As candidate Donald Trump hammered the Affordable Care Act last year as âa fraud,â âa total disasterâ and âvery bad health insurance,â more Americans than not seemed to agree with him.
Now that President Trump and fellow Republicans show signs of keeping their promise to dump the law, many appear to be having second thoughts.
Multiple polls show for the ACA, including two recent ones indicating more about it than ever. True, many still dislike whatâs known as Obamacare. One survey showed 42 percent see it unfavorably while 48 percent viewed it favorably.
But as the national conversation swells on the fate of a law that affects millions of people in multifaceted ways â and the issue takes center stage at â itâs increasingly clear that many Americans donât see the ACA as an either-or proposition.
âAt first it was a good deal â that was three or four years ago,â said Mark Bunkosky, 56, an independent contractor in Michigan who buys coverage through one of the lawâs online portals. âEvery year itâs gone up. From where it started, the premium has doubled, and now my deductible has also doubled. And my income has not doubled.â
Bunkosky, a Republican, views the ACA unfavorably but believes Washington should fix it, not toss it. He supports keeping some of the lawâs Medicaid coverage for low-income people and its prohibition on discriminating against those with preexisting illness.
This week Trump acknowledged that health care is âso complicated.â So are voter opinions on what to do next with the ACA, which expanded coverage to some 20 million.
âI didnât like that it mandated people to carry health insurance. And I thought it was just a lieâ when it promised affordability, said Amber Alexander, 27, a Pennsylvania independent whose seasonal income puts her on Medicaid in winter and a commercial plan the rest of the year.
However, she said, âI donât think it should be thrown out altogether. There are people that do benefit from it, but there are also a lot of people that get screwed.â
Carol Friendly, 67, is an Oregon Republican who voted for Hillary Clinton for president and favors the health lawâs Medicaid expansion, which many Republican policymakers excoriated but has gained support among . She objects to the ACAâs reproductive health coverage, saying consumers opposed to birth control and abortion shouldnât have to pay for them.
On the other hand, âI know it put 22 million in the health care system that werenât there before,â she said. âSo thatâs a plus.â
Adding to the political fog are mixed signals from Republicans.
For weeks, Trump has been promising â but not yet producing â a blueprint detailing his plan to repeal and replace the ACA with âinsurance for everybody.â In his Feb. 28 address to Congress, he said a new law âshould ensure that Americans with preexisting conditions have access to coverage.â
But a leaked GOP in Congress would shrink coverage subsidies, and House even those were still too expensive. Just this week, congressional Republicans they were still working on âthe best way to build a consensus to pass a bill to gut Obamacare.â
For many helped by the health law, such a prospect has focused minds and aroused fears and may account for its rising popularity, said Simon Haeder, a political science professor and specialist on health policy at West Virginia University.
âNow that we have this whole debate on replacing, repealing, repairing â whatever you want to call it â more and more of this information is coming out on what the ACA does and how itâs benefited people,â he said. âNow thatâs entering the public conversation.â
I think once Trumpcare comes out, weâre screwed.
ACA beneficiaries and activists flooded town halls held by Republican congressmen during their February recess, urging them not to repeal the law.
âMy story thus far has been one who has benefited from the system,â said Michael Bilodeau, 39, who attended two town halls by California Republican Rep. Tom McClintock. âWe are able to see our local doctor, who we like. And our premiums have been, I would say, stable.â
He co-owns a small business with his wife and is on a plan from Covered California, the stateâs online marketplace.
âOne of the Republicansâ major arguments is that the ACA brought disruption to peopleâs health care,â Bilodeau said. âIt feels like weâre headed toward another disruption.â
Many middle- and lower-income Republicans and marketplace subsidies. Forty-three percent of Republicans and 57 percent of independents say Medicaid is important to their family, from the Kaiser Family Foundation. Many who thought may be realizing Medicaid coverage is also in jeopardy.
Thatâs a political hazard for Republicans who would abolish it, said Mark Peterson, a political science professor at UCLA.
âA lot of that base would be most adversely affected by repealing the ACA and replacing it with something that left enormous holes for the working class,â he said. Medicaid beneficiaries âbegin to recognize how theyâre put at risk, and they begin talking to friends and colleagues and it becomes quite real.â
Some Republican voters object to the ACA not because it expanded coverage but because it did so in such a complex way, with sliding subsidies and reliance on private insurers selling expensive plans with narrow doctor networks.
âIt would have been better if the federal government had said, look, to get these 20 million insured letâs just expand Medicaid nationwide and letâs leave everybody else alone,â said Rickey Mathis, 56, a Georgian who voted for Trump and hasnât had insurance since the factory employing him closed in 2012. âWhy did they have to screw up the whole countryâs health insurance?â
Franchesca Serrano, 31, looked at marketplace plans in Florida, where she lives, but they âreally wouldnât cover anythingâ because of large deductibles â the care costs that patients pay before insurance kicks in. âAny of the referrals I needed, blood work I needed done, it would have needed to come out-of-pocket â a lot.â
Sheâs a single mother who voted for Clinton. Her 2-year-old twins are on Medicaid, which she said is âway better than just the Obamacareâ sold through the marketplaces.
Sheâs not expecting any improvements.
âI think once Trumpcare comes out, weâre screwed,â she said.
Michiganâs Bunkosky, a contractor for heating and air conditioning, urged Republicans to think hard about any Obamacare replacement.
âEverybodyâs in a hurry for it, but they need to sit down and do it right,â he said. âSome of it is still a good idea. You shouldnât have to worry about preexisting conditions.â
