Late on Friday night, a far-right judge with a reputation for giving Republicans what they want handed the GOP a rather extraordinary gift: U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor struck down the entirety of the Affordable Care Act as unconstitutional.
In the short term, nothing has changed in terms of the application of the law — “Obamacare” remains in place while the appeals process moves forward — but the ruling, derided as ridiculous by experts from the left, right, and center, has put the health security of tens of millions of Americans in jeopardy.
Donald Trump couldn’t be more pleased.
President Donald Trump on Saturday hailed a court decision against Obamacare as “a great ruling for our country,” while a U.S. government official said the decision by a Texas judge would have no immediate impact on health coverage. […]
“It’s a great ruling for our country. We will be able to get great health care. We will sit down with the Democrats if the Supreme Court upholds,” Trump told reporters during a visit to Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia on a rainy Saturday.
On Twitter, the president added that the district court’s decision is “great news for America!”
While many of Trump’s pronouncements are odd, this was an especially difficult position to defend. The Republican just spent months on the campaign trail, boasting at one rally after another that he and his party will protect Americans with pre-existing conditions.
And yet, there was Trump, celebrating a ruling that stripped people of these same protections.
Indeed, the right-wing decision has introduced a degree of uncertainty — and by some measures, chaos — into a system countless families rely on. For those Americans terrified of losing their benefits as part of an ugly GOP scheme, it’s not at all clear what, exactly, the president considers “great.”
What’s more, Trump’s misplaced joy notwithstanding, most Republican policymakers don’t seem nearly as excited as the president.
As Politico noted over the weekend, “Congress was ready to move on from Obamacare.”









