Delays

The House Republicans were forced to cancel yesterday’s scheduled American Health Care Act vote.  The Freedom Caucus, the Caucus of No, couldn’t be satisfied.  Congressmen like Jim Jordan (R, OH) and Caucus of No Chairman Mark Meadows (R, NC) refused late compromises, all the while insisting by implication from their refusals that constituents of other Congressmen, for instance Tom Cole (R, OK), worked for them and not that Cole worked for his Oklahoma constituents—and that those Oklahoma constituents might have different imperatives than those Congressmen of the Caucus.  So, no compromise from the No-ers.

Even after regulation changes that were part of Phase II of the overall three phase repeal and replace plan were offered to be brought into this Phase I AHCA, the No-ers refused.  Never mind that even the need to make such an offer displayed a monumental distrust by the No-ers of their ex-Congressional colleague, Tom Price, now Secretary of Health and Human Services and the gentleman who would have carried out those regulation rescissions of Phase II.  Even the No-ers’ plaint that they wanted those regulation removals written into law rather than merely rescinded makes no sense: that could have been legislated next year, by this same Congress, and that, as change to a done, deal would have thereby much easier to do.

Nor did a single member of the Caucus of No offer either any plan for getting the changed bill past a Senate filibuster from these too-large changes or any explanation of why their demanded changes would have permitted the bill still to go through via reconciliation and a majority-only vote.

It’s clear that the Freedom Caucus, this Caucus of No, is little more than a collection of yapping porch dogs, or alternatively just a bunch of right-handed virtue-signaling snowflakes, with little interest in actually improving our health provision system or restoring our health care to us constituents and our doctors.

The PRC’s Economic Opening

The People’s Republic of China is wining and dining major American companies, trying to convince them that the time is ripe for investing in the PRC.

Apple Inc’s Tim Cook and Jon McNeill of Tesla Motors were among dozens of western executives who spent a long and unseasonably warm weekend here strolling the grounds where Mao Zedong once lived, surrounded by blooming magnolia trees and gliding swans.

Vice Premier Zhang Gaoli:

China will push for a higher level of economic opening-up[.]

And Jake Parker, vice president of the U.S.-China Business Council

We are obviously seeing very positive rhetoric for how China sees its potential future place in the economy[.]

The trouble is, it’s only rhetoric that’s coming out of the PRC.  It’s unimportant that the PRC “will push for a higher level of economic opening-up.”  The fact remains that the PRC requires foreign companies to take on as major, if not senior, partners a PRC government-approved domestic company as a condition of doing business inside the PRC.  The fact remains that the PRC requires a measure of technology transfer from the foreign company to domestic companies as a condition of doing business inside the PRC.  The fact remains that the PRC requires the foreign companies to take on board government apparatchiks as a condition of doing business inside the PRC.

Positive rhetoric is cheap.  The PRC must open up its economy, not just prattle on about it.  Then foreign companies can profitably invest there.  Not before.