February 28, 2020 Christopher Holt
Next month Americans will celebrate or lament
the 10-year anniversary of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) becoming law. The bill
passed the House of Representatives on Sunday, March 21, 2010, and on Monday,
March 22, before the law had even been signed by President Obama (on March 23),
multiple pieces of legislation were introduced in both chambers of Congress to
repeal it—presaging a conflict over the law now spanning as long as the Trojan
War. But new polling suggests there is an opening for this debate to move
forward.
The Kaiser Family Foundation’s latest tracking poll
from earlier this month finds that health care is the number one priority for
registered voters when thinking about their vote for president, ranking ahead
of even the economy. The issue is even more important for swing voters. At the
same time, the polling shows support for the ACA at an all-time high of 55
percent, with opposition at 37 percent. And if that gap isn’t significant
enough, when asked to identify their top health care priority, only 3 percent
of Republican voters said repealing the ACA was their top priority—down from 18
percent in October 2018 and 29 percent in March 2016.
So what does all this mean for the future of the
ACA and health care policy more broadly? To be sure, it doesn’t mean that
Republicans have embraced the ACA or are happy with the status quo. Lawmakers
and voters on the right continue to oppose Obamacare, and, yes, even support
its repeal. And concerns about health care costs and single payer aren’t
entirely separate from the ACA. But repealing the ACA may no longer be the
driving health care issue for Republican voters, and—rhetoric aside—repeal has
long since stopped being a primary objective of most Republican policymakers.
Kaiser’s polling instead indicates that Republican voters are, like most
Americans, worried about the cost of health care (24 percent) and about
stopping single-payer health care (19 percent). If these shifting Republican
priorities are accurate, it would be a big deal, and a great opportunity for
conservative health policy.
For
years now, conservatives have had to wrap virtually every health care proposal
in the mantle of “repeal.”For all the talk of ACA opponents never offering
alternatives, there have been a host of health care proposals from conservative
lawmakers
and third-party
groups, but these proposals have always faced competing attacks from
both sides. From the right they’ve frequently been attacked for not being “full
repeal,” and from the left for threatening benefits provided by the ACA. But if
Republican voters are willing to focus on something other than the white whale
of repeal, the opportunities for conservative health policymakers get wider. I’ve
argued for at least 6 years that we need to move beyond the rhetoric of
repeal and toward a forward-looking vision for health care. Rather
than being focused on undoing something that happened in the last decade, we
could focus on how to move the system we have today in a direction that is
market oriented and promotes choice, competition, and quality.
https://www.americanactionforum.org/weekly-checkup/beyond-repeal/#ixzz6FXiOS8lV
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