President Trump wants to ditch Obamacare but keep the gains

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US President Donald Trump and former president Barack Obama stand on the steps of the US Capitol with First Lady Melania Trump and Michelle Obama on Jan 20, in Washington, DC. In the inauguration ceremony Donald J. Trump becomes the 45th president of the United States. (AFP)

WASHINGTON, Jan 21, (AFP): Health coverage for all: the promise of President-elect Donald Trump was also the vow of his predecessor Barack Obama, whose signature domestic achievement is now under serious threat of repeal. Such is the paradox surrounding the fi rst legislative push expected by the new Trump administration.

Since the 2010 passage of the Affordable Care Act, its defunding and eventual repeal have been a top priority for Republicans, who control both chambers of Congress and, beginning with Trump’s inauguration Friday, the White House.

In their view, Obamacare has marked a costly drift toward socialized, European-style medical care. But the law has managed to add more than 20 million people onto the insurance rolls, lowering the percentage of Americans without coverage from 16 percent in 2010 to 8.9 percent last year. Republicans, in their push to repeal and replace Obamacare, are insisting they will leave no one out in the cold. Trump, a billionaire real estate tycoon, has declared it inconceivable that poor Americans are locked out of health coverage due to financial constraints. It has been a constant of his controversial campaign. “We’ll do things — because there are people that can’t afford it. And nobody is going to be dying on the streets with a President Trump,” he told Fox News on Tuesday. “We’re going to have insurance for everybody,” Trump added in comments to the Washington Post at the weekend.

But in a health care system that relies almost entirely on the private sector, such a commitment would be tough to fulfill. Only one third of the US population is covered by public insurance — either Medicare, for those over age 65, or Medicaid for the poorest Americans. Half of all Americans are insured through their employers, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation, while about seven percent are covered through the so-called individual market, which serves those who are selfemployed or are employees without coverage through work. Obama’s solution rested largely on the obligation that everyone be insured, and to provide federal subsidies to those who cannot afford coverage. Republicans deemed the fi rst requirement too coercive, and the latter too costly. Instead of universal coverage, which Republicans argue is not an inherent right for citizens, they have begun calling for universal “access.” “I look forward to making sure every single American has access to the highest quality care and coverage possible,” congressman Tom Price, Trump’s pick for health secretary, told senators Wednesday at his confi rmation hearing. The Republican plan, as described by US House Speaker Paul Ryan, would abolish the individual mandate to purchase health insurance, offer new refundable tax credits for those purchasing insurance on the individual market, and create “high-risk pools” in each state for the millions of Americans with pre-existing conditions. Ryan argues that removing the sickest people from the commercial market and placing them in high-risk, tax-subsidized plans would reduce premiums overall and help stabilize the commercial market.

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