internet and talk radio, Lincoln's maxim is more true than ever: You can't fool all Americans all of the time.

The other option is to try to guide and shape the debate by slowing down, opening up the process, and taking things one step at a time; to stop trying to invent new ways to get Americans to listen to him, and instead actually listen to Americans.

Sixteen years ago, in the spring of 1993, then-First Lady Hillary Clinton came to me to talk about health care reform. I told her then what I would tell President Obama today: It's impossible to write a comprehensive health care reform bill and get it passed. Politicians aren't that smart, Americans aren't that trusting, and special interests aren't that lazy.

Instead of trying to pass a single bill that attempts to remake one-sixth of the American economy, Obama could use his speech to announce a series of four or five bills to reform our health care system, each written in a bipartisan way and debated in open hearings with open rules.

A step-by-step approach would make both sides more accountable. It would eliminate the opportunity for Democrats to bury bad programs in a mammoth, unreadable bill, and it would obligate Republicans to come to the table with their own reform ideas.

One set of hearings and one bill could focus on improving the delivery and administration of health care, including tort reform and rewarding providers for individual health and wellness.

Another bill could address creating real competition and choice in the insurance market by creating a nationwide market for insurance.

A separate bill could focus on saving Medicare and Medicaid from bankruptcy by finding ways to eliminate what the Center for Health Transformation estimates is $70-120 billion in fraud and abuse each year.

And a fourth bill could explore ways of investing in science and innovation, like reforming the FDA's hopelessly long and needlessly complicated approval process for new medicines.

Each of these bills is more understandable, more doable, and more democratic than the take-it-or-leave-it strategy that has been employed so far.

So Obama has a choice to make Wednesday night.

He can listen to us.

Or he can demand we listen to him.

Either way, we'll get the last word.

 

Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich has published 19 books, including 10 fiction and nonfiction best-sellers. He is the founder of the Center for Health Transformation and chairman of American Solutions for Winning the Future. For more information, see newt.org. His exclusive column for The Examiner appears Fridays.




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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Walt

Sep 3, 2009

It sounds like Newt is asking them to do their job. That would be nice

 

art

Sep 4, 2009

Obama is not serious about Healthcare if Tort is not included. When many of the lawmakers have not thoroughly read the bill, what can we expect.

 

wilson

Sep 4, 2009

newt gingrich we need another contract
for america now
wes we can

 

Rodney

Sep 4, 2009

Skunks cannot hide their perfume when they feel threatened and liars cannot come to the truth while they don't feel threatened. Hence next Wednesday will be more of the same anti-capitalist ranting as he tries to transform this country into his socialist nirvana. I am Christian and I want nothing to do with nirvana. I will see God in heaven if I do my job here on earth and stand up for justice and freedom. For Obama to actually propose tort reform as he must to reclaim the conservative votes for health care is as reasonable as believing that he has a plan that will turn the swords into plowshares in the Middle East and Asia. Hope is the fruit of reasonable expectations not pipe dreams from opium. To hope Obama will change his course of action is to ask the leapard to change his spots. It is not going to happen.

 

Humberto Hernandez

Sep 4, 2009

That's the way it should be.

 

John Dickerson

Sep 4, 2009

I agree with Minority Leader M. McConnell
this bill should be dumped and the current Health Bill be amended to add the
necessary changes. John

 

Ktystyna

Sep 4, 2009

If Gingrich is so smart, why didn't he stay in Congress. Were the older kids mean to him? According to Webster's a "newt" is a sort of semi-aquatic salamander. Is that the reason for Gingrich's nickname?

 

Rich

Sep 4, 2009

I'm for health care reform, but you're right; an incremental approach would probably work better. Still, I see very few proposals by Republicans to address the problems of pre-existing conditions and seemingly arbitrary denials of coverage.

 

meat

Sep 4, 2009

i read an article recently that bo told his cronies that he would not be ready in '08.that is the only truth that has parted his lips in his life. he and his gang r the mother of liars of this earth. meat



 

Mike

Sep 5, 2009

@Rich, Repbulicans are talking about pre-existing conditions.
Here is a qoute from Cong. Paul Ryan from his "Roadmap for America"...
"States would create “high risk pools” for people with pre-existing conditions who could not afford insurance premiums. Federal funding would help to offset the cost of insuring these individuals."

 

Mark Levin Fan

Sep 5, 2009

I wish Congress and the Obama Administration would follow Newt's advice. Also, I'll be listening to Mark Levin's play-by-play of the Obama speech next week. It's the only way I can handle Obama's speeches.

 

ggordon

Sep 5, 2009

Does anyone expect a "humbled" Obama? He and the Dems would have to go to market driven approaches. There is no doubt these guys are Marxists/socialists - in favor of government control of private business, or direct control of services. Market solutions run contrary to their purpose.
The markets - left alone - will work considerably better than they do currently with huge numbers of regulations at every level of government. It is not just a problem of the feds, but of states as well.

 

dotdot

Sep 5, 2009

Phew! Have not heard from Newt since he was on Fox a month or so ago when he said he would be joining the education secretary in taking a tour across the country to focus on better education. I thought he may be joining forces with the administration.
I will pay more attention to his articles in the Examiner--sorry, Newt!

 

GRAMMA

Sep 5, 2009

Newt. you got it togather, will you keep speaking out against what they are doing that is not the American way? I don't think very many will "walk" over you. Keep speaking out for this great country, and keep us safe and don't let him be my way or the high-way guy. Don't let his scare tactics work!! He IS IN A MESS AND IS LIKE A FISH OUT OF WATER GRASPING FOR THE CONGRESS/ANY-ONE TO HELP FIX HIS PROBLEM!!!! PRAY TO GOD THAT HE HAS AN AMERICAN PLAN AND THAT WILL KEEP US AMERICAN AND NOT UNDER SOCIALISM.WE NEED TO PRAY/PRAY/PRAY!! I want to keep our great country and all the freedom's that go with it, and not have him/a socialist/communist/marxist/take it away. I heard he has never admitted to being a capatialist!!! He is not working for our great country, so Newt. stay on him. You're doing a good job speaking out, and wish a FEW more would HELP you !!!!!! Thanks for the great job

 

msmac

Sep 5, 2009

Newt's second option, guiding and shaping,slowing down and opening debate will never happen - Obama wants to destroy America, not gain consensus for true health care reform - or any other positive thing. He wants to be a dictator and, God help us, I hope all Americans see through this facade. He's got to be nutralized until 2010.

 

novadine

Sep 5, 2009

I too, have my doubts obama will use common sense to improve health care. What Newt proposes is common sense, but this is not what the progressives are after. They want extreme gov control over our lives and health care and cap and trade or very important in their agenda. This is a dangerous administration and our freedoms and liberties are at high risk. This is a fight over Freedom...not health care. This is a fight over content of character, not race.

 

jcp

Sep 5, 2009

Are you an Obama's counselor, Mr.Gingrich?

 

JoeSwiss

Sep 6, 2009

how come conservatives like Gingrich (not in this article, but sometimes elsewhere, eg "John Fund interviews David Walker", yesterday on WSJ) admit regulating health care isn't a granted constitutional power, and then go on to make suggestions on how to make this work?

Why leave the essential Constitutional issue behind?

How else are we going to start getting to small governement?

 

freedumb1

Sep 6, 2009

newt you lost the fight back as speaker when "America's First Black President",BILL CLINTON, made you ride in the back of"AIRBUS1".Don't you BELTWAY POLITICIANS & PUNDITS ever get it?We don't want this MEDiKILL BILL.I'm tired of this BI-PARTY-SIN B.S.KILL THE BILL and stop putting us under FASCIST SOCIALIST COMMUNIST FEDERAL CONTROL.I want my REPUBLIC BACK!!!Where there aren't UBERPOLICISSYS!Who have set of BALLS that will never fit in HILLARY'S LOCKBOX!!!WE IN AMERICA ARE LOOKING FOR TRUE LEADERSHIP-BOTH MEN AND WOMEN IN OUR U.S.GOVERNMENT--THROW THEM ALL OUT IN 2010...LET THE "VET&SEARCH" BEGIN...the best way to get TERM LIMITS passed is VOTEOUT2010.

 

csh

Sep 6, 2009

Newt Gingrich knows history, Obama should take a few history lessons. The problem is, Obama wants socialism, so he will ignore history. Americans are smarter than he gives them credit, wise up Obama. Stop making such a mess of things.

 

Edward

Sep 6, 2009

Newt Gingrich for President, you can understand him when says something. He doesn't have to pause after every two or three words. He is a very smart man. I hope he continues to stand up for the people. Thanks, Newt.

 

Andrew

Sep 6, 2009

I don't know why people as smart as Newt continue to live with the delusion that Obama is operating within the same paradigm as are most Americans as as did every prior American president. Have they NOT been listening to the man for the past 2 years? Were they not paying attention during the Great Obamapology Tour earlier this year?? The president is NOT interested in what's best for America. That much is plainly and abundantly clear. Thus, the healthcare debate, in his mind, is NOT about healthcare. It's about power. The acquisition and expansion of raw government power over as much of American life as possible, and of course in the hands of the Democrap Party. When will Newt and the others stop with the fairy-tale that Obama "should" do this or that? Obama's "shoulds" are driven by most things antithetical to most Americans. Wake up already.

 

June

Sep 6, 2009

For your information

 

alert

Sep 6, 2009

I think America is waking up and finally coming back to consciousness and seeing Obama for who he truly is...
I don't understand how they missed that during his campaign. It was very obvious
what he stood for, it is just taking a little longer for some folks to see the handwriting on the wall. You should know someone before you trust them...

 

Sep 6, 2009

Those of you that say Republicans haven't come up with health care reform ideas, just read this article. I see
some very good ideas right here. Someone isn't listening. I don't think the White House wants to hear from anyone else, they are focused on their
own agenda. It seems to be their way or the highway. If they are smart they will listen to the American people. Independents, Republicans, and Democrats are going to the town hall meetings and letting thier mistrust be known. They are not "angry mobs". They might be angry and with good reason.

 

db562008

Sep 7, 2009

COMMON SENCE, DOES ANYONE HAVE ANY? a 1,000 PAGE BILL that no one, lets break it down, incremently, work on sections of the bill, I don't think this is Oboma's way. Most Marists want it all or nothing. Oboma has alot at stake, and he is going to repackage the trojan horse anyway he can. BUTTTT He has underestamated the resiliance of the American people. We are not just dumb white folks that he talked about on the campaign trail. If he doesn't back down/slow down on some of his radical ajenda he probably won't even complete his first term. The American people will be calling for IMPEACHMENT.

 

Katie Murphy

Sep 7, 2009

Gingrich - the super hypocrit. He talks about "values", and supports the relgious right whose objectives are greed and more greed, and the destruction of the middle class for the super-wealth of the rich.

And his values include cheating on his first wife, while she was in the hospital with cancer. And he is now on his third wife, while he is one of the so called defenders of marriage.

Republicans, for the most part, have sold their soul to Greed. If only they read the bible, and saw what is in place for them in the next 'life'

 

Sep 7, 2009

Since day 1, the Obama administration has been nothing but DRAMA. Obama and his backers are determined America should be a socialized government. He and his libs have dreamed for years of the day when they could takeover the Health Care system, once and for all. I do not see he has changed his mind. A marxist never changes. All opposition Obama has received has just made Obama more determined to steal more power by ramming this socialized bill on though.
Wonder where Soros is?

 

Zoe

Sep 7, 2009

Newt please write more articles and speak more often. Teach us. If only all Americans could have had teachers like you. Thanks Newt for all your work. I trust you! Politics is so many faceted there are precious few people with your ability to sort and discord such massive amounts of information and keep whats worth keeping. You do that! And I want more of your wisdom. Thanks again Newt.

 

Wealthy

Sep 7, 2009

OH!!Nice??I found a more interesting place ~~~~~~MyWealthyLove.com~~~~~~where you can meet lots of wealthy people and find your ideal match…What are u waiting for? Go there right now!! LOL…….

 

GracefulConsonance

Sep 8, 2009

Wise words from the former Speaker, hear hear!

The Obama Administration would do well to listen and indulge the constructive suggestions.

 

Independent Thinker

Sep 8, 2009

Oh my...db562008, perhaps you should continue your second grade education before you join a political discussion. "Oboma donchu be callin me no dumb whyt person" LOL. Amazing. Bravo to the Republican party for convincing these types of people that you have ANYTHING to offer them! BTW, I don't necessarily have a problem with what Newt said.

 

Beth

Sep 8, 2009

Katie, Katie, Katie....WAKE UP!!!!!

Has anyone making 50,000.00 a year ever offered you a JOB???? the ones who are willing to Take the risk SHOULD reap the reward....Have YOU ever created a JOB for ANYONE?????

 


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