The Republican effort to overhaul the nation’s health care system was already messy, but Donald Trump this morning made matters quite a bit worse.
As Senate negotiations continue over the stalled Republican health care bill, President Donald Trump Friday morning called on senators to pass a simple repeal of Obamacare now and focus on replacing it later this year if no deal is reached.
Trump’s tweet came just after Sen. Ben Sasse, R-Neb., sent a letter to the White House urging the president to support a repeal-first, replace-later strategy if there is no agreement by the time senators return from their week-long Fourth of July recess on July 10.
There’s no reason to assume the president saw Sasse’s letter. The Nebraska Republican realizes, however, that to deliver an idea to Trump, it’s important to go on television, so Sasse went on Fox News this morning to tout his preferred approach. The president endorsed Sasse’s idea on Twitter 18 minutes later.
And why does this make a big mess even messier? Because Trump just threw his support behind a plan he said he opposes.
Let’s back for a minute to remember how we got here. Shortly after the 2016 elections, Republicans came up with a health care strategy that GOP leaders had confidence in. It was called “repeal and delay,” and it involved repealing the Affordable Care Act quickly, while creating an arbitrary deadline at which point Congress would have to replace the ACA with something new.
This was the official Republican approach, right up until Donald Trump condemned it, repeatedly, insisting that policymakers should repeal and replace “Obamacare” at the same time. Left with no choice, GOP leaders shelved their plan and began working on their own legislative blueprint.









