Shortly after the 2010 midterms, in which Republican took the House majority, the GOP-led chamber held a vote on a measure to repeal the Affordable Care Act. Not surprisingly, it passed, leading Rep. Joe Wilson (R-S.C.) to declare with pride on Twitter, “WE JUST REPEALED OBAMACARE!”
Wilson, of course, was badly confused. The bill died in the Democratic-led Senate, faced obvious White House opposition, and was soon forgotten. Some on the far-right may have preferred to think that the reform law had been destroyed, but reality told another story.
Nearly eight years later, Donald Trump spent last week bragging that he and his GOP brethren had “essentially” repealed the Affordable Care Act. Like Joe Wilson’s 2010 claim, the president’s boast didn’t really make any sense, but Trump nevertheless seemed convinced that he’d achieved something important: at least in his mind, Obamacare was no more.
Vox’s Sarah Kliff noted yesterday that the president isn’t the only one who’s struggling with the details.
One-third of American adults believe that President Trump has successfully repealed Obamacare, a new poll from the Economist and YouGov finds.
The poll of 1,000 adults shows that 31 percent believe Trump has repealed the Affordable Care Act, 49 percent say he hasn’t, and 21 percent are unsure.
Of those who identify as Republican voters, 44 percent say that Trump has repealed Obamacare.
At a certain level, this is kind of embarrassing. The public should have a clearer understanding of the difference between trying to repeal a law and successfully repealing a law. I suspect misleading presidential rhetoric has contributed to broad misunderstandings, but that doesn’t fully explain such widespread confusion.









