Washington – Obama Says He’d Back Obamacare Repeal If GOP Has Better Plan

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    U.S. President Barack Obama answers a question during an interview with Vox at Blair House in Washington, U.S., January 6, 2017. REUTERS/Carlos BarriaWashington – Putting pressure on Republicans, President Barack Obama pledged Friday to publicly support repealing “Obamacare” if Republicans come up with something better, but cast doubt on the GOP’s ability to develop a viable alternative.

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    As Republicans prepare to gut his biggest legislative achievement, Obama implored his opponents not to pursue a two-step approach where the Affordable Care Act is repealed first and replaced after — perhaps years later. He sought to lay the groundwork for Democrats to pile on Republicans for taking health care away from millions of people if the replacement never materializes.

    “I am saying to every Republican right now: If you, in fact, can put a plan together that is demonstrably better than what Obamacare is doing, I will publicly support repealing Obamacare and replacing it with your plan,” Obama said in a live-streamed interview with online news site Vox. “But I want to see it first.”

    Obama appeared to be betting on the possibility that Republicans won’t be able to unify behind an Obamacare replacement — or that if they do, it won’t be one that will pass muster for Democrats. Though Republicans are in agreement that the law should be repealed and replaced, they’re at odds over what the replacement should look like, and particularly over how to pay for popular elements they hope to preserve, including coverage for pre-existing conditions and the ability for parents to keep children on their plans until age 26.

    Most alarming to Obama and Democrats is the possibility of no replacement at all, given the fact that Republicans have been unable to settle on their own health care vision in the nearly seven years since the Affordable Care Act became law. Hoping to give themselves more time while also fulfilling campaign pledges to quickly abolish the law, Republicans are discussing a repeal that wouldn’t take effect for 18 months or longer, during which they’d ostensibly agree on a replacement.

    “What you don’t want is a situation where they make a promise they can’t keep,” Obama said. “I’ve worked on this a long time. If we had had a better way to do this, we would have done it. It would have been in my interest to do it, because I knew I was going to be judged on whether or not it worked.”

    The president argued he had no “pride of authorship” over the law that colloquially bears his name, adding that it wasn’t he who had dubbed it “Obamacare.” He tried to dispel the notion he was trying to prevent a repeal in hopes of preserving his own legacy.

    “They can call it whatever they want,” Obama said. “They can call it Trumpcare or McConnellcare or Ryancare,” Obama said, referring to President-elect Donald Trump, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan. “If it actually works, I will be the first one to say, ‘Great.'”

    Signed into law in 2010, Obama’s overhaul has extended insurance coverage to 20 million more people and brought the uninsured rate to a historic low of about 9 percent, reshaping the $3 trillion-per-year health system in the process. Still, the law has failed to win broad public approval, amid persistent concerns about rising premium rates through the insurance marketplaces the law created.

    Republicans have set a goal to offer “universal access,” but their replacement may cover fewer people than Obama’s overhaul. A key GOP focus is to do away with the individual mandate requirement that all Americans have insurance or pay a fine. Absent that requirement, insurers have warned it’s not financially viable to force them to accept people regardless of pre-existing health issues.

    In his final days in office, Obama has been ramping up a public push to pressure Republicans over their repeal plans and unite Democrats behind a strategy to try to protect the law. He traveled Wednesday to Capitol Hill to strategize with Democratic lawmakers, and penned an opinion piece published Friday in the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine.

    In the article, Obama said the uncertainty of a repeal with no replacement could lead insurance companies to bail on the health care marketplaces during the phase-out years, leaving millions without insurance. He said it would set up a “cliff” with harmful consequences if lawmakers fail to approve a replacement in time.

    Yet Trump’s team has said repeal is the first order of business, and leaders in Congress hope to deliver a bill voiding much of the law by late February. Although Ryan said this week that lawmakers will vote on a replacement this year as well, it’s unclear how Republicans could move that quickly to replace a law that took more than a year to craft.


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    7 Comments
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    AlbertEinstein
    AlbertEinstein
    7 years ago

    Wait for it, Barry. Not that your opinion will matter in 14 days.

    7 years ago

    Why should anyone care what this incompetent liar thinks? His opinion was never a qualified one. It was always based on the selfish or political benefit, never once on what was better for America. How he ever got elected speaks volumes for the severe intellectual deficit or a huge amount of political corruption in an entire state. His departure from office will be a reason for all of America to celebrate. The more obscure he becomes, the better off America will be.

    dooalldel
    dooalldel
    7 years ago

    Obama, almost Jan 20 just pack up and leave nobody cares if u back it or not, go play golf and enjoy life after 8 yrs of doing nothing

    7 years ago

    Here is a better plan .

    1) get rid of the pre existing conditions clause . Insurance is about mitigating risk . It’s about buying when healthy so one has when sick . If you choose not to buy when healthy or you buy a cheap plan and now want a more comprehensive plan why should an insurance company be forced to accept you . ( the latter is a biggy and something we all do) Note this does not mean that those who loose jobs should be out in the street . And neither should insurance companies be able to drop
    those already insured .
    2) for the poor expand Medicaid so more are covered . But charge a
    $5 co pay . If I pay $35 medical recipients can pay $5 . And yes co pays bring down overall costs or the companies would not charge co pays.
    3) Drop mental health requirements . I know every liberal needs a shrink but it’s really not as crucial as cancer coverage . We have limited resources
    4) tort reform

    Bottom line the liberals have a nerve to call anti Obama care voters selfish . 175 million Americans right now must pay for 20 million American in terms of higher premiums. And it’s not clear if all those 20 million are even all ” uninsured” or some just signed up because why not . If that’s not selfish what is ?

    grandbear
    grandbear
    7 years ago

    ”gay shoin” – go already-don’t forget to shut the lights.