Texarkana Gazette

More needs to be done on affordable health care

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If the COVID-19 pandemic has taught Americans anything, it’s surely the necessity of making sure everyone has access to decent medical care.

That’s why the recent decision by the U.S. Supreme Court upholding the Affordable Care Act, which has since its passage 11 years ago sought to help close this gap between the haves and have-nots of health care, is heartening. Not just because it keeps Obamacare in place but because it did so with an exclamatio­n point — a 7-2 ruling that even included Justice Clarence Thomas. When such a conservati­ve court rejects the efforts of Republican states to kill the ACA (even through a technicali­ty like the eliminatio­n of the individual mandate four years ago), it doesn’t take a legal expert to recognize Barack Obama’s signature domestic accomplish­ment isn’t going away. This is the third Supreme Court defense of the law; surely even the most ardent GOP opponents will give it a rest.

As of this month, an estimated 31 million Americans have health insurance either through ACA marketplac­es or the law’s Medicaid expansion, according to U.S. Department of Health and Human Services data. But there are still many millions of Americans whose medical needs aren’t being met under the existing program. To his credit, President Joe Biden has already made some steps in this direction, adding a special enrollment period in February while funds from the American

Rescue Plan are helping make ACA coverage more affordable this year. Yet additional steps need to be taken. And it should start with GOP leadership dropping their misplaced antagonism toward the law which was, after all, a compromise that preserved private insurance instead of moving toward a single-payer or ‘Medicare for All” system as liberals sought. Republican voters have benefited from the ACA. Their elected leaders are simply unwilling to admit it.

Oh, it won’t be easy for certain critics to change their tune and stop referring to Obamacare as a government “takeover” of medicine or a communist plot. But then it probably also wasn’t easy for conservati­ves who initially opposed Social Security in the 1930s (even as nearly three dozen other countries had already adopted some form of social insurance). It was many years after the program’s initial passage that signature changes were adopted such as cost-of-living adjustment­s (1950) or disability insurance (1954). Social Security may need some more tweaks and better funding but it’s been generation­s since anyone seriously talked about doing away with that government safety net.

In his official statement, President Biden called the Supreme Court’s ACA ruling a “major victory for all Americans.” It certainly is that. But it’s also not the end of the story for providing greater equity in health care.

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