Many people will lose access to healthcare because of Trump winning
Even if the ACA is not repealed or totally gutted — which we shouldn’t count on — there is a lot of damage Trump can and will to reduce access to healthcare:
President-elect Donald J. Trump never revealed the “concepts” of the plan he said he had to replace the Affordable Care Act, the law that he tried unsuccessfully to kill during his first term.
But the fact that Republicans have gained control of the Senate — and possibly the House — could give Mr. Trump an opening to try and transform the 2010 health law and remake the nation’s health care system.
Key to that strategy, health policy experts said, is simple inaction. Major subsidies that lawmakers approved during President Biden’s term that have lowered the cost of plans are set to expire next year. Republicans could allow them to sunset, a move that could deprive roughly 20 million Americans of extra financial help for coverage on the Affordable Care Act’s marketplaces.
The subsidies, which are estimated to cost more than $300 billion if extended for a decade, helped Obamacare enrollment almost double during President Biden’s term, shattering records. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that 3.4 million people will lose insurance if the subsidies expire and the cost of plans rises. Lower-income Americans would still receive some federal assistance, while higher-income people would lose it altogether.
This was more a necessity created by the yobbos who were the marginal votes in the Senate than a considered strategy, but the “create temporary programs and hope political momentum will lead to them being extended” is definitely not an approach that worked or is likely to work in the future.