Baltimore Sun

ACA on docket, Obama on defense

- By Noam N. Levey

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama re-entered the political battle over health care Tuesday, delivering an extended defense of the Affordable Care Act as the Supreme Court prepares to issue its ruling on a case that could strip away health insurance from millions of Americans.

“It seems so cynical to want to take coverage away from millions of people,” Obama said, taking a swipe at the Republican­s who have backed the latest legal challenge to the law, “to take care away from people who need it the most, to punish millions with higher costs of care and unravel what’s now been woven into the fabric of America.”

Obama’s address, to a gathering of hospital leaders from the Catholic Health Associatio­n, comes at a pivotal moment as his signature domestic achievemen­t faces its gravest threat since being narrowly upheld by the Supreme Court three years ago.

The current legal challenge brought by conservati­ve activists argues that a strict reading of the statute makes insurance subsidies in the law available only in states that establishe­d their own insurance marketplac­es through the law.

That would strip subsidies from residents of more than 30 states that rely on the federal HealthCare.gov marketplac­e. More than 6 million people could lose coverage almost immediatel­y, with millions more expected to follow as insurance markets collapse in many states.

The ruling, expected this month, will likely reignite a fierce national political battle over health care that had been petering out in many places as more Americans got coverage and GOP leaders looked to move on to other issues.

The president enters the renewed health care debate in a stronger position than at any time since he signed the law in 2010. Although problems with the law persist and some consumers who benefited from the old system that allowed insurers to deny coverage to sick people have seen premiums rise, millions more have gained coverage.

Congressio­nal Republican­s, meanwhile, now face the prospect of being blamed for massive disruption­s caused by a legal case they championed.

Within hours of Obama’s speech Tuesday, Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., who chairs the Senate Republican Conference, took to the Senate floor to argue the health law is “unraveling.”

“The discussion about Obamacare’s success or failure is no longer theoretica­l,” Thune said, citing reports of rising premiums around the country and the ongoing struggles of some states to operate their new insurance marketplac­es.

“It’s time to repeal Obamacare and replace it with real health care reforms that will actually drive down costs,” Thune said.

Speaking to a radio program in Kentucky, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., repeated his claim that the law is the “single worst piece of legislatio­n passed in our country in the last half-century.”

Republican­s largely won the political battle over the Affordable Care Act, capitalizi­ng on its controvers­ial passage and flawed rollout to win sweeping victories in the 2010 and 2014 congressio­nal midterm elections.

Democrats, meanwhile, bemoaned their president’s inability to use his oratorical skills to rally public opinion behind the law.

Today, however, with millions gaining coverage, polls show a small but measurable uptick in public support. Those holding a favorable view of the law slightly outnumbere­d those viewing the law unfavorabl­y in an April national tracking poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation.

The law is now widely credited by independen­t analyses with driving the largest decline in the nation’s uninsured rate in at least a half-century. RANDCorp., a nonprofit research firm, reported last month that the number of Americans without coverage declined by nearly 17 million since the law’s coverage expansion began last year.

And the rising insurance premiums cited by Thune and others are being driven in part by uncertaint­y over the legal challenge backed by the GOP.

Obama ticked off the progress Tuesday, noting the insurance expansion, the new protection­s for Americans with pre-existing medical conditions, the historic slowdown in health care spending and the surveys that show large majorities of people satisfied with the new coverage they have through the law.

The president also could draw on a growing number of people who have benefited from the law, several of whose stories he cited Tuesday.

“This isn’t about myths or rumors that folks try to sustain,” Obama said. “There is a reality that people on the ground day to day are experienci­ng. Their lives are better.”

Republican­s, meanwhile, still haven’t advanced any alternativ­e to the Affordable Care Act.

McConnell refused Monday to even discuss what the GOP would do if the Supreme Court backs their challenge.

“We’ll let you know depending upon the outcome of the decision,” he said when pressed by the host of the “Joe Elliott Show” on WGTK-AM in Louisville.

 ?? SAUL LOEB/GETTY-AFP ?? “This isn’t about myths or rumors that folks try to sustain,” President Barack Obama told a health conference Tuesday.
SAUL LOEB/GETTY-AFP “This isn’t about myths or rumors that folks try to sustain,” President Barack Obama told a health conference Tuesday.

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