Throughout the Trump era, the Republican administration took a variety of steps to undermine the Affordable Care Act. It was not time well spent: the first year of Donald Trump’s term was dominated by a failed effort to repeal “Obamacare”; Democrats regained the House majority after heavily emphasizing the issue in the 2018 midterms; and all GOP officials have to show for their efforts is a higher national uninsured rate.
Four years ago at this time, the conventional wisdom was that the ACA’s days were numbered, and the law stood little chance of surviving a full-scale Republican attack. And yet, here we are: the Affordable Care Act is in far better shape as 2021 gets underway than those who desperately tried to tear it down.
What’s more, as the Washington Post reports, President Joe Biden is poised to put the ACA on even stronger footing, with new executive actions.
Under one order, HealthCare.gov, the online insurance marketplace for Americans who cannot get affordable coverage through their jobs, will swiftly reopen for at least a few months, according to several individuals inside and outside the administration familiar with the plans. Ordinarily, signing up for such coverage is tightly restricted outside a six-week period late each year.
Note, last spring, as the coronavirus crisis first started to intensify, the Trump administration considered creating a special open-enrollment period, but the White House balked, to the surprise of nearly everyone involved in the process. As Politico reported, the decision appeared to be largely political: Team Trump didn’t want to turn to “Obamacare” to help people in a crisis.
The Post‘s new report added:









