By Robert
Reich
Shame on every one of the 217
Republicans who voted to repeal the Affordable Care Act on May 4, and
substitute basically nothing.
Trumpcare isn’t a replacement of the
Affordable Care Act. It’s a transfer from the sick and poor to the rich and
healthy.
The losers are up to 24 million
Americans who under the Affordable Care Act get subsidies to afford health
insurance coverage, including millions of people with pre-existing conditions
and poor people who had access to Medicaid who may not be able to afford
insurance in the future.
The winners are wealthy Americans
who will now get a tax cut because they won’t have to pay to fund the
Affordable Care Act, and healthy people who won’t have to buy health insurance
to subsidize the sick.
Sick people could be charged
premiums so high as to make insurance unaffordable. Trumpcare would even
let states waive the Obamacare ban on charging higher premiums for women who
have been raped — which actually occurred before the Affordable Care Act.
America has the only healthcare
system in the world designed to avoid sick people.
Private for-profit health insurers do whatever they can to insure groups of healthy people, because that’s where the profits are. They also make every effort to avoid sick people, because that’s where the costs are.
Private for-profit health insurers do whatever they can to insure groups of healthy people, because that’s where the profits are. They also make every effort to avoid sick people, because that’s where the costs are.
The Affordable Care Act puts healthy
and sick people into the same insurance pool.
But under the Republican bill that
passed the House, healthy people will no longer be subsidizing sick people.
Healthy people will be in their own insurance pool.
Sick people will be grouped with
other sick people in their own high-risk pool – which will result in such high
premiums, co-payments, and deductibles that many if not most won’t be able to
afford.
Republicans say their bill creates a
pool of money that will pay insurance companies to cover the higher costs of
insuring sick people.
Wrong. Insurers will take the money and still charge sick people much higher premiums. Or avoid sick people altogether.
Wrong. Insurers will take the money and still charge sick people much higher premiums. Or avoid sick people altogether.
The only better alternative to the
Affordable Care Act is a single-payer system, such as Medicare for all, which
would put all Americans into the same giant insurance pool.
Not only would this be fairer, but it would also be far more efficient, because money wouldn’t be spent marketing and advertising to attract healthy people and avoid sick people.
Not only would this be fairer, but it would also be far more efficient, because money wouldn’t be spent marketing and advertising to attract healthy people and avoid sick people.
Paul Ryan says the House vote was
about fulfilling a promise the GOP made to American voters.
But those voters have been lied to from the start about the Affordable Care Act. For years Republicans told them that the Act couldn’t work, would bankrupt America, and result in millions losing the healthcare they had before. All of these lies have been proven wrong.
But those voters have been lied to from the start about the Affordable Care Act. For years Republicans told them that the Act couldn’t work, would bankrupt America, and result in millions losing the healthcare they had before. All of these lies have been proven wrong.
Now Republicans say the Act is
unsustainable because premiums are rising and insurers are pulling out. Wrong
again.
Whatever is wrong with the
Affordable Care Act could be easily fixed, but Republicans have refused to do
the fixing. Insurers have been pulling out because of the uncertainty
Republicans have created.
The reason Republicans are so intent
on repealing the Affordable Care Act is they want to give a giant tax cut to
the rich who’d no longer have to pay the tab.
Here we come to the heart of the
matter.
If patriotism means anything, it
means sacrificing for the common good, participating in the public good.
Childless Americans pay taxes for
schools so children are educated.
Americans who live close to their
work pay taxes for roads and bridges so those who live farther away can get to
work.
Americans with secure jobs pay into
unemployment insurance so those who lose their jobs have some income until they
find another.
And under the Affordable Care Act,
healthier and wealthier Americans pay a bit more so sicker and poorer Americans
don’t die.
Trump and House Republicans aren’t
patriots.
They don’t believe in sacrificing
for the common good. They don’t think we’re citizens with obligations to one
another. To them, we’re just individual consumers who deserve the best deal we
can get for ourselves. It’s all about the art of the deal.
So what do we do now? We fight.
To become law, Trumpcare has to go
through 4 additional steps: First, a version must be enacted in the Senate. It
must then go a “conference“ to hammer out differences between the House and
Senate. The conference agreement must then pass in the House again, and again
in the Senate.
I hope you’ll be there every step of
the way, until Trumpcare collapses under the weight of its own cruelty. House
Republicans who voted for this travesty will rue the day they did. Any Senate
Republican who joins them will regret it as well.
ROBERT
B. REICH is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of
California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at the Blum Center for Developing
Economies. He served as Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration, for
which Time Magazine named him one of the ten most effective cabinet secretaries
of the twentieth century. He has written fourteen books, including the best
sellers "Aftershock", "The Work of Nations," and "Beyond
Outrage," and, his most recent, "Saving Capitalism." He is also
a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine, chairman of Common Cause,
a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and co-creator of the
award-winning documentary, INEQUALITY FOR ALL.