The Palm Beach Post

Poll: Don’t just kill ‘Obamacare,’ fix it

- By Emily Swanson and Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

WASHINGTON — Americans overwhelmi­ngly want lawmakers of both parties to work out health care changes, with only 13 percent supporting Republican moves to repeal “Obamacare” absent a replacemen­t, according to a new poll.

Although a deep partisan divide endures over the 2010 Affordable Care Act, people may be less far apart on what policymake­rs should try next, says the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research survey.

In the poll, 8 in 10 said Republican­s should approach Democrats with an offer to negotiate if the current GOP overhaul effort fails, rather than sticking with their own “repeal and replace” campaign of the past seven years. And nearly 9 in 10 said Democrats should take Republican­s up on such an offer.

The poll was conducted as the GOP’s plan floundered in the Senate during the past week.

A foundation for common ground seems to be this: Nearly everyone wants changes to the Obama law, while hardly anyone wants to see it abolished without a substitute in place.

Among Democrats, only 22 percent actually want the ACA kept just as it is; 64 percent want it kept but with changes. Among Republican­s, 27 percent want immediate repeal, while 54 percent favor repealing the law when a replacemen­t is ready.

“Since we are a nation that’s founded on compromise, I don’t see why we can’t compromise on this,” said Valcee Cox, a retired high school history teacher in Big Spring, Texas. He votes Republican but says with his party in control of Washington, “they should act like grown-ups.”

Republican­s including President Donald Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell have recently pushed the notion of repealing as much of Obamacare as possible, then figuring out a replacemen­t later. That’s not what the public wants, the poll found.

“When they talk about repeal and not replacing, that scares me half to death,” said Andrea Martin of Taylor, Michigan. Disabled and dealing with diabetes and other health complicati­ons, Martin is keenly sensitive to deep Medicaid cuts proposed by Republican­s. That “would just totally destroy me,” she said. “I’d just go downhill.”

Former President Barack Obama’s law extended coverage to some 20 million people, reducing the nation’s uninsured rate to a historic low of about 9 percent. But it was passed without a single Republican vote and has faced entrenched opposition ever since.

The law’s private insurance markets are shaky in many areas, with premiums rising and insurers exiting due to financial losses. The law’s Medicaid expansion has worked more smoothly, but 19 states still refuse it, amid debates about costs and the government’s role in health care.

Candidate Trump promised voters that repeal would be a slam-dunk, and that better, more affordable health care would take its place. Instead the first six months of his presidency have been consumed with fitful efforts to move GOPonly legislatio­n.

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