"Matt fights for everyone with a preexisting condition."
A campaign ad for Matt Rosendale, a Montana congressional candidate, Sept. 22, 2020

Throughout the 2020 election cycle, candidates鈥 positions on health care have been particularly important for voters with underlying and often expensive medical needs 鈥 in short, those with preexisting conditions.
It鈥檚 no surprise, then, that protections for people who have chronic health problems like diabetes and cancer have become a focal point for candidates nationwide 鈥 among them, Matt Rosendale, the Republican contender for Montana鈥檚 only U.S. House seat.
On Sept. 22, Rosendale鈥檚 campaign hit airwaves and online streaming services with https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lQ7X88XJNnU
target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">an ad featuring a Whitefish resident named Sandee
, whose son was diagnosed with a life-threatening disease. Sandee told the story of how Rosendale came to her family鈥檚 aid, concluding that 鈥淢att fights for everyone with a preexisting condition.鈥
As is often the case with health care policy, however, the truth is far from simple. Rosendale and many other Republican congressional candidates face the challenge of convincing voters they support these safeguards even as they oppose the Affordable Care Act, which codifies those safeguards.
Polls show for keeping the ACA鈥檚 preexisting condition protections.
We decided to investigate.
Rosendale is up against Democrat Kathleen Williams for the congressional seat now occupied by Republican Rep. Greg Gianforte, who has entered the state鈥檚 gubernatorial race. The open seat has been controlled by the GOP for the past 12 terms, but this year鈥檚 race is expected to be close. Williams, who also ran for the seat in 2018, has made health care her top campaign issue.
We contacted the Rosendale campaign to find out the basis for his ad鈥檚 claim. Campaign spokesperson Shelby DeMars listed a range of that would help people with preexisting conditions directly or indirectly by holding down health care costs. She specifically pointed to Rosendale鈥檚 work on the state鈥檚 reinsurance program as Montana鈥檚 state auditor and insurance commissioner, a post he was elected to in 2016.
"Matt Rosendale is a champion for those with pre-existing conditions and he has the record to prove it,鈥 DeMars said via email. 鈥淚t is because of the Reinsurance program he implemented that Montanans with pre-existing conditions can access the affordable healthcare coverage they need.鈥
Examining Reinsurance
In a nutshell, is designed to help insurers cover costly medical claims with a mix of federal pass-through dollars and funding generated by a premium tax on all major medical policies in the state. Gov. Steve Bullock announced the formation of in fall 2018, and the state鈥檚 legislature approved the plan in 2019, allowing Rosendale to under the Affordable Care Act.
indicated the idea worked. In-state insurers credited the program with lowering premiums by 8% to 14% for 2020. As shortly after the 2019 legislative session, 鈥淚t allows the insurance companies to have rate stabilization for those really big claims, the ones that are the earthquakes in health insurance.鈥 He went on to say that this stability 鈥渂rings the cost down for the consumer.鈥 More to the point, that reinsurance not only serves to subsidize high-cost patients but 鈥減rotects patients with pre-existing conditions.鈥
But there鈥檚 a rub.
The reinsurance program that Rosendale touts wouldn鈥檛 exist without a state innovation waiver created by the ACA, which . That effort will doubtless continue to fuel pitched battles in Congress, and how the U.S. Supreme Court may rule on a pending ACA challenge . One thing is clear, though: If the entire ACA is thrown out, , along with Montana鈥檚 Medicaid expansion and the ban on insurers excluding people with health problems from affordable coverage.
When asked about the resulting elimination of the reinsurance program, DeMars emphasized that Rosendale鈥檚 work as auditor has created a system that will ensure protections for preexisting conditions 鈥渞egardless of what happens to the ACA.鈥 She did not elaborate or explain what protections would remain if the ACA were repealed.
The Short-Term Plan Component
In defending his stance on preexisting conditions, Rosendale continues to be haunted by another health care policy specter from his political past. During his unsuccessful challenge against Democratic U.S. Sen. Jon Tester in 2018, Rosendale for promoting short-term, limited-duration health insurance plans. Unlike plans offered on the individual marketplace, these short-term plans are exempt from the ACA鈥檚 ban on excluding people with preexisting conditions. And, under a 2018 regulatory change pushed by the Trump administration, from three months to 12, with the potential to renew for up to three years.
As state auditor, Rosendale included those plans in . They often exclude coverage for a variety of higher-cost benefits. In Montana, for example, found that of four short-term plans available in Billings in 2018, none offered coverage for maternity care, mental health, substance abuse or prescription drug services. (KHN is an editorially independent program of 麻豆女优.)
Historically, short-term plans were designed to help individuals fill gaps in health coverage. According to Dania Palanker, an assistant research professor at Georgetown University鈥檚 Center on Health Insurance Reforms, the role short-term plans play on today鈥檚 health insurance landscape is to attract younger, healthier individuals seeking low-cost options to cover catastrophic events. That splits insurers into two pools 鈥 those who are less likely to incur medical expenses, and those who are more likely to incur them. Costs on the individual market go up as a result, leaving people with preexisting conditions no other option than to pay higher premiums. Short-term plans are, Palanker said, 鈥渁ctively hurting people with preexisting conditions.鈥
鈥淧romoting short-term plans and stumping on supporting protections for preexisting conditions are mutually exclusive,鈥 she continued.
Asked whether the cost-lowering effect of a reinsurance program would be enough to offset the effects of short-term plans, Palanker said the only way such an offset would be enough is if the program encompassed short-term plans. She hasn鈥檛 seen that happen anywhere.
Our Ruling
A campaign ad says Rosendale 鈥渇ights for everyone with a preexisting condition.鈥 While it is true that health insurance premiums have dropped during Rosendale鈥檚 tenure as state auditor, the choice to establish Montana鈥檚 reinsurance program ultimately fell to decision-makers in the state鈥檚 legislature and the governor鈥檚 office. Since his ad鈥檚 claim simply states that he 鈥渇ights鈥 for people with preexisting conditions, his testimony in support of that program and role in securing the state waiver do seem to fit the bill.
In the long-term, however, Rosendale鈥檚 positions begin to run counter to the claim. His support for short-term, limited-duration plans poses a considerable threat to keeping health insurance affordable for all, and absent a solid plan from Congress to ensure that state reinsurance programs survive, his stated goal of repealing the ACA would actually serve to unravel the very protection he鈥檚 built his case on.
We rate this statement as Mostly False.
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