So many presidents tried it.
From Harry S. Truman to Richard Nixon to Bill Clinton. Some say as many as seven presidents attempted to pass some form of national health care with few results, often stymied by the notion that social welfare should be left up to the states.
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But Barack Obama, in his first term as president, succeeded where so many had found failure, becoming the first president to pass a reformative plan for national health care, one that also confronted the practices of insurance companies that have historically disqualified from quality medical coverage millions of Americans, many with pre-existing health conditions or predisposition to them.
In this next installment of The Rootâs series His Lasting Legacy, we take a look at the Affordable Care Act, arguably Obama’s greatest demonstration of efficacy. It was signed in 2010, when the country was still staggering to its feet from the Great Recession that had consumed the previous 18 months and left some 6 percent of the job force unemployed and, essentially, uninsured. Economically, President Obama inherited a hot, nightmarish mess. Still, he pressed the issue, making the Affordable Care Act, the ACA, Obamacareâwhether you call it by its official name or criticsâ pejorative of choiceâhis signature piece of legislation. Its historical impact is being lived out by 20 million previously uninsured people who now have health coverage, which, according to the White House, is the highest number of insured Americans in history. More than 3 million black people and 4 million Latinos now have health coverage, a particular victory for communities that disproportionately succumb to diseases that can be prevented and controlled. Obamacare has given people, especially people of color, access to care where there previously was none.
While there have been other successes in the Obama administrationâthe legalization of same-sex marriage, restored relations with Cubaâthe Affordable Care Act shines as a standout accomplishment.
âDespite its shortcomingsâand it clearly has many because itâs built on an existing system that is problematicâit is a remarkable political achievement,â said Michael Gusmano, associate professor of health policy at Rutgers University and research scholar at the Hastings Center. âWeâve been trying to adopt some form of comprehensive health coverage since the Teddy Roosevelt administration, and with the notable exception of the adoption of Medicare and Medicaid in 1965, this is really the first major success.â An Alignment of Ideal Circumstances
Timing played a major factor in the success of Obamacare. Built on national health care achievements that started with the introduction of Medicaid by Lyndon Johnson in 1965, there were several variables in play that made Obamaâs platform more likely than that of many previous presidents: He had a majority in both houses, with 60 votesâat least for a whileâin the U.S. Senate. Democrats, who had learned from the failure of the Clinton attempt at health care reform introduced back in the 1990s, were deliberate about working cohesively. That helped set the mood to push Obamacare forward. âIt’s always about an alignment of time and circumstances, but I think even when his Congress was Democratic in both houses, which is a pretty good alignment for him for a short time; even when some of his top advisers said, âDon’t do this. Do the economy, do something else. Don’t get bogged down in something that can turn out to be disastrous for you the way the Clinton plan was,â he said, âNope. I’m doing it.â He made a commitment to health care that people around him thought was foolhardy. He stuck with it and did it,â said Sandra Tanenbaum, professor of health services management and policy at Ohio State University. Adding to that diligence, said Gusmano, was the presidentâs political skill and the amount of personal political capital.
âI really think if you would have polled most policy experts in the U.S., they would have said this would have failed yet again. It took a lot of effort on the part of the president and the Democratic leaders of the Congress to make that work. They barely got it through, basically with no Republican vote and a lot of cajoling by the president,â said Gusmano. âHe really had to lobby some of the Blue Dog Democrats and the more liberal Democrats, the final bill in part because it wasnât going to include the so-called âpublic option,â which everybody forgets about now. The people on the left were unhappyâyou see echoes of that in the Bernie Sanders campaignâand you see people on the right [not] happy with it. So he had people coming at him from both sides.â In January, on a campaign stop in Iowa, Hillary Clinton credited her mid-â90s work in health care reform for the birth of the ACA, half joking, âIt was called Hillarycare before it was Obamacare.â
Experts disagree, crediting the Clintonsâ health care proposal for being a teaching model, but pointing out that theirs focused on universal health coverage by âoffering all Americans a standard minimum-benefits package and imposing limits on out-of-pocket expenses, along with a broad requirement that employers provide insurance,â according to health-policy expert Timothy Jost. In contrast, Obamacare expands on the Medicaid program.
Who Obamacare Is Really For In Prince Georgeâs County, Md., the suburban side of the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area, 29-year-old Allen Wilkins is working as a building maintenance manager to pay his bills and not much else for now. His job doesnât offer health care and he wasnât pressed to pay for private insurance out of pocket, largely because it seemed like a nonessential expense to factor into his already skintight budget. Still, he wasnât thrilled about being forced into Obamacare.
âThe incentive was not to get the penalty,â he said, laughing. âBut itâs a benefit, so Iâm glad it was something I was forced to do. As a young black man, I trust Obama, so I trust Obamacare. His name has a positive vibe.â Heâs thankful now to have the coverage, particularly as he starts to pay closer attention to his weight and overall health.
âIt was pretty easy to get, and it was my first time having insurance outside of my parentsâ insurance,â he said. âI have dental and I can get physicals and checkups. Iâm not sure how I would have done that if I didnât have it.â This is what ACA supporters and evangelists love to hear, the testimonials of Americans benefiting from the ability to take charge of their health and get in front of issues instead of pouring cash into reactive care. Said Dr. Meena Seshamani, director of the Office of Health Reform at the Department of Health and Human Services, âOur uninsured rate is at historic lows, and that expansion of coverage is through several sources, including the health insurance marketplace and Medicaid expansion. So I would say that is one aspect: serving lots of people who never had health insurance before, who had been locked out of the insurance market because they had a pre-existing condition, and enabling them to be able to get health insurance, find a doctor and keep themselves healthy.â
The debate can rage on about how to make it better, when the best time is to move and who should do the work. Obamaâs legacy has been solidified by his vigilance in radicalizing American health care for people who most need access to it.
âThe ACA set the groundwork for changing the delivery system to engage better care, smarter spending and healthier people,â Seshamani added. âThat looks like better integration and coordination of care, engagement of patients in their care, and rewarding providers for quality of care and value. Thatâs also another historic change thatâs occurring in the health care system as a result of the Affordable Care Act.â
Also in the His Lasting Legacy series on The Root:
âHistoric Presidency, Historic Opposition: The Legacy of President Barack Obamaâ
âFighting Racism in the Age of Obamaâ
âObamaâs Battle for Black Boys: My Brotherâs Keeper 2 Years Laterâ
âObama Legacy: A First Lady Like No Otherâ
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