That Elusive Common Ground – Mother Jones

That Elusive Common Ground – Mother Jones


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Get your news from a source that’s not owned and controlled by oligarchs. Sign up for the free _Mother Jones Daily_. What could Barack Obama offer congressional Republicans in return for


support of his healthcare bill? How about malpractice reform? Jon Cohn ponders: > The key is finding ways to fix the malpractice system so that it > helps both physicians and the 


patients, rather than one at the > expense of the other. And there are several promising possibilities > for achieving that. One is to have doctors report medical errors to > 


hospital administrators, who would then notify patients and begin > negotiations….[Another] proposal — perhaps the most intriguing > — is to tie malpractice to quality incentives, by 


offering some > sort of legal protection to physicians who demonstrate they have > abided by accepted clinical guidelines. >  > ….This is where the Republicans could push the 


discussion forward. > Both the House and Senate health reform bills encourage more > experimentation. But they don’t set aside enough money. If > Republicans wanted to do something 


to change malpractice, they could > call for more funding of these programs — and, perhaps, more > aggressive guidance about how to handle the results. >  > Of course, that would


 mean achieving malpractice reform, a cause > they’ve long championed, in a different manner than the > Republicans have traditionally embraced. But that’s the definition > of 


compromise: Finding common ground with an adversary in order to > achieve a goal you both share. Obama has shown he’s willing to do > that. Will the Republicans do the same? Jon is


too….decorous….to say this outright, but the answer is no. The reason is that Republicans have a very specific motivation for pursuing tort reform, and it has nothing to do with actually


making tort law fairer. Here’s me a few years ago, in a review of Stephanie Mencimer’s _Blocking the Courthouse Door_: > In the 1980s and 1990s, conservative activists began pursuing a


> series of strategies aimed not just at increasing Republican votes > and campaign contributions, but also at _reducing_ Democratic votes > and campaign contributions — and doing 


so in a structural way that > would permanently erode the Democratic Party’s ability to win > elections. The result was an increased interest in gerrymandering, > union busting, 


voter ID laws, and the K Street Project, a party-wide > program aimed at persuading lobbying firms to stop hiring Democrats. >  > And, of course, tort reform. Tort reform was 


already a natural > Republican Party issue thanks to its support in the business > community, but it was [Grover] Norquist, in his usual bald style, > who pointed out in 1994 that 


there was more to it than just that: > The big losers in tort reform are trial lawyers, and trial lawyers > contribute a huge amount of money to the Democratic Party. “The > 


political implications of defunding the trial lawyers would be > staggering,” he wrote. When it comes to medical malpractice, the Republican Party doesn’t really care about “reform.” They


want one thing and one thing only: caps on punitive damages. Why? After all, big punitive awards, almost by definition, are only handed out in the worst, most egregious cases of


malpractice. It’s the little suits that are most likely to be frivolous. Here’s why: because big damage awards are where trial lawyers make a lot of money, and trial lawyers support


Democrats. Capping damages hurts trial lawyers in a way that serious reform most likely wouldn’t. Democrats, of course, generally support trial lawyers, and in return they get a lot of money


from them. Still, there are a lot of Democrats who would support serious efforts at making our malpractice system better and more efficient. This would reduce trial lawyer income, but it


most likely wouldn’t decimate it the way damage caps would. Republicans, conversely, _only _care about decimating trial lawyer income, which means that none of them are interested in serious


reform. It’s caps or nothing. This makes finding common ground more than a wee bit difficult.