Something
new is happening in a health care debate dominated for seven years by the
twists and turns of Barack Obama's signature law. The focus has shifted to
ideas from President Donald Trump and GOP lawmakers in Congress, and most
people don't like what they see.
With
Republicans in command, their health care proposals as currently formulated
have generated far more concern than enthusiasm.
Even among
rank-and-file Republicans, there's opposition to changes that would let
insurers charge higher premiums to older adults, and many disapprove of cuts to
Medicaid for low-income people, according to a recent poll by The Associated
Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. It also found more than half of
Republicans at least somewhat worried about leaving more people uninsured, as
the House plan is projected to do.
March polls
by Fox News and Quinnipiac University showed overall margins of opposition to
the GOP proposal nearing or even exceeding those of Obama's Affordable Care
Act, or ACA, at its lowest points - such as when the HealthCare.gov website
opened for business in 2013 and promptly crashed.
"Republicans
are taking ownership of the health care issue, and all the pleasure and pain of
health reform," said Drew Altman, president of the nonpartisan Kaiser
Family Foundation, a clearinghouse for information about the health care
system. "There has been a shift in focus from the ACA itself to the
Republican plans, and who might lose benefits as a result."
Highlighting
the stakes, the uninsured rate among U.S. adults rose slightly in the first
three months of this year, according to an update Monday of a major ongoing
survey. The Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index found that 11.3 percent of
adults were uninsured, an increase from 10.9 percent in the last two calendar
quarters of 2016.
"Only
time will tell" if the uptick means the U.S. is again losing ground on
health insurance, said survey director Dan Witters. "A lot of uncertainty
has been introduced into the marketplace through efforts to repeal," he said.
"Plus premiums are now realizing a big jump for the first time in the ACA
era."
Trump came
into office with big, bold health care promises. In a Washington Post interview
shortly before his inauguration he declared his goal was "insurance for
everybody," hand-in-hand with affordable coverage, "lower numbers,
much lower deductibles." Although Trump said he'd soon release a plan,
none appeared.
Instead,
after weeks of laboring behind closed doors, House Republican leaders rolled
out a proposal March 6 that the president enthusiastically embraced. But all
the efforts of the White House and congressional leadership haven't convinced
GOP lawmakers to pass it. Congress is on a two-week break with the health bill
in limbo.
Frustrated,
Trump is seeing his promise slip away to quickly repeal "Obamacare"
and replace it with something better. Instead he could get left as the
caretaker of the ACA, a law he's repeatedly called a "disaster" on
account of rising premiums and insurer exits that diminish consumer choice in
many communities.
Trump's
personal image has taken a blow, with the AP-NORC poll finding that he gets his
worst rating on health care. About 6 in 10 people disapprove of how the
president has handled the issue.
"It is
a major failure that a high priority of President Trump and the congressional
Republican leadership leads to no bill, and the bill as proposed becomes
unpopular even among their own voters," said Robert Blendon, a professor
at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, who follows opinion trends on
health care. "It's a real leadership crisis issue."
Amid
disapproval of the House GOP plan, some polls have shown improved ratings for
the ACA. Gallup, for example, found "Obamacare" gained majority
approval for the first time. But that does not change the fact that Republican
voters remain overwhelmingly opposed to Obama's law and want it repealed.
Nonetheless,
there's recent evidence that Republicans differ among themselves about what
"repeal" may mean.
A Quinnipiac
poll last month found that 55 percent of Republicans said Trump and the
Republican-led Congress should repeal "parts" of Obama's law, while
42 percent said "all" of it should go. Only 2 percent of Republicans
said the ACA should not be repealed.
Republican
views compare with 50 percent of the general public who say parts of the ACA
should be repealed, 20 percent who say all of it should be repealed, and 27
percent who say it should remain.
The
divisions among rank-and-file Republicans appear to mirror what's going on in
the House, where disagreements among hardliners and moderates are keeping
Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., from putting together enough votes to take the bill
to the floor.
Tim Malloy,
assistant director of the Quinnipiac poll, said, "You have to figure a lot
of people who voted for Trump are on Obamacare."
(AP)
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