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DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 12:45 PM Jan 2017

Cracks in the Wall - by Josh Marshall

By JOSH MARSHALL PublishedJANUARY 6, 2017, 10:56 AM EDT

There are now three Republican Senators who have expressed serious reservations about the GOP's "repeal and delay" plan for repealing Obamacare: Sens. Collins, Cotton and Paul. In a normal world, this should be no surprise. Virtually If all three defected (a very big if), ObamaCare repeal would be dead in its tracks until Republicans decided on a replacement.

Collins is the quintessential early 21st century GOP 'moderate'. But Cotton and Paul definitely are not. Far from it, though Paul's politics are certainly as idiosyncratic as they are consistently rightwing. But look at their states: Arkansas and Kentucky. These are both poor states, both states which took Medicaid expansion and both saw huge increases in the number of enrollees who got health insurance under Medicaid expansion. This doesn't include insurance through exchanges.

Total Medicaid/CHIP enrollment went up 69% since Obamacare in Arkansas. In absolute numbers, enrollments went up over 385,000. That total went up 102% in Kentucky. In absolute numbers, that was over 620,000 new enrollees. These are needless to say big, big numbers. Kentucky has by far the biggest increase of any state on a per capita basis and Arkansas isn't far behind. I do not think it's any accident that these two happen to be hold outs. (Maine's Gov LePage vetoed Medicaid expansion; but more than 87,000 Mainers have insurance the ACA exchange.)

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Cracks in the Wall - by Josh Marshall (Original Post) DonViejo Jan 2017 OP
Lets call it like we see it. Wellstone ruled Jan 2017 #1
K&R Cha Jan 2017 #2
They were right when they warned not to vote for it. HassleCat Jan 2017 #3
 

Wellstone ruled

(34,661 posts)
1. Lets call it like we see it.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 12:55 PM
Jan 2017

The Republican Party wants Health Care for those who can afford it. And the use of that Health Care to be on a limited basis or regulated by some invisible group who would control your acsess to it.

 

HassleCat

(6,409 posts)
3. They were right when they warned not to vote for it.
Fri Jan 6, 2017, 12:59 PM
Jan 2017

They said it would be hard to repeal it once people "got a taste of the sugar." They know how people get attached to benefit programs. Their fundamentalist, rebel flag waving constituents love welfare as much as the people they hate. Life is complicated, isn't it, Republicans?

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