We had to pass it to see what was in it, we were told, with the sincerest pledges that it would bring down healthcare costs, shrink the deficit, and those who wanted to keep their insurance and/or their physician absolutely could. No ifs, ands, or buts
After its 100% partisan passage, how well has it been for 'the country", as its biggest cheerleader is about to leave office (read, NOT just for those who now have coverage, but didn't before, since that could have been addressed with about 3 pages of legislation vs the 2000+ page monstrosity we got instead. Let's take a totality tally, shall we;
- Much higher rates,
- ballooning out-of-pocket costs,
- more federal debt accrual,
- decreased options for consumers,
- more uncompensated care,
- constricting networks,
- major insurers pulling the plug,
- imploding co-ops,
- collapsing marketplaces,
and
- enduring unpopularity, as more Americans are directly harmed than helped by the $2 trillion law that was marketed with no downsides for anyone.
But yea, a few more people are covered, so I guess there's that