The rocky rollout of Obamacare may be a crisis for the president, but to Republican eyes, it’s an opportunity: one more chance to derail the commander-in-chief’s signature piece of legislation.
Shortly after President Obama announced his plan to fix a series of embarrassing issues in the Affordable Care Act, Republicans pointed to his remarks as proof that the president has been lying to the American people.
House Speaker Boehner released a statement after Obama’s news conference insisting Obama had “finally acknowledged he repeatedly misled the American people to sell his health care law.” The Ohio Republican said Obama’s fix is a “political response designed to shift blame rather than solve the problem. This problem cannot be papered over by another ream of Washington regulations. Americans losing their coverage because of the president’s health care law need clear, unambiguious legislation that guarantees the plan they have and like will still be allowed.”
Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa asked, “What will it take for the president to admit the law isn’t working and at least call for a full delay?”
Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas released a statement saying “We cannot ‘fix’ Obamacare. The damage has been done, as millions of Americans have already been made to pay higher premiums, and lose their jobs, wages and health care plans.”
Before the president spoke, Cruz, who was attending the Aspen Institute’s Washington Ideas Forum, said he’d continue to fight the law. “I think stopping Obamacare is the essence of pragmatism,” he said. He argued that Americans are starting to understand why he spearheaded a strategy to defund Obamacare.
“A few weeks ago there were lots of people–particularly in Washington–that were saying, ‘Why are you guys fighting so hard on this?’ And with just the passage of a few weeks, people aren’t asking that anymore,” said Cruz. He said those who teamed up with him are feeling “vindication” in light of the problems ACA is facing.
GOP strategist Karl Rove and former top adviser to President George W. Bush argued in an op-ed piece in the Wall Street Journal that Obamacare forces millions of Americans into “bells-and-whistles” coverage they don’t need. He called Obama’s previous apologies “nonsense.”
“The Affordable Care Act was designed to make unavailable health-insurance policies that didn’t include its extensive, expensive, and often unnecessary provisions,” Rove argued.









