The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Health coverage shouldn’t hinge on court ruling

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Most of those with opinions about it agree that President Barack Obama’s 2010 health care law should not merely be repealed.

Opponents and supporters of the Affordable Care Act take very different stands on the issue.

Even U.S. Sen. Bob Casey Jr., a supporter of the law, sees some problems with the law.

He recently told a Media News Group editorial board that more needs to be done to make health coverage affordable enough to get everyone covered.

But the senator, a Scranton Democrat, expressed great worry about what would be lost if the law were to simply disappear — guaranteed coverage of preexistin­g conditions, the Medicaid and exchange-secured coverage of nearly 20 million Americans (an estimate shared by the RAND Corp. and the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities) and parents’ ability to keep adult children on their health plans up to age 26.

That’s why he’s worried by a lawsuit supported by 18 Republican governors that seeks to overturn the Affordable Care Act on constituti­onal grounds.

The suit says that when Congress repealed a tax penalty meant to enforce the law’s mandate that individual­s obtain health coverage, it removed a provision the U.S. Supreme Court considered cited as a key to its constituti­onality.

Casey’s voice rose as he condemned the lawsuit.

“It’s a bad, bad result for America if this succeeds,” he said of the lawsuit now before the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals and possibly headed to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Opponents of the law would say Casey is overstatin­g the law’s benefits and failing to note its deficienci­es.

Many conservati­ves argue that pushing people into Medicaid coverage is not much of a benefit because the program offers a narrow field of doctors from which to choose.

And they say the law’s expansion of Medicaid and its means-tested subsidies both leave people open to gaps in coverage should their incomes rise.

But even such critics want what Casey noted has not been offered: an alternativ­e.

And Casey is right to challenge his Republican colleagues to come up with a replacemen­t for the Affordable Care Act.

While some say the Affordable Care Act was itself a disruption of health insurance markets, and papered it over with government subsidies to individual­s and insurers, it’s hard to deny that the law’s sudden repeal in court would destabiliz­e the health insurance market.

A December commentary for the Heritage Foundation made the case for replacemen­t over simple repeal via the courts:

“As the case continues to wind its way through the legal system, it is imperative that policymake­rs pursue real health care reform. … Politician­s have long promised to replace Obamacare with solutions that help everyone. It’s time to deliver — no matter which way the courts go.”

The Affordable Care Act has been described as an unpopular law with very popular provisions.

Republican­s’ inability to repeal it during President Donald Trump’s first two years in office supports this view.

And that failure was largely a result of Republican senators’ inability to come up with a replacemen­t.

At this point, with Trump’s administra­tion backing the law’s repeal by refusing to defend it in court, his party should consider itself duty-bound to at least offer a health care reform plan that will protect those with coverage under the Affordable Care Act.

If it’s better and more affordable coverage — results conservati­ves insist a market-based approach would deliver — that would be ideal.

Meanwhile, if they can’t pass such an Obamacare replacemen­t bill, they should support legislatio­n that would keep the Affordable Care Act in place in the event it’s overturned by the courts, and take their reform plan to the voters in November 2020.

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