Obamacare and the crisis of incompetence
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Savannah Lewis, 1, of Germantown, dressed as a character from Yo Gabba Gabba! for Halloween 2013. (Tracie Van Auken/for NewsWorks)
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Kevon Lewis, 9, of Germantown, loaded candy into a pumpkin to be given away as prizes at the Halloween party for West Rockland Street in Germantown on Halloween night. (Tracie Van Auken/for NewsWorks)
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A ghastly ghoul hangs at the Halloween festivities organized for West Rockland Street in Germantown by Emaleigh and Aine Doley on Halloween evening. (Tracie Van Auken/for NewsWorks)
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Chiani Reed, 5, wears pink lashes and a graduation cap to the West Rockland Street Halloween party on Halloween night. (Tracie Van Auken/for NewsWorks)
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Crowds gather for games during the West Rockland Street Halloween Party at the intersection with Greene Street in southern Germantown on Halloween evening. (Tracie Van Auken/for NewsWorks)
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Cymaiah Marc (left), 6, and Makayla Oduardo (center), 6, participate in a potato sack race during the West Rockland Street Halloween Party in Germantown on Halloween evening. (Tracie Van Auken/for NewsWorks)
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Sharrell Littles, of Mt. Airy, walks with her daughters, LaShae (left), 2, and LaShari, 4, while trick-or-treating on Germantown Avenue Halloween night in 2013. (Tracie Van Auken for WHYY)
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Yandel Aponte-Boyd, 3, of Mt. Airy, startles Linda Rothe, with Rothe Florists, when he comes back for seconds while trick-or-treating at the shops on Germantown Avenue Halloween night. Next to him is Leilanni Mays, 10, of East Oak Lane. (Tracie Van Auken/for NewsWorks)
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Ruby Simpson (left), 10, of Mt. Airy, and Kaya Sterner, 10, of Chestnut Hill, take a break from trick-or-treating on Germantown Avenue on Halloween evening. (Tracie Van Auken/for NewsWorks)
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Ruth Stroman, of Mt. Airy, and her daughter Madison, 3, leave The Juiceroom after trick-or-treating there on Halloween evening. (Tracie Van Auken/for NewsWorks)
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Larry Daniels, with Edward Jones Investments, hands out candy to Jaekyung Kim (center), 8, and Yikyung Kim (right), 10, on Germantown Avenue in Mt. Airy on Halloween night. (Tracie Van Auken/for NewsWorks)
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Tyrena Jackson (left), of Mt. Airy, takes her son Zaiking Jackson, 2, trick-or-treating at the shops on Germantown Avenue with Rashea Martin (right) on Halloween night. (Tracie Van Auken/for NewsWorks)
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Saige Frazier (center), 5, of Mt. Airy, gets candy at Mi Puebla Mexican Food Restaurant on Germantown Avenue Halloween night. With her are her sister, Amanda Frazier (left), 10, and Kya Conyers (right), 5. (Tracie Van Auken/for NewsWorks)
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Robin Vallette sits on her porch in Chestnut Hill and gives juice boxes away to trick-or-treaters (from left) Darrius Ward, 11, Daysha Ward, 8, and Taren Williams, 12, all from Chestnut Hill, on Halloween night. (Tracie Van Auken/for NewsWorks)
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Chestnut Hill resident Jim McCafferty passes out candy from his porch on Halloween night. (Tracie Van Auken/for NewsWorks)
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Evie Valiante, 18 months, takes a lollipop from Jim McCafferty in Chestnut Hill on Halloween night. (Tracie Van Auken/for NewsWorks)
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Ava Sylvester, 2, and her sister, Audrey, 4, stand on their front porch in Chestnut Hill and wait to give candy to trick-or-treaters on Halloween night. (Tracie Van Auken/for NewsWorks)
What is it with second-term presidents, anyway? Nixon supposedly knew nothing about Watergate, Reagan professed to know nothing about Iran-Contra, Bush clearly knew nothing about his administration’s ineptitude during the Katrina cleanup, Clinton at first claimed to know nothing sexual about “that woman, Miss Lewinsky” — and here we go again.
What did Barack Obama know, or prefer not to know, about the burgeoning technical nightmares at healthcare.gov? Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius testified Wednesday that she had sent Obama “regular reports” about the launch preparations, and that she told him “we were ready to go” on schedule. Presumably those “regular reports” were relentlessly upbeat, or else Obama wouldn’t have gone public with his promise that the site – the public’s entry point to Obamacare – would be a cinch to use, a la Amazon.com.
But why were the reports to Obama so sunny? Didn’t Sebelius heed the September warning, from the site’s contractors, that the site was nowhere near ready for Oct. 1, that the time frame for test and launch was way too short? (In a separate congressional hearing this week, the contractors said they had relayed this warning to government officials.) Or did that warning not reach her ears at all? She insisted Wednesday that “no senior official ever reporting to me ever advised me that we should delay” and that “no one indicated that this (launch) could possibly go this wrong.”
Meanwhile, she acknowledged that comprehensive testing of the finished site began way too late, just two weeks before launch, making it impossible to fix things in time. And, separately, top Sebelius subordinate Marilyn Tavenner said that top contractor CGI Federal “had some issues with timely delivery.” But Sebelius didn’t say whether any of that downbeat info was included in the “regular reports” to Obama. Nor did she indicate whether Obama asked probing questions about the status of the site, or simply punted all the details.
It’s like what Casey Stengel asked about his 1962 New York Mets: “Can’t anybody here play this game?”
So it’s no surprise that Obama took a major hit in the latest bipartisan NBC News-Wall Street Journal poll. His job approval rating is now 42 percent. (The Republicans are faring far worse, having fallen to a record low 22 percent, but it’s symptomatic of Obama’s woes that he can’t seem to capitalize on the GOP’s toxic brand.) Peter Hart, the Democratic pollster who co-conducted the aforementioned survey, said this week that Americans – annoyed by the website episode and the new revelations of NSA spying – are askng two fundamental questions about this administration: “Who is in control? Who is running things?”
I’d take that interpretation one step further. Most Americans (tea-party ideologues aside) want their government to work properly. Democrats are the party of government, and we have a Democratic president whose signature domestic law is grounded in the proposition that government can be a positive force to make people’s lives better. So when it is revealed that a Democratic administration has screwed up what it’s supposed to be good at – especially with a law that, given its tenuous popularity, has little margin for error – then naturally, and appropriately, the president is going to pay a political price.
Ultimately, what Obama knew or didn’t know is immaterial. As the sign on Harry Truman’s desk said, “The Buck Stops Here.”
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Follow me on Twitter, @dickpolman1
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