Last week, Politico had an item noting that Democrats are “accusing” Donald Trump of sabotaging the Affordable Care Act. There wasn’t anything especially wrong with the article, except for the fact that it presented the sabotage question as a matter of partisan debate: Dems are making an accusation, while Republicans deny it.
The trouble is, the truth is unambiguous. The Trump administration’s sabotage campaign is both real and lacking in subtlety.
Vox had a good piece yesterday summarizing the most obvious ways the White House is deliberately undermining the nation’s health care system, and the list wasn’t exactly short. From shrinking the open-enrollment period to threatening to cut off cost-sharing-reduction payments to insurers, curtailing ad campaigns to slashing in-person sign-up programs, Trump World seems determined not to help Americans get the health care coverage they’re entitled to under the law.
The real-world effects of this are already quite real, with consumers having to pay more — what congressional Democrats refer to as a “Trump Tax” — as a direct consequence of Trump’s actions.
This morning, the White House’s campaign went quite a bit further. The Washington Post reported:
President Trump signed an executive order Thursday morning intended to allow small businesses and potentially individuals to buy a long-disputed type of health insurance that skirts state regulations and Affordable Care Act protections.
The White House and allies portray the president’s move to expand access to “association health plans” as wielding administrative powers to accomplish what congressional Republicans have failed to achieve: tearing down the law’s insurance marketplaces and letting some Americans buy skimpier coverage at lower prices.
OK, let’s unpack this a bit, because the consequences are likely to affect a lot of people, and not in a good way.
Under the current law, the Affordable Care Act establishes a series of standards private insurers have to meet in order to qualify for exchange marketplaces. For the right, this is a problem: by making coverage better, the law also makes coverage more expensive.
And so Trump has signed an executive order to effectively do the opposite: expand access to worse coverage — what’s often referred to as “skimpy” plans — at a lower cost. As the New York Times‘ report explained, the administration is moving forward with plans to “develop rules that would expand access to less expensive, less comprehensive insurance, including policies that could be sold by trade associations to their members and short-term medical coverage that could be offered by commercial insurers to individuals and families.”
This insurance will be exempt from the ACA’s safeguards, and not surprisingly, the plans will offer those who buy the coverage far less. Indeed, these plans won’t even have guaranteed essential health benefits or protections for those with pre-existing conditions — which happen to be the most popular parts of “Obamacare.”









