Mercer Column: Don’t trust anybody over 30—another blast from the past
Published: September 13, 2009
In the spirit of Woodstock and the return of Beatlemania, here’s another blast from the past: “Don’t trust anybody over 30!”
That rallying cry from the 1960s has gotten a 21st century makeover. Four decades later, many baby boomers and their elders don’t trust a president who’s under 50 or his youthful White House aides.
This generation gap is a problem for President Obama if he’s to pass health care reform. The first president born after the baby boom of 1946 to 1964 must persuade boomers to trust him.
The torch has been passed to a new generation, to borrow John F. Kennedy’s famous line, and to a president born more than six months after JFK uttered those words at his inauguration.
The first baby boomers turned 60 three years ago; Obama celebrated 48 last month. Unfortunately, the angriest voices from summer town halls were those of aging white male baby boomers.
To be sure, being a particular age guarantees a politician nothing. Baby-boomer presidents George W. Bush and Bill Clinton had many foes in their generation.
But Obama was never the first choice of voters over 50. In the primaries, Hillary Clinton was the favorite of older Democrats. In the November election, voters over 60 were the only age group that chose
John McCain over Obama.
With most congressional Republicans opposing reform, Obama desperately needs Democrats to believe they won’t be throwing away their careers if they support it. Seniors vote and will turn out for next
year’s midterm elections.
Health care reform will affect everyone as no other legislation has in decades. People are asking, what’s in it for me and what will it cost me?
Seniors worry that Obama’s oft-repeated promise to pay for reform without adding one dime to the federal deficit inevitably will result in cuts to Medicare benefits.
In his address to Congress and the nation Wednesday night, Obama spoke to seniors directly.
“Don’t pay attention to those scary stories about how your benefits will be cut,” he declared. “I will protect Medicare.”
Obama set to rest once more the spurious claim that reform will authorize death panels. He called Medicare “a sacred trust that must be passed down from one generation to the next,” and reassured
seniors “not a dollar of the Medicare trust fund will be used to pay for this plan.”
So far, so good.
But he also promised to eliminate hundreds of billions of dollars in waste, fraud and “unwarranted subsidies in Medicare that go to insurance companies.” His plan also would create an independent
medical commission to identify more waste. His broad overview left many questions to be answered in coming months.
If someone is disposed to trust the president and government, such uncertainty is tolerable. But critics have spent months ginning up insecurity with false claims and scare tactics.
Interestingly, the under-30 crowd, strongest supporters of Obama, have not rallied around health care reform. Nobody ever expects to need health care, and the idea that everybody would be required to
purchase health insurance is unpopular with invincible youth.
Obama now believes that the system won’t work unless everybody participates, a shift since the primaries.
History tells us that seniors do have the power to kill reform. Twenty years ago, the burning issue were changes in Medicare that provided more coverage but were paid for with higher Medicare premiums.
In what became a pivotal scene in August 1989, angry seniors surrounded Rep. Dan Rosentowski, D-Ill., chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, as he left a town hall meeting. Shouting
demonstrators blocked his car from leaving.
“These people don’t understand what the government is trying to do for them,” a frustrated Rostenkowski complained.
Maybe so, but Congress subsequently repealed the unpopular measure.
Obama insists that his plan will provide Medicare recipients with all their promised benefits and may even save money for some with high out-of-pocket prescription costs.
“That’s what this plan will do for you,” the president said.
Obama has laid out his intentions. If he follows through and keeps the faith, he may yet convince skeptical seniors to trust a president under 50.
Marsha Mercer is an independent columnist in Washington, D.C. You can write her at .
Advertisement
Reader Reactions
Young people don’t support Obama’s plan because it’s not JUST going to make them buy insurance they don’t need, it will also make them pay a lot more for it than it’s worth to them.
The idea that government should give everybody something for nothing is very popular.
However, the idea that a person could be forced to buy something they don’t want or need, at a cost well above the value, is not nearly so crowd-pleasing.
If government would ease regulations and restrictions so that young people could buy cheap catastrophic medical insurance coverage, a significant number of people who don’t have insurance now could be persuaded to buy it, without government coercion.
But the Obama “plan” doesn’t care about young people having insurance so much as it needs young people’s money to pay for their plan.
Another Mercer column…ZZZZZZZZZ (yawn)
“Don’t pay attention to those scary stories about how your benefits will be cut,” he declared. “I will protect Medicare.”
It sounds like a fairy tale, lalala. Unfortunately this tale is a scary one. Absolutely zero bases in truth. Where is the proof? He talks for 45 minutes and says, nothing. Same old, same old and this time it’s supposed to make a difference.
If Obama can find all this money in waste from Medicare let him find it first and put this so called waste away in a ‘safe’ place (so his colleagues can’t spend it) and show the American people he is not all smoke and mirrors, but has some real substance. SHOW ME THE MONEY! Then see if older Americans are continuing with the same benefit coverage and not being turned away because no doctor will see them, or have any other unintended consequences.
Just my opinion….


Advertisement