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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsAt Long Last, House Republicans Reveal...the same warmed-over nonsense they had a year ago
http://acasignups.net/17/02/17/long-last-house-republicans-revealthe-same-warmed-over-nonsense-they-had-year-ago-part-oneYesterday was supposed to be a Big Day for Congressional Republicans, as they were set to finally reveal their Master Plan to replace the Affordable Care Act. Speaker of the House Paul Ryan held a press conference about it, and they even released a 19-page "Policy Brief" which purported to explain it to everyone. Hooray! They were hoping that the entire news universe would be singing their praises all day long.
That didn't happen, however, for two reasons. FIrst, because Donald Trump's bizarre, surreal press conference, complete with racist and anti-semetic incidents, pretty much sucked all the oxygen out of the news cycle. The other reason is that their "policy brief" didn't really include much that we hadn't seen before. As Jeffrey Young of the Huffington Post put it:
It was basically the same as what Ryan and the leadership outlined over the summer with A Better Way proposal.
It calls for replacing the Affordable Care Act with a much weaker set of insurance regulations and tax credits that are based on age, rather than income. It also proposes phasing out the expansion of Medicaid, and then transforming the entire low-income health program by giving states more control and reducing federal funding.
Like the Better Way proposal, this new paper doesnt include specifics, such as the value of those tax credits, or the actual formula for calculating Medicaid funds. Ryan, in his press conference, said his leadership team had submitted proposals to the Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation to evaluate how the proposals will affect insurance coverage and the budget.
That could mean Republicans have agreed on the numbers and arent making them public yet, or perhaps that they are close and just fine-tuning them.
It could also mean that, once again, Ryan is trying to create the illusion of progress, as he and other Republican leaders have been doing now for six years, 11 months and counting.
OK, so what's in the policy brief itself?
Well, first of all, while it is indeed technically 19 pages, 6 of those are title cards only (the cover page, blank back page and section titles with nothing whatsoever on them other than "FACTS", "POLICY" and so on). Several more pages basically just rip on the ACA for sucking, and 1.5 pages consist of footnote web links. The actual policy description makes up, by my count, just 6 1/2 pages of the total. "Brief" indeed. To be fair, I'm not sure whether that's typical for this sort of thing or not. I'm sure the ACA itself was only 6-7 pages long at some point in it's gestation...but I'm guessing that by the time it was actually voted on, it was a bit more specific.
Anyway, there's a bunch of other folks who have picked apart the brief in detail, such as this one from the Center for American Progress or this one from the New York Times, so for the moment I'll just hit on a few items which leapt out at me on the "Key Obamacare Facts" page. I'll look at the actual GOP policy part later:
25% average increase in premiums this year for the millions of Americans trapped in Obamacare HealthCare.gov exchanges.
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At Long Last, House Republicans Reveal...the same warmed-over nonsense they had a year ago (Original Post)
flamingdem
Feb 2017
OP
The paper is a litany of lies and half-truths regarding the problems with the ACA, all of which
Fred Sanders
Feb 2017
#3
Bob Loblaw
(1,900 posts)1. No dog
ever had a workable plan in the event it caught a car.
Wounded Bear
(58,670 posts)2. All of their "improvements" in any area...
are warmed over 19th Century bullshit.
Fred Sanders
(23,946 posts)3. The paper is a litany of lies and half-truths regarding the problems with the ACA, all of which
can be tweaked and fixed. More lies, what else did you expect?
For example the much touted 25% average increase premiums is offset almost entirely by subsidies for those enrolled in the ACA, while all increases apply without subsides for those, ironically, in the private market.
flamingdem
(39,313 posts)4. They want to kill those subsidies most of all
for their massive tax cuts
Blue Idaho
(5,049 posts)5. Replace Obamacare NOW!
The sooner people realize how badly republicans are going to screw them - the better the chances of Democrats being elected in the mid-term elections.
I wish no one would be hurt - but sadly - it may take exactly that for the low information voters to wake up and realize 45 and the GOP are their enemies - not their friends.