EDITORIAL: Steve Chapman: Obamacare repeal harbors risks for GOP
Long before
It might seem that taking measures to eliminate these problems would be good politics. In practice, it has been better politics to criticize those measures. One reason is that most Americans had insurance before Obamacare and didn't see what they would gain from it. That's why Obama felt the need to make a promise he was bound to break: "If you like your health care plan, you can keep it."
Even the comfortably insured had their gripes with the status quo he inherited. But that didn't mean they wanted it to change. In 2010, pollster
It did pass, and it failed to please most people. In a
Majorities in both parties support the law's provisions forbidding insurance companies to deny coverage based on pre-existing conditions, allowing children to stay on their parents' policy until age 26, eliminating copayments for preventive care and subsidizing premiums for lower-income people. What do they dislike? The individual mandate to buy coverage.
From a political standpoint, Obama made two big mistakes. First, he took action that saddled him with the blame for any complaints Americans have about their health care system. Even before the Affordable Care Act, premiums sometimes rose, treatments were sometimes denied and people sometimes had to change doctors. But when such things happened afterward, they automatically became his personal premeditated crime.
Second, he assumed the citizenry was mature enough to accept that there is no such thing as a free lunch. Obama figured that if Americans were protected against loss of coverage and astronomical bills, they would accept their reciprocal obligation to make the system work by purchasing insurance.
What was he thinking? They didn't accept it. They wanted -- and still want -- the benefits of the Affordable Care Act without the burdens.
They've actually gotten something approximating that. This year, the penalty for not having coverage is
They can get off scot-free, because the only thing the
Americans may not be crazy about the new system. But
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