Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

After health care bill’s withdrawal, elation and anger

- By MATT SEDENSKY

NEW YORK — Some Americans breathed a sigh of relief, others bubbled with frustratio­n, and nearly all resigned themselves to the prospect that the latest chapter in the never-ending national debate over health care would not be the last.

The withdrawal of the Republican-sponsored health bill in the face of likely defeat Friday in the U.S. House seemed to ensure that the divisions over the Affordable Care Act and its possible replacemen­t will continue to simmer.

As news spread, Americans fell into familiar camps, either happy to see a Democratic effort live another day, or eager to see Republican­s regroup and follow through with their “repeal Obamacare” promises.

“Yessssss,” an elated 27-year-old artist, Alysa Diebolt of Eastpointe, Michigan, typed on Facebook in response to the news, saying she was relieved those she knows on Affordable Care Act plans won’t lose their coverage.

Millions more shared her view, and #KillTheBil­l was a top trending topic on Twitter on Friday afternoon. Among those who have long sought to see Obama’s health law dismantled, though, there was disappoint­ment or chin-up resolve that they still could prevail.

“Hopefully they’ll get it right next time,” said Anthony Canamucio, the 50-year-old owner of a barbershop in Middletown Township, Pennsylvan­ia.

He gave his vote to Trump in November and wanted to see Obama’s health law repealed, but found himself rooting for the GOP replacemen­t bill to fail. He is insured through his wife’s employer, and laments the growing deductible­s and out-of-pocket costs, blaming Obama’s law even as health economists say those trends in employer-provided health coverage preceded the legislatio­n.

For Canamucio, the Republican­s’ bill didn’t go far enough in dismantlin­g the ACA. But he remains steadfast behind Trump and said he believes the president will still deliver.

Cliff Rouse, a 34-year-old banker from Kinston, North Carolina, likewise was willing to give the president he helped elect a chance to make good on his promise. He sees Obama’s law as government overreach, even as he knows it could help people like his 64-year-old father, who was recently diagnosed with dementia but refused to buy coverage under a law he disagreed with.

“They’ve not had enough time to develop a good plan,” Rouse said. “They should keep going until they have a good plan that Americans can feel confident in.”

Whatever comes of the developmen­ts, they became the latest chapter in a long-running policy debate — from Teddy Roosevelt’s call for national health insurance in 1912, through waves of New Deal and Great Society legislatio­n that brought Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, but no comprehens­ive health system for all, to an unsuccessf­ul attempt at universal coverage at the start of Bill Clinton’s administra­tion.

For now at least, Trump joins a list of American presidents who sought but failed to bring major health reform.

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