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Monday, Oct 31 2016

Full Issue

Will Voters In State Hit Hardest By Premium Hikes Be Swayed By The Increases?

The flood of bad news around the health law is unlikely to change the minds of Arizona voters, who have been long-braced for the spike in costs. Meanwhile, not a single one of 100 prominent health care executives has given money to Donald Trump's campaign.

Arizona was shaping up to be one of the more unlikely battlegrounds of the 2016 campaign when a political bombshell appeared to explode last week: The Obama administration revealed that the cost of midlevel plans on the Affordable Care Act鈥檚 health insurance marketplace here would increase next year by 116 percent on average. Senator John McCain, running for re-election against the headwind of Donald J. Trump, took the bad news as a gift, highlighting it in a new television ad that begins, 鈥淲hen you open up your health insurance bill and find your premiums are doubling, remember that McCain strongly opposes Obamacare.鈥 (Goodnough, 10/29)

Healthcare leaders apparently don't think much of Donald Trump. A quarter of 100 prominent healthcare executives gave money to Trump's opponent, Democrat Hillary Clinton. The rest have not donated to either Clinton or Trump, according to a Modern Healthcare analysis of federal election records. Not a single one financially backed Trump, even though many of them have a history of donating to conservative politicians and causes. (Herman and Muchmore, 10/29)

In other 2016 elections news聽鈥

ObamaCare appears to have lost its potency on the campaign trail. Senate Republican candidates have featured the healthcare law in just 12 percent of their ads this year, according to data by Wesleyan University. That鈥檚 about half as many anti-ObamaCare ads by Republicans from the same period in 2014. It's an even sharper shift from the elections in 2010 and 2012, when Republicans campaigned aggressively on the healthcare law and wiped away the Democratic majorities in Congress. Leading up to the GOP鈥檚 2010 wave election, ObamaCare made up a full one-third of advertising, according to the Wesleyan data. (Ferris, 10/31)

This is the third in a series of videos about campaign health proposals that 鈥渟ound like a good idea.鈥 This one explores why a Republican suggestion to establish a new federal high-risk insurance pool may not be such a good idea after all. (Rovner and Ying, 10/31)

Watch聽the other videos on聽 and .

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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