Editorial: Trump’s Promised Health Care Plan: “Very Very Soon” Has Expired

Since before he was elected, Donald Trump has promising a “phenomenal new health plan” that will replace “Obamacare” (the Affordable Care Act, or ACA), and that it will be coming out “very, very soon.” Does anyone still believe that Trump and GOP lawmakers will ever create a health care bill at all, let alone one that would be “better” than the ACA? Does anyone still believe that Trump wants to improve health care for Americans as much as he wants the pleasure of gutting one of Obama’s major domestic accomplishments?

The Affordable Care Act, though far from perfect, has been an important first step toward making health care accessible for more Americans. Not only did it create health insurance “marketplaces” for people who didn’t have health insurance through an employer, it mandates that every  insurance plan cover a set of 10 “essential health benefits,” including well exams, pregnancy and childbirth care, and mental health services. It also prohibits insurance companies from denying coverage or raising premiums on the basis of a preexisting condition. Provisions of the Affordable Care Act, including its 10 essential benefits and the preexisting condition mandate, affect all Americans, whether they have insurance through an employer, a private broker, or a state-run health insurance marketplace.

Trump ran on his promise to abolish the Affordable Care Act, and whether or not health care mattered much to his base back in 2016, Trump’s promise to obliterate an Obama accomplishment sounded good to them. For those of his base to whom health insurance mattered, “repeal and replace Obamacare” must have implied to them that they would end up with better coverage and more affordable health care under Donald Trump. Others of Trump’s base saw the ACA as the gateway to socialized medicine, which terrified them.

In 2018, as evidenced by the flipping of the House from Republican to Democrat, it was clear that health care was on the minds of voters, who weren’t impressed with the GOP’s inability to present a replacement for the ACA. Now we’re in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic. Americans have lost jobs, and with jobs, their health care. Access to health care matters to Americans a lot right now.

In August of 2019, White House counselor Kellyanne Conway said that Trump was about to introduce an elaborate redesign of America’s health care system. “We’re working every single day here,” Conway said. “I’ve already been in meetings this morning on the president’s health-care plan. It’s pretty impressive.”

A year later, the world is still waiting for the impressive unveiling.

Just over two weeks ago, Trump told Chris Wallace of Fox News, “We’re signing a health care plan within two weeks, a full and complete health care plan.”

On Friday, July 31, just before the two weeks was up, Trump said, “We’re going to be doing a health care plan. We’re going to be doing a very inclusive health-care plan. I’ll be signing it sometime very soon.”

All Trump or his cronies can offer when asked about their mysterious and so-far elusive health care plan is that people with pre-existing conditions would still be covered, and that people would not lose their coverage if they become sick. They won’t say how much their premiums might increase, however.

As “sometime very soon” gets closer to Election Day, here are some things Americans should remember about how much Donald Trump and his GOP care about Americans’ health care.

In 2017, the GOP Congress spent most of the year trying to repeal portions of the Affordable Care Act, though they ultimately failed, except with the individual mandate. As part of the 2017 tax reform bill, they eliminated the ACA’s penalty for failing to carry health insurance, and this, in turn, neutralized the ACA’s insurance mandate. Some lawmakers contend that this invalidates the entire Affordable Care Act.

Toward the end of 2017, Trump continued his crusade against “Obamacare” by ending the ACA-required payments to insurance companies that made it possible for them to offer discounts to low-income consumers on out-of-pocket costs. This caused many insurance companies to eliminate or reduce their offerings on the health insurance marketplaces, as well as to raise their premiums and deductibles. ACA health insurance plans with reasonable deductibles became more expensive. Yet, Trump and his cronies continue to claim that the health care of Americans is of the utmost importance to them.

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) also cut federal funding for outreach and advertising to encourage people to purchase ACA health care plans during the annual enrollment period. Though it was a clear effort of the Trump administration to reduced enrollments in ACA plans, recent enrollment figures show an increase— not a decrease— in enrollments since last year.

During 2018, GOP lawmakers made it easier for states to redefine the 10 “essential health benefits” they were required to offer. They also made it easier for Americans to purchase short-term health plans that are cheaper than marketplace and private plans, while offering minimal coverage and higher deductibles. These plans, meant to be just short-term bridge policies for when someone is, say, between jobs, also don’t offer all of the ACA required benefits or meet consumer protections. Should a policyholder get sick or injured, their out-of-pocket costs could cause financial hardship.

Currently, the Trump administration, hell-bent on destroying a health care plan created by Trump’s nemesis, has a lawsuit before the Supreme Court to declare the entire Affordable Care Act unconstitutional. This would leave tens of millions of Americans without health care coverage. And yet, no replacement plan is forthcoming, even though we’re in the midst of a pandemic.

Nevertheless, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany maintains, “President Trump continues to act in delivering better and cheaper health care, protecting Americans with preexisting conditions, lowering prescription drug costs, and defending the right of Americans to keep their doctors and plans of their choice.”

If only a health care plan could cover the damage that occurs from the continued and repeated ingestion of gaslight fumes.

Trump Has No Healthcare Plan | Meidas Touch [2020-08-02]

Trump promises ‘great, great surprise’ health care package | ABC News [2017-06-28]

Editorial: Divisiveness Is All Donald Trump Has Left

Donald Trump affirmed this Fourth of July weekend that he has nothing in his campaign bag of tricks other than what worked for him in 2016: the stoking of the country’s racial and cultural divide. America is struggling with a pandemic, a crisis of racism, and a national security threat involving the lives of American soldiers in Afghanistan. Trump, however, chose to focus his speeches instead on his base’s obsession with saving Confederate statues.

When he spoke, Trump covered all of the dog whistle bases for his diehard supporters. He knows that for those who showed up at the fireworks display at Mount Rushmore, or at the Fourth of July celebration in Washington, D.C., COVID-19 is overblown, racism doesn’t exist in the U.S., and the recently reported issue of Russian bounties on U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan is a hoax. The threat that keeps Trump’s base up at night is the threat to their Confederate monuments.

“Our past is not a burden to be cast away,” Trump said at the White House’s “Salute to America” event on the White House South Lawn. “We will never allow an angry mob to tear down our statues, erase our history, indoctrinate our children or trample on our freedoms. We will safeguard our values, traditions, customs, and beliefs.”

Imagine for a moment if any other president in recent memory had been speaking instead. Imagine a president who cared about his country more than he cared about titillating his base of supporters; who was empathetic to the country’s craving for leadership, reassurance, and hope in its current state of fear, grief, injustice, and division.

The president’s speech might have gone more like this:

“Not one of our people is a burden to be cast away… We will never again allow a more powerful group of people to tear down another group of people, erase their legitimacy, let unjustices against them stand, or trample on their freedoms. We will safeguard their well-being, traditions, customs, and right to exist in peace in the United States of America.”

Or this:

“Our people— not one of them— is a statistic to be cast away and disregarded. We will never allow a deadly virus to tear apart our nation, and we will never allow politics to erase the legitimacy of science, indoctrinate our constituents against it, or trample on the right of others to be safe and remain healthy. We will safeguard our people, their health, and their lives.”

Or possibly this:

“Our soldiers are not burdens to be cast away. We will never allow a bad actor to place a bounty on their heads, and we will never ignore intelligence of a threat, demonstrate a lack of concern for our troops, or place personal interests above the safety of Americans abroad. We will safeguard our service people, our national security, and our global leadership.”

But Donald Trump did not speak out against the racism in the U.S. that is behind the ongoing demonstrations across the country. He did not say anything in support of those for whom injustice is a part of their daily lives. Instead, he defended the very artifacts that stand for that oppression, making it clear what the “values, traditions, customs, and beliefs” are for the MAGAs.

And Donald Trump did not seek to reassure Americans that his administration was doing all it could to help protect them from COVID-19. He did not spell out or model the behaviors Americans need to adopt to help slow the spread and save lives. Instead, in the midst of nearly 3 million cases and 132,000 deaths in the U.S., he not only downplayed the seriousness of the virus, he continued his narrative of lies, endangering those who believed him, and said this:

“Now we have tested almost 40 million people. By so doing, we show cases — 99% of which are totally harmless — results that no other country can show because no other country has testing that we have. Not in terms of the numbers, or in terms of the quality.”

Our commander-in-chief did not indicate outrage at the discovery that a Russian intelligence unit had offered the Taliban bounties on U.S. troops in Afghanistan. He didn’t condemn Vladimir Putin. He didn’t seek to reassure Americans—particularly the soldiers’ families—that he’d get to the bottom of the issue. He didn’t even mention it.

Yet the unmasked, tightly packed-together crowds went wild, covering each other with their droplets as they cheered. And when, in a week or two, there’s a surge in the number of COVID-19 cases, as there almost certainly will be, they will blame the Black Lives Matter demonstrators for the spread.

Unlike many other Americans, the attendees who disregarded a potentially deadly virus to support their president this past weekend were not there to hear uniting words of comfort; they were not seeking reassurance that the nation would heal, or that the troops would be safe. They were there for the validation of their hate-saturated, fear-riddled, anger-filled view of the world that they knew they could count on from Donald Trump. They were there for the emboldenment fix. Donald Trump knew it, and he gave it to them in return for their adulation. Should they begin to seek substance, integrity, or leadership in their presidential candidate, Donald Trump will be out of luck, because his bag of divisiveness-stoking tricks is all he has.

Trump’s Mt. Rushmore 4th of July speech: Protesters want to ‘wipe out our history’ | DW News [2020-07-04]

Trump Warns Of ‘Left-Wing Cultural Revolution’ During Mount Rushmore Speech | TODAY [2020-07-04]