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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Obama focuses on health care law

President ends long reticence on his signature legislation

President Barack Obama takes a flag from Katelyn Maloy, 5, in Sandusky, Ohio, on Thursday, during his two-day bus trip through Ohio and Pennsylvania. (Associated Press)
Christi Parsons Los Angeles Times

MAUMEE, Ohio – A week after the Supreme Court upheld most of President Barack Obama’s signature domestic policy achievement, the politics of health care held center stage in the presidential campaign, shoving aside the economic debate that has dominated most of the past several months.

In a notable shift of tactics after months of talking only minimally about health care in public, Obama went on offense Thursday and emphasized the law during a campaign bus trip through the crucial swing state of Ohio.

As he did so, his Republican challenger, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, was on the defensive, under attack from leading conservatives for alleged failures in handling the issue. The criticism reflected long-standing anxiety among conservatives that Romney’s history on health care would make him a flawed carrier of the party’s message.

Before a cheering crowd of several hundred at a rally in northwestern Ohio, Obama declared that the health care law was alive and well and highlighted elements that have proved popular with the public – even as the overall law has not.

“We will not go back to the days when insurance companies could discriminate against people just because they were sick,” he said. “We’re not going to tell 6 million young people who are now on their parents’ health insurance plans that suddenly they don’t have health insurance. We’re not going to allow Medicare to be turned into a voucher system.

“Nobody should go bankrupt because they get sick. I’ll work with anybody who wants to work with me to continue to improve our health care system and our health care laws. But the law I passed is here to stay.”

As he spoke, campaign aides distributed literature listing the benefits of the law, defiantly stealing the label that Republicans have used to attack it. “Because of Obamacare,” the list began.

As Obama waved the health care banner, Romney, vacationing in New Hampshire, seemed tongue-tied on the issue.

As Massachusetts governor, Romney’s biggest achievement was a law that resembled Obama’s in many ways, particularly in the requirement that people who could afford to do so either buy insurance or pay a fine. During the primary campaign, his rivals predicted that as the nominee, he would have trouble convincing voters that his requirement was good and Obama’s virtually identical requirement was bad.

Since the Supreme Court’s decision, Romney’s campaign has stumbled over whether to call that requirement a “tax,” as Chief Justice John Roberts did in his opinion for the court, or a “penalty,” as Romney had previously labeled it. Republicans in Washington had seized on the tax language after the ruling, figuring that the one victory they could snatch from the court defeat was to accuse Obama of having sponsored a tax increase.

That created a potential problem for Romney because, logically, it would mean that he too, as governor, had imposed a tax increase.

On Monday, Romney’s chief spokesman, Eric Fehrnstrom, said in an MSNBC interview that the requirement in the Obama law was a penalty, not a tax. Then on Wednesday, Romney went the other direction, saying in an interview with CBS that the requirement was a tax.

On Thursday, two of the conservative movement’s leading platforms – the editorial page of the Wall Street Journal and the Weekly Standard magazine – reacted by publicly upbraiding the candidate and his aides.

“The campaign looks confused in addition to being politically dumb,” the Journal said, and it accused Romney’s “insular staff” of “slowly squandering an historic opportunity.”

In the Standard, editor William Kristol, never a Romney fan, compared the former governor to two other Massachusetts politicians who unsuccessfully ran for president: Sen. John F. Kerry and former Gov. Michael Dukakis, both Democrats.

“So,” Kristol wrote, “speaking of losing candidates from Massachusetts: Is it too much to ask Mitt Romney to get off autopilot and actually think about the race he’s running?”