Should Rmney apologize for RomneyCare?        By    Byron York           
           
      http://www.JewishWorldReview.com |                 	It's always been a challenge for Mitt Romney to explain the differences  between Romneycare and Obamacare. The two programs share a lot of the  same features -- mandate, penalties, subsidies, exchanges and others.  Romney has consistently argued that those provisions are acceptable,  even good, at the state level, but not acceptable, and in some cases not  even constitutional, at the federal level. 
  	The problem isn't  just that Romney frequently finds himself making detailed explanations,  which is never a good thing in politics. The problem is that it always  sounds a little odd to voters for Romney to say that when he did it in  Massachusetts, it was a great thing, but when Barack Obama did it  nationwide, it was a terrible thing. 
  	Now, in the wake  of the Supreme Court's Obamacare decision, Romney's job has gotten even  harder -- so hard that there will likely be growing pressure on him to  admit that Romneycare, his signature achievement as Massachusetts  governor, was a mistake. 	
  The problem is the  court's ruling that Obamacare's individual mandate is a tax. Even  though most Republicans had wanted to see Obamacare struck down, many  embraced the mandate-is-a-tax ruling because it allowed them to accuse  the president of raising taxes. 	
  Romney, however,  did not jump on the bandwagon, and the reason was Romneycare. If Romney  denounced Obama's mandate as a tax, then what about the mandate he  imposed in Massachusetts? 	
  On July 2, top  Romney adviser Eric Fehrnstrom told MSNBC that Romney did not believe  the mandate is a tax, that it is instead a penalty. That wasn't a gaffe;  Fehrnstrom was accurately stating Romney's position. But his words  created controversy after Democrats and the press pointed out the gulf  between Romney and other Republicans. 	
  So on July 4,  Romney himself came forward to clear things up. "The Supreme Court has  the final word, and their final word is that Obamacare is a tax," he  told CBS News' Jan Crawford. "So it's a tax." 	
  When Crawford  asked whether that meant Romneycare's mandate was also a tax -- and thus  whether the former governor had raised taxes in Massachusetts -- Romney  said no. The court made a distinction between a mandate imposed by a  state and one imposed by the federal government, he explained: Obama's  is a tax, and mine isn't. 	
  The court didn't  actually say it quite so clearly, but there's no doubt Romney and the  Massachusetts legislature had the authority to impose an individual  mandate in the state. The bottom line for this election, however, is  that Romney is making another fine, legalistic distinction so he can  keep vowing to repeal Obamacare while at the same time defending  Romneycare. 	
  Meanwhile, Obama  himself is being cagey on what to call his mandate, afraid to agree with  the court for fear that it would give Republicans an opening to say he  raised taxes. Recently his spokesman said the mandate is "under the  section of the law that is the tax code," but is not a tax. Imagine how  Republicans could tear that one up -- if only the GOP candidate hadn't  passed a mandate of his own. 	
  The tension has  gotten so great that some conservative voices have had enough. In a  scathing editorial on July 5, The Wall Street Journal wrote that Romney  "favored the individual mandate as part of his reform in Massachusetts,  and as we've said from the beginning of his candidacy his failure to  admit that mistake makes him less able to carry the anti-Obamacare case  to voters." 	
  "The tragedy," the  Journal continued, "is that for the sake of not abandoning his faulty  health care legacy in Massachusetts, Mr. Romney is jeopardizing his  chance at becoming president." 	
  This is not an  entirely fixable problem. Romney can't change his record, and Obamacare  won't stop being an issue. But could Romney at least partially reconcile  the two by admitting that Romneycare was a bad idea? 
  	It would certainly  make Romney's case more consistent; he could promise to end Obamacare  without also having to explain himself. He would also bring his position  in line with that of most Republican voters. But it might also be an  unmitigated disaster, the most damaging flip-flop ever for a candidate  known to change positions. 	
  In the end, it's  almost impossible to imagine Romney would do it. When he talks about  health care, there's always a certain bravado -- he has said he just  can't wait to engage Barack Obama in a one-on-one debate over health  care -- that conceals the weakness of his position. He's come too far to  back down now, and odds are he will win or lose without ever admitting  that Romneycare was the wrong thing to do.               
                                 
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