IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Rick Scott's stunning health care 'ruse' in Florida

Two years ago, the Florida governor cited the death of his mother as a rationale for his health care stance. Now, Rick Scott admits that wasn't actually true.
Florida Gov. Rick Scott during his State of the State speech Tuesday, March 4, 2014.
Florida Gov. Rick Scott during his State of the State speech Tuesday, March 4, 2014.
In early 2013, Florida Gov. Rick Scott (R) surprised nearly everyone by announcing he'd changed his mind about Medicaid expansion through the Affordable Care Act. The Republican governor had long condemned the idea, but he apparently had a change of heart.
 
"I cannot, in good conscience, deny the uninsured access to care," he said at the time. Scott added that Medicaid expansion is "a compassionate, common sense step forward." The governor even referenced the death of his mother when explaining his rationale.
 
"A few months ago, my mother passed away, and I lost one of the only constants in my life," Scott said. "Losing someone so close to you puts everything in new perspective ... especially the big decisions.... As I wrestled with this decision, I thought about my Mom's struggles raising five kids with very little money."
 
That was February 2013. In April 2015, Scott reversed course again, announcing his renewed opposition to the policy he'd endorsed. And today, the local CBS affiliate in Miami reports that that the governor offered an unexpected explanation for his posture two years ago.

Scott conceded this week that was all a ruse. He now says his support for Medicaid expansion was a calculated move designed to win support from the Obama administration for the state's proposal to hand over control of Medicaid to private insurance companies. At the time, he denied that his support was tied to a deal with the federal government. Now that he's succeeded in privatizing Medicaid, Scott is again railing against Medicaid expansion and is suing the federal government for allegedly forcing it on him.

Oh my.
 
Of course, if you notice that CBS/Associated Press excerpt, you'll notice that it's missing something: a quote. The entire report appears to be a paraphrase of Scott's comments, and the exact wording always matters.
 
Indeed, the governor's office this afternoon pushed back against the AP's reporting, saying the piece "editorialized" Scott's comments.
 
So, which is it? On Twitter, Gary Fineout, an AP reporter in Florida, fleshed this out in a little more detail, explaining the argument Scott presented yesterday. As Fineout described it, the governor may have claimed at the time that his mother's death inspired him to change his perspective, but in reality -- according to Scott's comments yesterday -- the Florida Republican only supported Medicaid expansion as part of "a quid pro quo" to get a waiver from the Obama administration for Medicaid privatization.
 
Scott may have publicly claimed in 2013 that his position was about his "conscience" and deceased mother, but according to the governor's new version of events, the rhetoric wasn't actually sincere -- his previous position was a calculated move to gain approval for his privatization plan.
 
In other words, the governor didn't literally use the word "ruse" yesterday, so much as he effectively described a scheme in which he told the public something untrue in order to get what he wanted at the time.
 
I don't expect much from Florida politics, but when a governor references his deceased mother to make a deliberately misleading argument, the Sunshine State is quite possibly breaking new ground in ugliness.