Obamacare’s glitches are here to stay according to House
Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan.
In an exclusive interview with CNBC’s Larry Kudlow, set to
air Tuesday night on “The Kudlow Report,” Ryan said the problems with the
Affordable Care Act extend far beyond website malfunctions.
“It’s more than the website,” Ryan said. “It’s because this
law itself is built from an architecture, a foundation, that’s just not
workable.”
Ryan said he sat through several House Committee Oversight
meetings in which the administration failed to answer fundamental questions on
the rollout of the Affordable Care Act.
“The point is they said ‘everything is fine, the law is
going to be OK. We are ready to roll it out. We won’t have any problems.’”
But House Republicans knew better, Ryan said.
“People should know that we tried to prevent this from happening
in the first place by fighting a law we did not intend,” Ryan said, referring to the Republican-led House’s 46
attempts to repeal the law.
“Then we tried giving people relief from the law by
delaying it until 2013. That was rejected and now we are living with this law.”
Frustrated with the Senate’s rejection of attempts to
defund and delay the law, Ryan shifted to the GOP’s most plausible tactic to
end the Affordable Care Act: winning elections.
“We owe the American people an alternative,” Ryan said. “We
want to win elections by saying this is not working for you and there are
better ways in keeping with the country’s principles that puts you in charge of
your heath care future.”
Ryan dismissed criticism that the Republican Party is at a
“civil war” after failed attempts to delay Obamacare as part of the government
shutdown and debt ceiling negotiations.
“We’ve had disagreements with each other on tactics,” he
said. “These aren’t principles. I don’t know a Republican that doesn’t support
comprehensive reforms to replace Obamacare with patient-centered health care.”
The Wisconsin Congressman said the GOP will have a chance
to showcase their common principles in budget negotiations set to begin
Wednesday.
He rejected hopes for a “grand bargain” deal, which he said
would include pro-growth tax reform, a balanced budget and entitlement reform.
“I don’t think we’ll get a grand bargain, and we’re not
talking about getting a grand bargain,” he said. “Because then, one party will
require that the other compromise their core principles, and we won’t get
anything done.”
The GOP’s key bargaining chip, Ryan said, is the
sequestration, the automatic spending cuts Democrats are seeking to repeal.
“If we can’t get anything better than the sequester, then
we’ll keep the sequester,” Ryan said. “That’s our base case to begin with.”
Ryan insisted increased tax revenue was out of the
question, calling Keynesian stimulus programs “sugar-high economics.”
“We’re not in this business to raise taxes,” he said.
“We’ll take the spending cuts we have and work with those.”
Instead, he said he was willing to negotiate on the
“smarter” cuts to replace sequestration.
“If we get a down payment on this debt and deficit in
exchange for short-term relief, we’ll take it,” he said. “But it has to be on
net a positive, meaning we will take the spending cuts right now.”
Ryan said substituting entitlement reform in place of broad
spending cuts under sequestration would enable long-term growth in the U.S.
economy.
“If smart entitlement reforms could replace this crude
across-the-board sequester, it would do a couple things,” Ryan said. “It would
show the world that America is getting ahead of its problems. We’re not just
going to victims of circumstances. We’re not just going to fall into a debt
crisis like Europe, but we’re going to get out of it.”
Entitlement should be at the top of the budget agenda, Ryan
said.
“The question is not if we deal with entitlements,” Ryan
said. “The question is if we are going to do it before the debt crisis or after
the debt crisis. We would like to do it before so that we can shape events in
this country instead of having events shape us.”
The Congressman said, ultimately, his job is to find common
ground in budget negotiations among Republicans and Democrats.
“I would argue that in this very difficult time that we are
in, wouldn’t it be nice to show that this American divided government can at
least govern?”