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Wednesday, Jun 10 2015

Full Issue

Obama's Speech To Catholic Health Association Makes Moral Case For Health Law

In the speech, which drew immediate GOP criticism, President Barack Obama asserted the law's successes, saying it has insured millions and saved lives.

President Obama on Tuesday condemned opponents of his signature health care law as 鈥渃ynical鈥 partisans seeking to deprive Americans of a benefit that has become an integral part of the country鈥檚 social safety net, building a tough political case against Republicans as the Supreme Court weighs whether to strike down a key element of the Affordable Care Act. 鈥淭his is now part of the fabric of how we care for one another 鈥 this is health care in America,鈥 the president said in a speech to the Catholic Health Association, an organization that championed the law and has written a brief asking the high court to uphold it. 鈥淚t seems so cynical to want to take health care away from millions of people.鈥 (Hirschfeld Davis and Shear, 6/9)

President Obama reentered the political battle over healthcare Tuesday, delivering an extended defense of the Affordable Care Act as the Supreme Court prepares to issue its ruling on a case that could strip away health insurance from millions of Americans. ... Obama鈥檚 address, to a gathering of hospital leaders from the Catholic Health Assn., comes at a pivotal moment as his signature domestic achievement faces its gravest threat since being narrowly upheld by the Supreme Court three years ago. (Levey, 6/9)

The speech drew criticism from Republican opponents of the health law, which they call 鈥淥bamacare.鈥 鈥淭he president鈥檚 spin doesn鈥檛 change the fact Obamacare is a deeply flawed law that no one read before Democrats rammed it through Congress on a highly partisan basis,鈥 said Michael Short, a spokesman for the Republican National Committee. (Radnofsky, 6/9)

Obama鈥檚 tone was much more conciliatory than it was the day before, when during a news conference wrapping up the G-7 meeting in Germany he said of the case now before the Supreme Court, 鈥淔rankly, it probably shouldn鈥檛 even have been taken up.鈥 (Rovner, 6/9)

Peppered with religious and historical references, Obama鈥檚 speech was part victory lap and part plea: an assertion of the law鈥檚 success, even as the courts and the Republican-controlled Congress threaten to dismantle the overhaul. Saying broadening access to health care had been the goal of historic leaders 鈥渇rom Teddy Roosevelt to Teddy Kennedy,鈥 Obama asserted that health care is 鈥渘ot a privilege, it is a right.鈥 (Wheaton, 6/9)

Despite years of political and legal challenges, President Obama said Tuesday his health care law has insured millions, saved lives, and is a success that is here to stay. "After a century of talk, after decades of trying, after a year of sustained debate, we finally made health care reform a reality here in America," Obama told a supportive crowd with the Catholic Health Association. (Jackson, 6/9)

President Obama defends the health care reform law as the Supreme Court prepares to issue a ruling in a case that could dismantle it. The law still remains controversial politically. (Horsley, 6/9)

Obama poked fun at opponents who have issued 鈥渦nending Chicken Little warnings鈥 about what would happen if the law passed. None of those predictions have come true, Obama argued. 鈥淭he critics stubbornly ignore reality,鈥 he said. Anticipating his speech, however, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., dismissed Obama鈥檚 claims as 鈥渏ousting with reality again.鈥 (6/9)

President Barack Obama accused Republican critics of his signature health care law of cynicism, demonstrating how hard he's willing to fight for the law as the Supreme Court prepares to decide the fate of one of its key components. (Bradner, 6/9)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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