By Julie Rovner
MARCH 26, 2019
[UPDATED at 4:30 p.m. ET]
“The Mueller Report” is so last
week’s news. Health care has returned in force as the dominant political issue
in Washington, reflecting what voters have been telling pollsters for the past
year.
The Trump administration moved
Monday night to get more in line with President Donald Trump’s voter base by
endorsing a Texas federal judge’s December opinion that the entire Affordable
Care Act should be struck down as unconstitutional.
After he arrived at the
Capitol for lunch with Republican senators Tuesday, Trump endorsed the change,
suggesting it will usher in Republican priorities instead. “The Republican Party
will soon be known as the ‘party of health care!’” he told reporters.
Less than two hours later,
House Democrats unveiled their proposals to not only protect the health law,
but also expand it — including extending help paying premiums and other costs
to families higher up the income scale than those now eligible and reinstating
cuts made by the administration for outreach to help people sign up for
coverage.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi said
that, since taking control of the House in January, Democrats have been
fighting to preserve the health law and “voted on Day One” to file a motion in
the Texas court case to support the ACA.
The arguments are a return to
one of the key battles during the 2018 midterm elections. Democrats hammered
their Republican opponents on the GOP’s two-year efforts to repeal the ACA —
and especially its popular protections for people with preexisting medical
problems and Medicaid expansion — and credited those attacks for big gains the
party scored in the House and legislatures around the country.
House Majority Leader Steny
Hoyer said those Democrats were elected to “protect and expand” the health law.
He warned Republicans not to undermine it, saying, “Americans don’t want to see
the ACA protections undone.”
The new filing in the Texas
case marks an about-face for the Justice Department. The Republican attorneys
general and governors who brought the case argued that when Congress zeroed out
the tax penalty for people who lacked health coverage as part of the 2017 tax
bill, the entire Affordable Care Act was rendered unconstitutional. In
December, U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor agreed with them, although he put his ruling on hold while
the case is on appeal.
At that time, the Justice
Department did not endorse the GOP plaintiffs’ argument. It suggested instead
that the elimination of the tax penalty should invalidate only those parts of
the health law most closely associated with it — notably, the provisions
requiring insurance companies to sell to people with preexisting conditions and
not charge them more.
The health law is being
defended by a group of Democratic attorneys general, led by California’s Xavier
Becerra. They filed their brief Monday night, just before the Justice
Department issued its position change.
“The Affordable Care Act is
landmark legislation that has transformed the nation’s healthcare system,”
said the brief. Striking it down “would strip existing
healthcare coverage from millions of Americans” and “it would make a mockery of
the dramatic votes in which the same Congress rejected earlier efforts to
repeal or substantially revise the ACA.”
The Department of Health and
Human Services declined to comment on the change of position, which was filed
as part of the appeal process. Kerri Kupec, a spokeswoman for the Justice
Department, said the department “has determined that the district court’s
comprehensive opinion came to the correct conclusion and will support it on
appeal.”
Trump has repeatedly called
for the law to be repealed and replaced, but when Republicans controlled
Congress they could not muster the necessary votes. Just last week, the
president lashed out Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), who died in August, for
failing to support that effort.
If the law is invalidated, it
would not only directly affect the 11 million people who purchase insurance
through the ACA marketplaces, but also millions of low-income people who gained
coverage under the expansion of the federal-state Medicaid health program.
The Urban Institute estimates full repeal would result in
nearly 20 million more uninsured Americans.
The ACA also includes
substantial changes to the Medicare program, extends protections to people with
employer-provided insurance and includes such seemingly unrelated provisions as
requiring calorie counts on restaurant menus and making it easier to make
generic copies of expensive biologic drugs.
Health analysts warn that the
law is so embedded into the fabric of the nation’s health system that
eliminating it could have consequences well beyond the things it created.
“The act is now part of the
plumbing of the health-care system,” wrote University of Michigan law professor
Nicholas Bagley in a post for the Incidental Economist website. “Which
means the Trump administration has now committed itself to a legal position
that would inflict untold damage on the American public.”
Democrats, who already had
their health event scheduled for Tuesday, were quick to pounce on what they see
as a GOP weakness.
“In two short sentences, the
Trump administration crystallized its position that the health care coverage
enjoyed by nearly 20 million people, as well as the protections by tens of
millions more with preexisting conditions, should be annihilated,” said Senate
Minority Leader Chuck Schumer on the floor Tuesday morning.
Democratic presidential
candidates also voiced their opposition.
“I’ll say it for the zillionth
time: We will not let the Trump administration rip health care away from
millions of Americans. Not now. Not ever,” tweeted Sen. Elizabeth Warren
(D-Mass.).
Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.)
said in an interview on MSNBC that health care is “one of the biggest most
critical issues facing American families. The existence of preexisting
conditions and that being a barrier to people having access to health care. We
decided as a nation” that it was wrong, she said, to deny someone with a
preexisting condition access to health care, and that the Republicans’ latest
move amounts to “playing politics with people’s public health.”
[NO SHIT!!?? Kamala Harris is NOT
a progressive. Harris herself has endorsed some
more incremental health care expansion plans that wouldn’t do away entirely
with private coverage. Harris is pretending to be a progressive, just like
Obama did. Our so-called ‘representatives are KILLING US! “For-profit health
care” is a contradiction in terms. Americans are sheep being governed by wolves
and foxes. –vanishingmediator]
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