If you’re looking for a news story that exemplifies what so many people find both engaging and infuriating about Politico, look no further than this piece about the continuing fallout for Mitt Romney of the health-care law he spearheaded in 2006 as governor of Massachusetts.
Like the Obama administration’s health-care overhaul that’s anathema to conservatives, Romney’s law is based on an individual mandate. That means that should Romney run for president in 2012, as is likely, he’ll be wide open to attacks from his primary rivals that he favors the “Obamacare” approach. Politico reports that some conservatives are advising Romney to deal with this problem by admitting his mistake and apologizing.
It’s an interesting story, and it may have even have succeeded in winning the morning, getting widespread pickup online. But I kept waiting for a key piece of information: Has the Massachusetts law been a success? And that information never came. The closest we got was a Romney aide asserting that it has been, which tells us very little.
Of course, the merits of the law aren’t the main focus of the story. From a political standpoint, it’s no doubt true that the similarities between the two laws present a huge problem for Romney in the GOP primary. But surely the empirical evidence at least deserves a mention somewhere in the story, since it would let us assess whether the (assumed) stance of the Republican primary electorate is anchored by evidence, or whether it’s more of a knee-jerk ideological reaction.
Even if you only care about this on the political level—as Politico does—you’d still want to know something about the Massachusetts law’s outcome. After all, if Romney did somehow manage to capture the GOP nomination, his chances in the general would surely be affected by the success or not of his signature policy achievement. And is it totally crazy to think that some Republican primary voters might also be interested?
As it happens, there’s no simple answer on the question of the law’s impact. It has unarguably raised the number of Massachusetts citizens with health-care coverage, and has reduced out-of-pocket costs for many. But it hasn’t reduced overall costs, and in a lengthy series for CJR, Trudy Lieberman has raised questions about the law’s impact on small businesses and low-income workers, among others.
But the point remains: there’s no attempt in the piece to even consider any of this, because the story, like so many others by Politico, contains no independent frame of reference outside of what the political actors are saying. The issue of whether these actors are worth listening to for any reasons other than politics becomes not just secondary, but non-existent. It would be hard to conceive of a more destructive way of thinking about journalism.

Of course, you're right. But did you just discover that not only Politico, but many mainstream media are less concerned with facts than what he or she said.?
www.NewsCommonsense.com
#1 Posted by Bob Griendling, CJR on Wed 6 Oct 2010 at 09:18 PM
This is all about "State Rights" .... 10th amendment .... vs.... "Federal Authority"....
Rational people (including our founders) thought that a States may need to "mandate" the actions of its citizens for the good of the state.... However, the Federal Government should never have to mandate except in the case of interstate commerce issues... Thus one can easily come to the conclusion that MA had the right to create a law that they thought could conntrol runaway spending on funding medical care for uninsured MA citizens who were amassing huge medical bills as an entitlement for simply choosing not to carry health insurance... It was the single biggest drain on MA tax dollars and thus they inacted Romneycare to make people pay their own way if they could afford it... Gosh what a concept...
Obamacare, on the other hand, was and is an over- reach on the part of the Federal Government to control something across all states that they are not entitled to control and that is not wanted by the majority of Americans... This over-reach is unconsitutional by vitue of the 10th amendment and thus Romeney, myself and others can legitimately (with a great deal of logic) say that it might have been a good idea for MA, but it is a bad idea for all states.
#2 Posted by Paul Poyfair, CJR on Wed 6 Oct 2010 at 10:09 PM
Which is why it's called Politico, no? The well documented failure of Romneycare is in fact the reason this is even an issue about which Politico writes from a political standpoint. And why Obamacare should never have been passed.
Even your comment about raising the number of people insured is bogus: About 5,500,000 people always had insurance here. Giving it away for free raised that to about 5,750,000, but another 250,000 mostly poor people won't even take it for free (regarding your comment about the law's impact on low income workers)
#3 Posted by Dennis Byron, CJR on Thu 7 Oct 2010 at 12:04 PM
The states rights argument is strong--not
just on constitional grounds as the author states
but on a more practical gut-level, people feel
literally enslaved to the cause with no escape
valve when it is a federal mandate--whereas as a
state program, people have the escape valve
option of leaving the state if it does not work out
and other states can view it as an experiment and
either follow suit or not. The state itself can more easiky
reverse course because the program is not so massive.
This is exactly what the framers intended, an
does not carry Obama's effect of universal, inescapable enslavement.
#4 Posted by jason, CJR on Wed 10 Nov 2010 at 07:58 PM