Americans Getting Cold Feet on Repealing Obamacare (user search)
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May 28, 2024, 10:51:20 AM
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  Americans Getting Cold Feet on Repealing Obamacare (search mode)
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Author Topic: Americans Getting Cold Feet on Repealing Obamacare  (Read 1578 times)
Badger
badger
Atlas Legend
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Posts: 40,421
United States


« on: February 28, 2017, 09:20:55 AM »

And now, John Boehner says ObamaCare will stay the law of the land. I'm in complete agreement. There will be mild modifications, probably requested by the governors, but the Medicare expansion is here to stay, so are the exchanges, and so are the subsidies (guess who they go to? That's right, a lot of Trump voters!). Big Pharma and all the people who benefit will stand on the tracks to stop the repeal.  

I imagine the Trump base will move on swiftly to other issues and the GOP will gain collective amnesia that they ever wanted to repeal the law. In five years, it will be remembered as the "Affordable Care Act," not "ObamaCare."

Obama's victory on his healthcare law is breathtaking. He rolled the dice and it looks like he's won the game after all. And it looks like ObamaCare will be the transition point between our prior system and single payer. (Or as they will call it, "Medicare for All.")

The RNC really fumbled badly on not using the 5 years to come up with a replacement plan.

I'm not seeing how Obamacare will be replaced by single-payer if Republicans end up repairing (instead of repealing) it.  If it's running like a well-oiled machine by the time 2020 rolls around, there will be very little incentive to take the next step and institute single-payer.  And -apart from some left-wing activists- why would we?  Why change that which is no longer broken?  Unless you are proposing it will be done by stealth, step-by-step, without anyone noticing.   

The real next battleground is instituting the public option, which most analysts (CBO, OMB, plenty of private sector and academic experts) agree would help bigly in slowing costs.
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Badger
badger
Atlas Legend
*****
Posts: 40,421
United States


« Reply #1 on: February 28, 2017, 11:11:07 AM »

Which country's healthcare system does everyone think ours will ultimately most closely resemble, assuming Obamacare survives with minimal changes?

Canada?

United Kingdom?

Germany/Switzerland?

Obamacare as it exists now seems quite similar to the Dutch model, but maybe David or one of our other Dutch posters can shed some light on that.

Dutch have public option that costs like 100 Euros a month but is free for anyone under 18

Ergo, NOTA
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