The upside of anger about health care

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If Mitt Romney wants to win the Republican nomination for president this year, which he clearly does, he has one big hurdle to overcome: it has something to do with his anger.

During the final debate before the Florida primary, former Pennsylvania senator — and winner of the Iowa caucus — Rick Santorum took the opportunity to show some contrast between himself, front-runner Romney and former speaker of the House Newt Gingrich. He homed in, as he had in the previous Florida debate, on the health care plan that Romney shepherded into law while governor of Massachusetts.

Romney stunned my typical tweeting-at-the-TV self into silence as he responded to Santorum: “It’s not worth getting angry about.”

For conservative voters who don’t trust Romney, period, and trust him even less on health care — who are worried that he did, in fact, set the stage for Obamacare — it was not the best answer. It wasn’t the best answer, because Santorum’s point was that a government approach to health care reform isn’t the best one, and that the discussion of health care reform has to start from a position of freedom, not federal mandates. It wasn’t the best answer because one of the most energetic and vital grassroots movements to strike a chord with voters in recent years — the tea party — sprung from activists angry at the terrible state of the status quo.

It wasn’t the best answer, either, because in the coming weeks and months, I predict that we will see a whole new engagement from religious Americans concerned about the things they will be forced to accept from government-controlled health care. The Obama administration has made clear that taxpayer money will fund contraceptives, sterilization and some drugs that could cause abortions. Furthermore, religious organizations that oppose such things will be forced under the law to provide them in employee health-care plans, regardless. The rhetoric this campaign season has suggested that radical, religious Republicans want to take away your personal choice to use birth control. To the contrary: This radical administration wants to insist that things like abortion are part and parcel of basic health care, and that everyone will be forced to pay for it. That’s clearly worth a little rage.

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