Sebelius on the Run
The Affordable Care
Act's botched rollout has stunned its media cheering section, and it even seems
to have surprised the law's architects. The problems run much deeper than even
critics expected, and whatever federal officials, White House aides and outside
contractors are doing to fix them isn't working. But who knows? Omerta is the
word of the day as the Obama Administration withholds information from the
public.
Health and Human
Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius is even refusing to testify before the
House Energy and Commerce Committee in a hearing this coming Thursday. HHS
claims she has scheduling conflicts, but we hope she isn't in the White House
catacomb under interrogation by Valerie Jarrett about her department's
incompetence.
The department is also
refusing to make available lower-level officials who might detail the source or
sources of this debacle. Ducking an investigation with spin is one thing.
Responding with a wall of silence to the invitation of a duly elected
congressional body probing the use of more than half a billion taxpayer dollars
is another. This Obama crowd is something else.
What bunker is Henry
Chao hiding in, for instance? He's the HHS official in charge of technology for
the Affordable
Care Act, and in March he said
at an insurance lobby conference that his team had given up trying to create
"a world-class user experience." With the clock running, Mr. Chao
added that his main goal was merely to "just make sure it's not a
third-world experience."
He didn't succeed.
Whatever is below third-world standards would flatter the 36 federally run
exchanges as they've started up. But perhaps Mr. Chao or someone else, if not
Mrs. Sebelius, can answer even the simple question of how many Americans have
managed to enroll for coverage. HHS could easily resolve any confusion but it
won't even talk to Democratic allies, friendly reporters and what it calls the
insurance industry "stakeholders" that it will need to make ObamaCare work.
No doubt a hearing
would be a spectacle—with TV cameras on hand—but Mrs. Sebelius can't hide
forever. Even pro-entitlement liberals want to know about what went wrong and
why, how much if any progress is being made, and whether the ObamaCare website Healthcare.gov will be usable in a
matter of months—or years.
More disclosure might
also help HHS preserve a scrap of credibility, given that none of its initial
explanations has held up. Right now, no one trusts a word that emerges from
Fortress ObamaCare.
To take one example,
this week the Associated Press obtained an internal HHS memo from September 5,
2013 specifying the Administration's monthly enrollment targets—a half-million
sign-ups in October, 3.3 million by December 31, and so on. Asked about this by
AP, HHS not only declined to say if it is meeting its projections. The
department issued a statement claiming that "The Administration has not
set monthly enrollment targets." The spokesman did not cite the classic
Marx Brothers line, "Who are you going to believe, me or your own
eyes?"
Eventually Mrs.
Sebelius will have to make a real accounting of this government failure to
someone other than the TV comic Jon Stewart, and perhaps she can also explain why the
people who can't build a working website also deserve the power to reorganize
one-sixth of the U.S. economy. For now, the Administration that styles itself
as the most transparent in history won't reveal the truth—perhaps because it is
afraid of what the public will find.
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