Different Takes On Trump’s Executive Order On Health Insurance: The Good, The Bad And The Ugly
Opinion writers across the nation express outrage and concern about Thursday's White House directive loosening some of the rules regarding health coverage, but some also defend it and even see it as progress. The opinions also touch on other health policy topics including Medicaid.
Fed up with failed attempts in Congress to repeal the Affordable Care Act, President Trump on Thursday took matters into his own hands, signing an executive order that could significantly damage the health insurance market and harm millions of people. Mr. Trump directed his administration to effectively create an alternative health insurance system that does not include the safeguards of the A.C.A. and could sabotage that 2010 law, one of his predecessor鈥檚 biggest accomplishments. (10/12)
His latest executive order, signed Thursday, will cause premiums to fall drastically for 鈥渕illions of Americans,鈥 Trump said. What he didn鈥檛 mention is that these potential savings would accrue only to people healthy enough to gamble on skimpy insurance coverage. Sicker people, left stranded in a deteriorating risk pool, would see their premiums rise. In other words: The changes would shift costs, not save money, for the health-care system. (11/12)
President Trump on Thursday signed an executive order directing his administration to ramp up its sabotage campaign against the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, also known as the health-care law without which millions of needy people would lack coverage. The only good news is that the order merely instructs executive agencies to draw up some new, looser regulations, rather than immediately eroding Obamacare鈥檚 protections. The bad news is that those looser regulations may nevertheless come soon, and they could devastate the ACA鈥檚 carefully regulated marketplaces. Much depends on how reckless the leaders of agencies such as the Labor Department decide to be. (10/12)
Republicans are still trying to defuse the ticking Obama Care bomb without blowing themselves up, and on Thursday the GOP cut the first wire: President Trump signed an executive order that could begin to revive private insurance markets. More to the point, Americans may start to have more choices at a lower cost. (10/12)
President Trump has made a lot of promises on health care. Somehow, though, I don鈥檛 remember him promising stadiums of cheering fans that he鈥檇 take away protections for preexisting conditions, increase deductibles, spike premiums, eliminate basic coverage requirements and, more generally, destabilize the individual health-insurance market.聽But that is what he said he鈥檇 do Thursday, when he signed an聽executive order聽on health care. (Catherine Rampell, 10/12)
An executive order signed by Trump on Thursday authorizes changes to Affordable Care Act regulations that are designed to create less expensive, less comprehensive health insurance plans. Health care experts predict that changing the ACA formula in that way drives younger people 鈥 who are typically healthier 鈥 to the cheaper products. (10/13)
Donald Trump has a new way to get rid of Obamacare. This one comes without the humiliating defeats previous repeal efforts have suffered in Congress. It also might dodge the political outcry that preceded those defeats. It鈥檚 a bad idea, however, and not only because Trump鈥檚 new idea would do the same thing as Republicans鈥 old ideas 鈥 destabilize insurance markets and cost millions of Americans benefits and coverage. It鈥檚 a bad idea because one man shouldn鈥檛 solely decide significant domestic policy. (10/11)
President Donald Trump issued a sweeping executive order on Thursday that may help lower costs and create more options for many Americans who struggle to find health insurance. At the same time, the order could be another nail in Obamacare鈥檚 coffin. Nobody will know for weeks if not months how the order will pan out: Trump鈥檚 edict depends on federal agencies鈥 regulations to enact it. We hope the rules prompt insurers to offer new policies that attract consumers. (11/12)
Iowans are in big trouble if politicians adopt the philosophy of Jeff Kaufmann, chairman of the Republican Party of Iowa.
He issued a statement this month in response to reports about Iowa鈥檚 鈥渟topgap鈥 plan 鈥 a proposal from the state insurance commissioner to stabilize the private health insurance market for Iowans who buy coverage on their own. The plan needs federal approval to move forward, but President Donald Trump told a top human-services administrator in August to reject it, according to the Washington Post. Iowa officials say they haven't heard that their proposal is dead, and Gov. Kim Reynolds has asked to speak with Trump about it. (10/12)
President Donald Trump took health care reform into his own hands on Thursday, signing an executive order after months of failed attempts at legislation by Republicans in Congress. The executive order aims to make lower-premium health care plans available to more Americans. (Abby Hamblin, 10/12)
In the burst of enthusiasm that followed passage of the Affordable Care Act in 2010, Massachusetts expanded its Medicaid program to cover tens of thousands of able-bodied adults with no children. Cooler heads warned that the bonus federal funding promised by the law would not last forever. Many also warned that supporters were wildly underestimating the increase in state costs .... Along with the Bay State, 30 others and the District of Columbia ignored these warnings. Now the birthplace of Romneycare is trying to move people off Medicaid to stave off fiscal disaster. So, yes, we told you so. (Akash Chougule, 10/11)