World's Largest Resource for Cardiovascular Perfusion

Perfusion NewswireMain ZoneThe Future of Obamacare

The Future of Obamacare

Since 2010, the fate of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) has been uncertain. The ACA was a historic achievement for the Obama administration and Congressional Democrats. But it passed Congress without a sin­gle Republican vote, and the GOP subsequently mounted legal and legislative challenges to Obama­care, vowing to repeal and re­place it. The Supreme Court decision in June 2012 upholding the ACA’s constitutionality dealt a serious blow to the law’s opponents. Now, in the aftermath of the 2012 elections, with President Barack Obama reelected and Democrats maintaining majority control of the Senate, Republicans lack a viable option for overturning the law through legislative or execu­tive action. There will be no Re­publican in the White House be­fore 2017 at the earliest, and by then the ACA’s core provisions will have been in effect for 3 years. It’s difficult to take benefits away once they’re in place — one reason that many Republicans saw the 2012 elec­tions as their last chance to de­rail Obamacare.


Leave a Reply