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Repeal & Replace Watch

Timeline: Despite GOP鈥檚 Failure To Repeal Obamacare, The ACA Has Changed

On Oct. 12, President Donald Trump signed an executive order pushing federal officials to make it easier for people to purchase insurance that does not meet the regulatory standards of the Affordable Care Act. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

Congress in 2017 failed to 鈥渞epeal and replace鈥 the Affordable Care Act. But the health law has been changed in many other ways over the past year and a half. Some changes were made by Congress, some by President Donald Trump and his administration and some by state officials. Here is a timeline of the most consequential events that have shaped the health law:


Jan. 20, 2017:

(Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

On his first day in office, Trump issues an to 鈥渕inimize the unwarranted economic and regulatory burdens鈥 of the health law. It includes instructions to agencies to 鈥渆xercise all authority and discretion available to them to waive, defer, grant exemptions from, or delay the implementation of any provision or requirement of the Act that would impose a fiscal burden.鈥

The same day, officials at the Department of Health and Human Services information on how to sign up for coverage from the healthcare.gov website, even though enrollment for 2017 policies lasts until the end of the month.


Jan. 26, 2017:

HHS officials abruptly pull funding for for the last days of 2017 enrollment. That is usually when healthier people traditionally enroll. Some of the advertising and outreach but that鈥檚 largely because it is too late to cancel advertising purchased and scheduled by outgoing Obama administration officials.

One former Obama-era official later estimates nearly a enrolled as a result of the cuts to outreach and advertising.

Feb. 14, 2017:

Reversing an Obama administration plan, the it won鈥檛 start rejecting returns that don鈥檛 indicate whether a taxpayer had health insurance.


Feb. 15, 2017:

The Trump administration , backed聽by the insurance industry, cutting the 2018 open enrollment period in half and making it more difficult for people to buy insurance outside that six-week window. Insurers say the rules would reduce the number of people who 鈥済ame the system鈥 by waiting until they need care to sign up for coverage. These rules in April.


March 7, 2017:

U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan, a Republican from Wisconsin (center) holds up a copy of the American Health Care Act while House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy from California and Rep. Greg Walden, (R-Ore.) listen during a news conference on March 7, 2017. (Zach Gibson/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

House Republicans introduce a repeal-and-replace bill:


March 13, 2017:

HHS Secretary Tom Price to each state saying the department is eager to help leaders unleash state innovations for the insurance marketplaces to 鈥渁lleviate the burdens鈥 of the ACA. He says HHS is eager to see ideas from the states for bringing down premium prices through new insurance pools that would help cover the costs of high-risk enrollees.

The the GOP bill would result in an additional 24 million people being without insurance by 2026. It also predicts that premiums would go down for younger people and rise dramatically for older people under changes envisioned in the bill.


March 15, 2017:

Surprise! Despite Trump鈥檚 cutoff of enrollment advertising and outreach, the final tally of marketplace enrollment during the open season shows numbers fairly close to the previous year.


April 12, 2017:

Efforts in the House to advance the AHCA stall as it becomes clear Republicans don鈥檛 have the votes. Trump, trying to revive the repeal effort, the ACA鈥檚 cost-sharing reduction payments (CSRs) that help some low-income marketplace customers pay for out-of-pocket expenses in an effort to get Democrats to the negotiating table.


May 4, 2017:

President Donald Trump stands in the Rose Garden on May 4 after House Republicans mustered just enough votes to pass their health care bill. (Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The House narrowly passes the , its version of a 鈥渞epeal and replace鈥 measure for the health law, but the bill has no support in the Senate. Despite that, that not only was the House bill 鈥渁 great plan,鈥 but also, of the underlying health law, 鈥渋t鈥檚 dead. It鈥檚 essentially dead.鈥


June 6, 2017:

The uncertainty about the fate of the ACA is having an impact on the market. becoming just the latest in a long list that included Humana, Aetna, Wellmark in Iowa and Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas City.


June 7, 2017:

A screenshot from YouTube of an HHS video, part of a series that detailed the problems people are having with the Affordable Care Act.

HHS launches a series of videos on its detailing the problems people are having with the Affordable Care Act.


June 22, 2017:

In an effort to pass the bill before the July Fourth recess, Senate leaders release their bill to overhaul the ACA: the Better Care Reconciliation Act (BCRA). It would cap Medicaid spending, repeal the taxes that pay for ACA benefits and let states waive consumer protections in the health law.


June 26, 2017:

The the new Senate bill would result in 22 million more uninsured by 2026 and increase premiums initially, but lower them in the long run.


June 27, 2017:

The Senate before leaving for the Fourth of July holiday.


July 13, 2017:

A of the BCRA is released, including an amendment from Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) that would let insurers offer plans that don鈥檛 meet some ACA provisions and would provide more money for opioid treatment and allow the use of money in health savings accounts to be used to pay premiums.


July 16, 2017:

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) on the health care bill until Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) returns from surgery for brain cancer.


July 20, 2017:

The CBO of the revised BCRA, saying it would result in 22 million more uninsured people by 2026 and would lower premiums, but that would be because the plans would likely cover fewer services, so people who use health care would pay more on average. And older people could be hit particularly hard.


July 25, 2017:

The Senate approves a procedural motion to take up BRCA 2.0, by a vote of 51-50, with the just-returned John McCain


July 28, 2017:

Sen John McCain (R-Ariz.) leaves the Senate Chamber after a vote on a stripped-down, or 鈥渟kinny repeal,鈥 version of Obamacare reform on July 28. McCain was one of three Republican senators to vote against the measure. (Zach Gibson/Getty Images)

As the week wears on, it becomes clear none of the leading proposals can garner enough votes. A last-ditch effort called a 鈥渟kinny repeal鈥 is the last bill standing. It is little more than a shell to keep negotiations going with the House. Still, it would repeal the individual and employer mandates for coverage and give broad authority to states to waive key sections of the ACA. The CBO says it would have resulted in 16 million more people without insurance in 2026 and premium increases of 20 percent. But in a moment of high drama around 2 a.m., McCain, who dramatically voted to let the debate proceed earlier in the week, to end the effort.


July 29, 2017:

Trump to stop funding the cost-sharing reduction (CSR) payments. These reimburse insurers for discounts that they are required by the ACA to offer to some low-income exchange enrollees to help them afford deductibles and other out-of-pocket costs. The payments were the subject of a against the Obama administration, with the House charging that Congress had not provided a specific appropriation and therefore the administration was making the payments illegally.


Aug. 2, 2017:

Sens. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) and Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) (Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

With the partisan fight seemingly over, Sens. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) and Patty Murray (D-Wash.) on a bill to stabilize the individual market.


Aug. 11, 2017:

An at insurance premiums for 2018 suggests much variation but somewhat lower increases than seen for 2017. It also suggests less competition as large insurers exit the market.


Aug. 14, 2017:

HHS officials make clear that they will on enrollment efforts for the sign-up period starting Nov. 1.


Aug. 31, 2017:

HHS officials 聽that the advertising budget will be cut 90 percent for the coming enrollment season and programs that provide help to people signing up will be cut by 41 percent. Officials tell reporters on a call that the programs are ineffective and people are already aware of the health law logistics, something public opinion polls suggest .


Sept. 22, 2017:

(Illustration created using iStock)

During a conference call with community groups, HHS officials announce the federal enrollment website healthcare.gov will be shut down for as long as 12 hours every Sunday except one during the six weeks of open enrollment. Officials say the time is needed for site maintenance, although such maintenance took far less time during the Obama administration.


Sept. 26, 2017:

The last chance for a partisan vote on the ACA repeal-and-replace effort ends with a whimper as Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Bill Cassidy (R-La.) announce they cannot get 50 votes for their bill that would effectively take most of the federal funds in the ACA and turn them over to states in the form of block grants. Sens. Collins, McCain and Rand Paul (R-Ky.) all come out against it.


Sept. 27, 2017:

Trump officials instruct HHS regional directors and staff not to participate in state events to promote enrollment. An HHS official tells that enrollment events 鈥渁re organized and implemented by outside groups with their own agendas, not HHS.鈥


Sept. 29, 2017:

Oklahoma for a waiver from federal rules that would have allowed the state to create a 鈥渞einsurance鈥 program that it estimated could have reduced premiums in the state by more than 30 percent. The proposal followed Price鈥檚 April letter inviting states to seek changes, and state officials said they had been led to believe a waiver was forthcoming. But it failed to materialize. State officials say the delay would keep the program from launching in time for the 2018 plan year.

Earlier, Trump administration officials said could institute a similar program, but that the state was also going to lose nearly $370 million in funding for a separate health law program serving those with low incomes. Other states that are ultimately frustrated by the waiver process include and .


Oct. 12, 2017:

During the day, Trump signs an pushing federal officials to make it easier for people to purchase insurance that does not meet the regulatory standards of the Affordable Care Act.

(DigitalVision Vectors/Getty Images)

Late that night, he follows through on his threat to cut off the cost-sharing reduction payments to insurers. 鈥淭he bailout of insurance companies through these unlawful payments is yet another example of how the previous administration abused taxpayer dollars and skirted the law to prop up a broken system,鈥 says a statement from press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders.

State regulators respond by adding the lost payments to premiums of 鈥渟ilver鈥 plans that determine premium subsidies. The result is that insurers get the money anyway, and most consumers eligible for premium help are held harmless or pay less.


Nov. 1, 2017:

for 2018 coverage. (Although, for the first time, enrollment will last only six weeks. In the previous year, the window was 12 weeks.)


Nov. 14, 2017:

The Senate for not having health insurance 鈥 the so-called individual mandate 鈥 as part of its tax cut bill.


Dec. 1, 2017:

Sen. Collins says on the bill from Sens. Alexander and Murray and the bill she introduced with Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) before the end of the year in exchange for her vote for the tax bill.


Jan. 4, 2018:

The Department of Labor proposes a rule to expand the availability of 鈥渁ssociation health plans鈥 that allow small businesses to band together to purchase health coverage that does not have to abide by some consumer protections.


Jan. 22, 2018:

Sen. Collins鈥 promised vote does not happen before the end of 2017, nor are the bills included in the spending bill to reopen the government in January. Aides say they will come later.


Feb. 20, 2018:

(Illustration created using Getty Images)

The Trump administration proposes to loosen restrictions on 鈥渟hort-term鈥 health plans that consumer advocates fear will fail to protect consumers from serious medical bills and could destabilize the individual insurance market by pulling healthy people out of insurers鈥 risk pools.


March 21, 2018:

The final spending bill of the year comes and goes 鈥


April 3, 2018:

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services reports that bought 2018 coverage on the ACA鈥檚 federal and state-based exchanges during the shortened open enrollment period 鈥 and 27 percent of them were considered new consumers.

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