Former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney said Sunday on NBC’s Meet the Press that President Obama’s “dishonesty” about the Affordable Care Act is “rotting” away his second term in office.
“Whether you like the model of Obamacare or not, the fact that the president has sold it on a basis that was not true has undermined the foundation of his second term,” Romney told host David Gregory. “I think it’s rotting it away. We’ve got to have a president that can lead, and right now he’s not able to do so.”
Romney said the president was “trying to get away from… the truth” about millions of Americans receiving cancellation notices from their insurance companies –a different outcome than the one President Obama promised and a point conservatives have repeatedly used to expand their attack on the law’s rollout.
The former Massachusetts governor, who’s health care model later became the blueprint for Obamacare, said it should be up to the states to adopt health care reform, instead of mandating a “one-size-fits-all” nation-wide system. “I think the president failed to learn the lessons that came from the experience of Massachusetts,” he said.
“Perhaps the most important lesson the president, I think, failed to learn was, you have to tell the American people the truth,” said the former presidential candidate. “And when he told the American people that you could keep your health insurance if you wanted to keep that plan, period, he said that time and again, he wasn’t telling the truth. And I think that fundamental dishonesty has really put in peril the whole foundation of his second term.”
Criticizing the president for lying to the American people, Romney said the Affordable Care Act would not have passed if Obama had not initially pledged that people who were happy with their insurance plans could maintain the same plans under Obamacare.
Clare Kim









