Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Trump: ACA Is Similar To Obama, You Only Like It When It's Gone
President Donald Trump sought to highlight complaints about the Obama health care law Monday, including a gripe of his own, that the law is "a disaster" but that the media makes it look "wonderful." (3/13)
Mr. Trump hosted people with complaints about the pricing and coverage of the current insurance system in the White House on Monday as he kicked off the second week of the administration鈥檚 make-or-break effort to overturn the 2010 health law and replace it with what he called a 鈥渢hing of beauty.鈥 (Radnofsky, 3/13)
Turns out Obamacare is a little bit like its namesake president: kind of popular. President Trump is in the midst of his pitch to the American public that it's time to throw out the Affordable Care Act, also known as 鈥淥bamacare,鈥 and replace it with a new Republican bill, the American Health Care Act. The problem is, according to Trump, the press and the public have come down with something akin to seller's remorse. (Phillip, 3/13)
President Donald Trump said it could take several years for health insurance prices to start to drop under an Obamacare replacement plan he is promoting, creating a rocky transition period that could pose a risk for members of Congress up for re-election next year and Trump鈥檚 own bid for a second term in 2020.聽In a meeting at the White House Monday with a group of small business owners, doctors and individuals who said their plans were canceled or that they saw a spike in health-insurance costs since Obamacare was enacted, Trump offered reassurances but warned that any relief won鈥檛 be immediate. (Pettypiece, 3/13)
President Trump blamed the news media on Monday morning for 鈥渕aking Obamacare look so good鈥 as he spoke at a listening session with nine people he characterized as 鈥渧ictims鈥 of the health care law. Mr. Trump repeated his declaration that 鈥淥bamacare is a disaster鈥 鈥 a sentiment echoed more specifically by White House and cabinet officials in the past few days. (Qiu, 3/13)
President Donald Trump told Americans he'd do it all on health care: "insurance for everybody," better coverage and lower consumer costs. By the reckoning of nonpartisan budget analysts at Congress, that's not what will happen if the Republican bill he's backing becomes law. (3/14)