Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Manuel Balce Ceneta

'You don’t throw 30 million people off healthcare without having a plan' - Battle lines drawn over Obamacare

Repealing the controversial health care plan is one of the main plans of the incoming Republican administration.

US PRESIDENT BARACK Obama yesterday called on congressional Democrats to “fight” to preserve his signature healthcare reform, with its future in doubt as Donald Trump’s incoming administration vowed a swift repeal of the controversial law.

Obamacare, the fruit of an eight-year drive to extend medical coverage to tens of millions of Americans, will come under sustained assault when Trump takes office on 20 January with Republican majorities in both chambers of Congress.

But the debate over US health care began in earnest yesterday at the highest levels, with Obama and Vice President-elect Mike Pence making duelling visits to Capitol Hill to urge their legislative foot soldiers to gird for battle.

Former Democratic presidential hopeful Senator Bernie Sanders tweeted strong criticism of Republican lawmakers yesterday, challenging that they had no plan to replace Obamacare if it was repealed.

Meanwhile, Obama met with Senators and House Democrats and urged them to fight against any repeal.

“I envy you for the opportunity you are going to have to engage in this fight to protect health care for the American people,” the outgoing president told Senate and House Democrats, according to Senator Ed Markey, who attended the 100-minute meeting.

After a crushing election loss, Democrats may have limited options for stalling a repeal of Obamacare without significant Republican defections.

They also face criticism that Obama’s reforms have led to rising insurance premiums and a string of technical problems.

But certain elements of Obamacare remain popular, notably the provisions barring companies from refusing coverage due to pre-existing conditions and allowing children to retain coverage on family plans through age 26.

Repeal and then what?

Republican opposition in general to Obamacare is clear – “They broke the health care system”, House Speaker Paul Ryan said of Obama’s administration – but his party’s prescription to fix it is not.

Ryan has proposed a tax credit system as a possible replacement, but the costs to government and individuals remain vague.

The White House is betting that American voters will revolt if Trump moves to strip millions of their coverage with no viable alternative – forcing the incoming president to confront the most radical reformers within his own party.

While Pence addressed the issue gingerly in Congress, he stressed that Trump would make the process of repealing the Affordable Care Act one of the administration’s top priorities.

Mike Pence AP Photo / J. Scott Applewhite AP Photo / J. Scott Applewhite / J. Scott Applewhite

“The first order of business is to repeal and replace Obamacare,” Pence told reporters in the US Capitol shortly after meeting with House Republicans.

But Trump himself cautioned against over-hasty action.

“Republicans must be careful in that the Dems own the failed ObamaCare disaster,” the president-elect said on Twitter, warning Republicans to allow it to “fall of its own weight”.

While urging a full repeal of the law, Ryan also said Republicans should avoid putting millions of families in further financial jeopardy by gutting Obamacare without a viable alternative in place.

“We’ve got to fix this by replacing it with something better. In that transition, we want to make sure we don’t pull the rug out from anybody,” he said.

One Republican lawmaker, Chris Collins, said the party was looking at a six-month timeline for crafting an Obamacare alternative. Other Republicans said that was far too ambitious.

Senator John McCain expressed confidence that fellow Republicans would be able to forge a replacement plan to go along with legislative repeal action.

“We’ll be doing both,” McCain said.

We’ll know what the replacement is.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who has already launched the legislative process for repeal, welcomed Pence to lunch with all Senate Republicans after his House huddle.

Pence, addressing reporters afterward, provided no details on the replacement plan being crafted by his party.

But “the architecture of the replacement of Obamacare will come together, as it should, through the legislative process in the weeks and months ahead,” he said.

With reporting from Cormac Fitzgerald

© AFP 2017

Read; ‘My daughter died because she didn’t have health insurance’

Read: White House to transfer prisoners out of Guantanamo despite Trump’s demands

Author
View 49 comments
Close
49 Comments
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute michal heba
    Favourite michal heba
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 7:04 AM

    It’s affecting USA and Germany this time, so now we need to change the rules… Before it only affected smal countries like Ireland that owed to Germany…

    396
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Paul Power
    Favourite Paul Power
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 7:18 AM

    @michal heba: your 100% right with that comment !

    143
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Peter Hughes
    Favourite Peter Hughes
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 7:39 AM

    @michal heba: The thing is Last time as you put it our government was warned about the massive housing bubble and how it would all end in tears and continued the corrupt greed fest regardless all voted for by us….and you expect other countries to then foot the bill for that?….if it was the other way round trust me you would be saying why should we pay for a self inflicted wound of shocking governance?…this time there was nothing anyone could have done to stop this from happening….big difference.

    123
    See 11 more replies ▾
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Shamey
    Favourite Shamey
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 8:23 AM

    @Peter Hughes: not really voted for by us….just the banks handing out money willy nilly to the masses (knowing that at the end of the day, they’d get their money back), who’d say no to money on a plate as it were. The only ones left high and dry were carpenters, sub contractors and taxpayers etc.

    50
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute NotMyIreland
    Favourite NotMyIreland
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 8:33 AM

    @michal heba: And the last one which started with sub prime mortgages in the USA, didn’t affect the USA?

    21
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute michal heba
    Favourite michal heba
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 8:38 AM

    @Peter Hughes: we have been told not to burn senior bond holders(Germany). they have invested in to Irish banks and risked their money. When everything collapsed they wanted money back and they got it.

    74
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Thomas Harrington
    Favourite Thomas Harrington
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 8:45 AM

    @michal heba: boom there you go! Spot in

    28
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Seanboy
    Favourite Seanboy
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 9:57 AM

    @Peter Hughes: the money Irish banks lent recklessly had been lent to them recklessly. Why were only the Irish people punished, why was the burden not shared by all involved in the recklessness.

    49
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Simon Dottcom
    Favourite Simon Dottcom
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 10:13 AM

    @Thomas Harrington: I presume you mean “spot on”

    3
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute john doe
    Favourite john doe
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 1:00 PM

    @Peter Hughes: the cause of the crisis while not irrelevant is not the discussion, the discussion is that Policies of austerity were not helpful and had we borrowed to fund large infrastructural projects, to stimulate our economy as the parties of the left were ridiculed for suggesting we would have come out of recession in 5 years instead of the ten it took.
    This was exactly the financial approach promoted by gerry addams and sinn fein at the time and they were told it was “shinnernomics”

    17
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Adam Hernes
    Favourite Adam Hernes
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 1:10 PM

    @michal heba: No. These is an overall consensus that the people payd for the banking debth. Bailing out banks and big corporations won’t fly this time. The political class knows that they will have fascists governments in half of European countries by the end of the year with new austerity. People will not take it again. Politicians think only amount their buts.

    10
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Vin
    Favourite Vin
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 1:19 PM

    @NotMyIreland: it was “sub prime” lending practices worldwide, the USA just popped first. I don’t know the breakdown of private mortgages vs developers here. But either way people borrowed what they couldn’t pay back with the infamous anglo being the worst. I believe their customers were mostly commercial

    4
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Mark V
    Favourite Mark V
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 6:07 PM

    @Peter Hughes: You seem to have forgotten that a lot of that debt was unsecured bonds. The EU forced Ireland to guarantee these so German, Dutch and other major EU nations didn’t have to prop up their banks, insurance companies and pension funds.

    8
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Niall O'Sullivan
    Favourite Niall O'Sullivan
    Report
    Apr 27th 2020, 8:10 AM

    @michal heba: We could have left some of the banks go to the wall until Brian Lenihan nationalised the debt. This turned it into a potential sovereign default and meant the taxpayers owed the money instead of the bank. Also inflation is low now and we aren’t really seeing risk of an overheated economy and runaway inflation so the rules are much looser.

    1
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Karllye kripton
    Favourite Karllye kripton
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 8:00 AM

    Only when the last tree is cut down or when the last animal is killed for food only then will people release that we can’t eat money and it really is worth less than the paper it’s printed on

    113
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute patrick boland
    Favourite patrick boland
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 9:02 AM

    @Karllye kripton: that is so like the Cree Indian proverb. ‘Only when the last tree has died and the last river been poisoned and the last fish been caught will we realise we cannot eat money’.

    59
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Karllye kripton
    Favourite Karllye kripton
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 10:13 AM

    @patrick boland: I probably got it form there I probably read it somewhere along the line and that’s what came to mind

    23
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Arthur O'Neill
    Favourite Arthur O'Neill
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 8:13 AM

    Why do governments borrow? A sovereign state should print money. Sure the currency will initially devalue but over time the increased taxes placed on the citizens will replenish the pot. So surely governments should avoid borrowing from private Banks where the debt is loaded with interest.

    58
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute King B
    Favourite King B
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 8:21 AM

    @Arthur O’Neill: see Germany after ww1 for reference.

    64
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Gerard Carthy
    Favourite Gerard Carthy
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 8:41 AM

    @Arthur O’Neill: Toure right of course, the EVB could creat 2 trillion in non repayable or payable on 100 years funds with no coupon and just let states spend it on infrastructure, energy housing. Also investing 20% of it in Africa, like Xhina was doing, would be strategically smart.
    There is no risk here of inflation, never mind hyper inflation, the economy oils bog enough to absorb it.
    The only issue is ideological politicians in Germany who have spent the last two decades telling their voters that debt is evil.

    43
    See 9 more replies ▾
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Arthur O'Neill
    Favourite Arthur O'Neill
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 8:42 AM

    @King B: Thats an extreme example.

    8
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Mickety Dee
    Favourite Mickety Dee
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 8:44 AM

    @Gerard Carthy: a ton of extra cash chasing the same limited resources. How can that not lead to inflation?

    17
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Fintan O'flaois
    Favourite Fintan O'flaois
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 8:47 AM

    @Arthur O’Neill: Because ultimately you end up like Zimbabwe or Venezuela.

    19
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Arthur O'Neill
    Favourite Arthur O'Neill
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 9:20 AM

    @Fintan O’flaois: if misused by dictatorships yes. Used correctly no different to borrowing. Printing by the state vs borrowing from private banks – both scenarios give a cash injection to the economy, which will be redacted over time.

    21
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Fintan O'flaois
    Favourite Fintan O'flaois
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 9:34 AM

    @Arthur O’Neill: Irresponsible monitory policy is not exclusive to dictatorships, however, in democracies sane voices then to prevail before the “money printers” destroy the economy. The benefits of controlling money supply and maintaining modest inflationary targets are well established – countries that do it tend to prosper, countries that don’t tend to struggle.
    Milton Friedman advocated what you’re suggesting on the proviso that the excess money supply would be retired at a time of fiscal surplus, so the net supply of money would remain in balance over time. Unfortunately, I just can’t imagine our government retiring money supply at a time of surplus, so we’d end up in an inflationary bubble, a la Zimbabwe and Venezuela.

    8
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Cormac O' Keeffe
    Favourite Cormac O' Keeffe
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 9:41 AM

    @Arthur O’Neill: you don’t have to look to dictatorships for examples of governments placing too much emphasis on growing an economy in nominal terms and not enough on inflation. It was a curse in almost every advanced economy in the 70s and 80s. Germany in many ways showed the benefits of controlling inflation and how it could be done. Imagine the panic buying of toilet roll if we had hyperinflation :-)

    3
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Bilbo Baggins
    Favourite Bilbo Baggins
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 10:17 AM

    @Arthur O’Neill: But only one increases the actual amount of money in the economy. Printing money in general leads to negative inflationary and devaluing effects. Hyperinflation is not just based on the responsibility of those in power but the world economic view of the value and stability of a currency, if you just keep printing your own it is of less value to people. So it devalues making everything purchased abroad more expensive. Putting you back in the same place as you began. That’s normal circumstances. But now is different. Money will need to be printed by everybody.

    7
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Aidan Murray
    Favourite Aidan Murray
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 11:53 AM

    @Arthur O’Neill: I think this is a potential solution … but not with countries acting unilaterally. If all the major central banks agree to act simultaneously and print x amount per person in every country, then there will be no currency devaluation but there will be money across the world to resuscitate the worldwide economy.

    1
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Sean Salmon
    Favourite Sean Salmon
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 12:05 PM

    @Arthur O’Neill: that is what the ECB are doing along with America and other major countries. This will sooner or later feed high inflation high interest rates major defaults by poorest countries and the collapse of the world’s financial system. Sorry to bring bad news but economically expanding money supply in a contracting economy is suicide unsustainable and for the sake of a short term illusion of dealing with a problem is ultimately going to compound an already bad situation

    7
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute lambda sensor
    Favourite lambda sensor
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 10:11 AM

    None of this is new. We simply ignored it in Europe last time at the behest of Germany and NL. The US, in contrast, spent their way out of the last crash and their economy soared. Europe’s never really recovered.

    Keynesian economics was followed in the US whereas austerity economics (a new and untested form) was followed in the EU. The results are clear. EU GPD in 2008 was 19.1Tr, US was 14.7. In 2018 EU was 18.7Tr and the US was 20.5Tr (stats from world bank).

    The reason there is a rethink on this is because austerity economics didn’t work. This was widely called out at the time but ignored. Most European countries had austerity forced on them as part of getting access to Troika or EU money.

    47
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Karllye kripton
    Favourite Karllye kripton
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 10:17 AM

    @lambda sensor: https://youtu.be/jsV_YXq-1×4

    Very good I highly recommend watching

    4
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Lisa Saputo
    Favourite Lisa Saputo
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 9:38 AM

    We all could have told these intellectuals that boosting the economy works better than strangling it if they had asked.

    43
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Sean Fahey
    Favourite Sean Fahey
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 12:00 PM

    @Lisa Saputo: So you would have told the intellectuals not to cut costs when we’re bankrupt in the midst of a financial crisis where we couldn’t borrow our way out of trouble and had to go cap in hand to the IMF who imposed restrictions so we could afford to keep the lights on?

    And once you were done with the intellectuals, what would you have told the civil servants when the wages aren’t lodged to their accounts?

    2
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Joe Griffin
    Favourite Joe Griffin
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 11:00 AM

    It’s called Keynesianism after the famous economist. But unfortunately those who stand to make the most out of our current austerity driven system haven’t allowed this approach. And I include political power as well as wealth in this. It’s much easier to control the population if you kep a good proportion poor and frightened of fighting for their rights. Austerity has always been about political control not about economies.

    28
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Patrick
    Favourite Patrick
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 10:36 AM

    I remember reading that when America went into recession in previous decades,the president of the day started massive infrastructure projects which were cheaper to do but kept the country ticking along.
    Austerity was not the way as some countries were in trouble even before this pandemic.
    What will EU countries debts look like after this and I wonder will some debt forgiveness happen or at the very least drop the interest payments?

    21
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Cormac O' Keeffe
    Favourite Cormac O' Keeffe
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 9:47 AM

    Also, the real economic failing that becomes apparent at these times is the lack of preparedness of governments like ours did to their reluctance to adequately follow counter cyclical economic policies. We had a government boasting about the fastest growing economy in Europe for half a decade and we had virtually no surplus and very little rainy day fund available. The fiscal advisory council were largely ignored and it kind of shows that due to the desire to be re-elected politicians can really be trusted with fiscal policy as well as monetary policy.

    18
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute john doe
    Favourite john doe
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 12:52 PM

    Interesting that the article backs up the economic approach begged for by people like Paul Murphy, Gerry Addams and Yanis Varoufakis during the last fiscal crisis. All of whom promoted borrowing to fund large infrastructural projects instead of austerity.
    Their suggestions were ridiculed by our government (still our government) at the time and a lot of posters on here now rubbing their chins in agreement to this article.

    17
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Cormac O' Keeffe
    Favourite Cormac O' Keeffe
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 9:07 AM

    One of the greatest achievements in economics in the last five decades has been the intellectual and practical triumph of delegating monetary authority to independent and conservative central banks. It needs to be tweaked in a number of ways, most importantly increasing inflation targets in times of crisis and taking a longer term average measure of inflation. However, going back to the situation where governments print money would lead to the time inconsistency problem again and would be a disaster. As people have said, there’s a very good reason why Germans fear inflation. Also, during hyperinflation it is the poorest and most vulnerable in society that suffer the most so there’s a welfare benefit to low inflation that shouldn’t be taken for granted.

    12
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute PV Nevin
    Favourite PV Nevin
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 10:44 PM

    @Cormac O’ Keeffe:
    The Thatcherite revolution has brought humanity to a precipice. Yet there was no other way for our ruling class to go. Ably assisted by the top 10%. Logical for them. Death and want for the other 90%.

    2
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute FIE
    Favourite FIE
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 10:26 AM

    shes a fine half..not meaning to be sexist or anything

    7
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Jack Inman
    Favourite Jack Inman
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 12:49 PM

    Reading the arm chair economists on here is highly entertaining….especially the bit where everyone blames Germany.

    4
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Sharp Elsi Mate
    Favourite Sharp Elsi Mate
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 3:09 PM

    Hard to believe she is 48 lads, she looks after herself

    3
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute PV Nevin
    Favourite PV Nevin
    Report
    Apr 26th 2020, 10:40 PM

    Since the last financial crash the wealth of the top 10% has increased, by no small amount. Repeat, increased.

    That states have intervened in the pandemic to cover some costs of the working class, and the IMF is advocating a Keynesian investment policy, indicates nothing less than the mortal fear of the capitalist ruling class.
    Think about it.

    1
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Roberto González
    Favourite Roberto González
    Report
    Apr 27th 2020, 12:37 AM

    To all the people saying Germany, Venezuela, runaway inflation, blah blah etc. How can printing money in a deflationary environment cause runaway inflation? This has to be done in the short term to stimulate demand. The money supply can be reduced again in the future. Its like giving a patient adrenaline. Not ideal for your system but needs must n all that. It’s either this or borrowing and Austerity. And I don’t think the proletariat will take that again.

    1
Submit a report
Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
Thank you for the feedback
Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.
JournalTv
News in 60 seconds