Posted on 06/11/2018 3:55:03 AM PDT by DoodleDawg
Most of the discussion of the Trump administration's decision not to defend the Affordable Care Act and to urge the courts to throw out its protections for people with pre-existing medical conditions has focused on what happens to the individual insurance market. But the political impact may be even greater.
Why it matters: Protections for people with pre-existing conditions are hugely popular, and the administration may have handed Democrats their strongest health care weapon yet because now they can make the case that the administration has gone to court to take away protections for people with pre-existing medical conditions.
The case is also likely to drag on, so it could be the political gift that keeps on giving through 2020, even if it is eventually thrown out.
(Excerpt) Read more at axios.com ...
What facts are you looking for?
Actually a number of the GOP have—right up until they had control of the presidency, house and senate going into 2017.
And agreed. Though Trump sometimes campaigned on free market healthcare reforms, he seems to default to telling us what great “plans” he’s going to provide us. It’s an area where he unfortunately seems to revert to his inner Democrat. But of course he’s fighting so much and being so great in so many other areas.
Those who have had their rates skyrocket because of this preexisting coverage aren’t necessarily such great fans of it. And the GOP’s more enlightened side, including Trump, has been advocating and moving to minimize the preexisting issue by allowing the small business and individual pooled plans that Obamacare expressly made illegal. Then, there have been plans of allowing states to have (or go back to, if they had them previously) high-risk pools for the remaining tough cases.
There messaging hasn’t been good, I agree.
It's also the feature of Obamacare that is one of the biggest factors in skyrocketing premiums for medical coverage.
The administration isn't attacking the pre-existing conditions feature. It's supporting the authority of a state government that wants to allow insurance carriers to sell plans that don't cover pre-existing conditions.
This -- along with the elimination of lifetime caps on coverage -- was one of the worst features of Obamacare. The fact that it's "just about the only really liked feature" of Obamacare tells you that the whole monstrosity was built on delusional expectations.
Currently, yes. Prior to Obamacare, not necessarily. It was up to the employer.
Pre-existing condition is a difficult dilemma. Let's call it destiny which makes ALL conditions are pre-existing.
The DOJ has declined to defend a lawsuit by several states with eliminate that possibility. Whether they win or not, it's bad optics for the GOP.
I am sure DJT has this calculated. He will win with it and it will not hurt in November. We don’t see yet how it will be done and what he will follow with.
They already made their stand.
After seven years of promising to overturn Obamacare, they failed. Nobody gives a sh!t what they think anymore, so we're all willing to accept whatever empty promises they make.
So you understand that mandated coverage for preexisting conditions via Obamacare assures the end of a free market in healthcare—and still you don’t want the GOP to tinker with it?
Hope you're right.
We dont see yet how it will be done and what he will follow with.
He said a couple of weeks ago his healthcare plan would be out by now. I'm sure the Singapore summit has delayed that a bit.
Depends on the tinkering I guess. What's their proposal?
A major reason, true.
The administration isn't attacking the pre-existing conditions feature. It's supporting the authority of a state government that wants to allow insurance carriers to sell plans that don't cover pre-existing conditions.
The lawsuit that 20 states filed will strike down Obamacare completely. Allowing states to eliminate the pre-existing condition requirement if Obamacare is ruled unconstitutional is only part of it. But it's a part the Democrats will fix on.
This -- along with the elimination of lifetime caps on coverage -- was one of the worst features of Obamacare. The fact that it's "just about the only really liked feature" of Obamacare tells you that the whole monstrosity was built on delusional expectations.
Perhaps. But it's expectation that voters really, really like.
Let me guess ... the Democrats are going to run ads showing Republicans throwing Grandma in her wheelchair off a cliff?
If the GOP can't deal with this issue they deserve to lose -- badly.
I think voters are smart enough to figure out that the Democrats don't have the answers. That's why Donald Trump was elected.
1. The person with $50,000 in annual health care costs who complains that his monthly medical "insurance" premium has escalated from $500 to $1,500 over the last ten years.
2. The person with $0 in annual health care costs who complains that his monthly premium has escalated from $500 to $1,500 over the last ten years.
Person #1 is a delusional fool who sees "insurance" as nothing more than a mechanism to make other people pay his medical bills. Person #2 is tired of being the damn fool who pays everyone else's medical bills.
I'm going to go out on a limb here and suggest that there are a lot more people who fit the description of Person #2 than Person #1.
Something similar probably.
If the GOP can't deal with this issue they deserve to lose -- badly.
The GOP can't make a deal amongst themselves over this much less with the Democrats.
I think voters are smart enough to figure out that the Democrats don't have the answers. That's why Donald Trump was elected.
Forty eight percent of the voters voted for Hillary. Don't be so quick to credit them with smarts.
Dont see it that way but we will see
Go find a policy that covers preexisting conditions and pay extra for that, all you want.
Here are my thoughts on "pre-existing conditions."
-PJ
Go find a policy that covers preexisting conditions and pay extra for that, all you want.
Well there's a winning campaign slogan. </sarcasm>
Only 1 million people got 0care who didnt already have insurance from other means, yet were forced into 0care because of the stupid mandate.
Of those now covered that werent before, I would guess 200,000 across the country would make 0care their main influencing issue in an election. Out of those same 200,000, probably only 50,000 are people who will actually vote in a mid-term.
So, 50,000 spread across the whole of the US versus the tens of millions of people helped by Trump means the Republicans and Trump win, big time.
Moreover, if the courts deliver a dispositive ruling before the election, the spur of immediate political self-interest is one of the surest ways to get Congress or a legislature to act quickly. Individually and collectively, politicians respond to self-interest like even the laziest dogs hasten to the sound of kibble being poured into their dinner bowl.
Also, in the event the courts made a decision, Trump, not the Democrats, would have the greatest prominence and capacity for decision. His natural instinct would be to try to seize the initiative and steal the pre-existing condition issue from the Democrats. I would not bet against his being able to pull it off.
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