As the ongoing government shutdown drags on, in large part over the fight to keep health care insurance affordable for Americans, Republicans have become increasingly unsubtle in their overt opposition to the Affordable Care Act.
House Majority Leader Steve Scalise declared late last week that for 90% of his GOP conference, the ACA is a “sinkhole” and a “failed product.” Soon after, House Speaker Mike Johnson condemned the popular and effective system as a “boondoggle.” Around the same time, Rep. Byron Donalds, a leading Republican candidate for Florida governor, insisted that officials “have to repeal and replace” Obamacare, echoing the phrasing his party seemed to abandon years ago.
Of course, one of the obvious questions is what, exactly, the GOP would offer American families after they’re done repealing and replacing the Affordable Care Act.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune told CNBC last week that the White House is looking for an overhauled system that costs less and does more for consumers. And while that certainly sounded nice — who would oppose a cheaper system that delivers higher quality care? — the South Dakota Republican said literally nothing about how his party would deliver such reform.
This week, the House speaker boasted to CNBC, “We’ve got pages and pages and pages of ideas of how to reform health care.” What are the ideas included on those pages? The Louisiana Republican didn’t say.
A day later, JD Vance appeared on Newsmax and was asked whether his party has a health care plan. “We do have a plan, actually,” the vice president replied.
VAN SUSTEREN: Does the administration have a healthcare plan?JD VANCE: We do have a plan, actually … to pretend we can fix such a complicated system, that logic is probably what led to the original Obamacare disaster.
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2025-10-17T12:30:29.630Z
They don’t have a plan, actually.
Indeed, the more the Ohio Republican tried to answer the question, the more obvious it became that he wasn’t willing to share even the vaguest details about his party’s preferred blueprint.
The party has been stuck on this path for a painfully long time. In fact, it was on June 17, 2009, more than 16 years ago, when then-Rep. Roy Blunt made a bold promise. The Missouri Republican, a member of the House Republican leadership at the time, had taken the lead in crafting a GOP alternative to the Affordable Care Act, and he proudly and publicly declared, “I guarantee you we will provide you with a bill.”
The same week, then-House Minority Whip Eric Cantor told reporters that the official Republican version of “Obamacare” was just “weeks away.”








