Ever since he was a presidential candidate, President Donald Trump has been promising the American people a âterrific,â âphenomenalâ and âfantasticâ new health care plan to replace the Affordable Care Act.
But, in the 3½ years since he set up shop in the Oval Office, he has yet to deliver.
In his early days on the campaign trail, circa 2015, he said on he would repeal Obamacare and replace it with âsomething terrific,â and on radio show he said the replacement would be âsomething great.â Fast-forward to 2020. Trump has promised an Obamacare replacement plan five times so far this year. And the plan is always said to be just a few weeks away.
The United States is also in the grips of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has resulted in more than 163,000 U.S. deaths. KFF that 27 million Americans could potentially lose their employer-sponsored insurance and become uninsured following their job loss due to the pandemic. (KHN is an editorially independent program of the Kaiser Family Foundation.) All of this makes health care a hot topic during the 2020 election.
This record is by no means a comprehensive list, but here are some of the many instances when Trump promised a new health plan was coming soon.
2016: The Campaign Trail
Trump in February that he would immediately repeal and replace Obamacare and that his plan would save money and result in better health care.
By March, a blueprint, was posted on his campaign website. It echoed popular GOP talking points but was skimpy on details.
During his accepting the Republican nomination in July, Trump again promised to repeal Obamacare and alluded to ways his replacement would be better. And, by October, Trump that within his first 100 days in office he would repeal and replace Obamacare. During his final week of campaigning, he asking Congress to come in for a special session to repeal the health care law quickly.
2017: The First Year in Office
January and February:
Trump The Washington Post in a January interview that he was close to completing his health care plan and that he wanted to provide âinsurance for everybody.â
He Feb. 17 that while Democrats were delaying Senate confirmation of Tom Price, his pick to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, the ârepeal and replacement of ObamaCare is moving fast!â
And, on Feb. 28, in his to Congress, Trump discussed his vision for replacing Obamacare. âThe way to make health insurance available to everyone is to lower the cost of health insurance, and that is what we are going to do,â he said.
March: Eyes on Congress â And Twitter
House Republicans, with backing from the White House, were the ones to introduce new health legislation, the (AHCA). The repeal-and-replace bill kept in place some of the more popular provisions of the ACA. Some conservative Republicans said the bill didnât go far enough, deriding it as âObamacare Liteâ and refusing to vote on it.
On March 9, Trump , âDespite what you hear in the press, healthcare is coming along great. We are talking to many groups and it will end in a beautiful picture!â
Later that month, as efforts to pass the AHCA continued to stall, Trump updated his earlier promise.
âAnd I never said â I guess Iâm here, what, 64 days? I never said repeal and replace Obamacare. Youâve all heard my speeches. I never said repeal it and replace it within 64 days. I have a long time,â said Trump in his from the Oval Office on March 24. (Which was true; he had said within 100 days.) âBut I want to have a great health care bill and plan, and we will. It will happen. And it wonât be in the very distant future.â
April and May: A Roller-Coaster Ride of Legislation and Celebration, Then âŚ
After an intraparty dust-up, the House narrowly passed the AHCA on May 4. Despite tepid support in the Republican-controlled Senate, Trump convened a Rose Garden celebratory event to mark the Houseâs passage, he felt âso confidentâ about the measure. He also congratulated Republican lawmakers on what he termed âa great planâ and âincredibly well-crafted.â
Nonetheless, Senate Republicans first advanced their own replacement bill, the but ultimately voted on a âskinny repealâ that would have eliminated the employer mandate and given broad authority to states to repeal sections of the ACA. It failed to gain passage when Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) gave it a in the wee hours of July 28.
September and October: Moving On ⌠But Not
Trump began September by signaling in that he was moving on from health reform.
But on Oct. 12, he signed an allowing for health care plans to be sold that donât meet the regulatory standards set up in the Affordable Care Act. The next day, , âObamaCare is a broken mess. Piece by piece we will now begin the process of giving America the great HealthCare it deserves!â
Roughly two weeks later, on Oct. 29, â... we will ⌠have great Healthcare soon after Tax Cuts!â
2019: More Talk, More Tweets
March and April: A Moving Target
It seems that 2018 was a quiet time â at least for presidential promises regarding a soon-to-be-unveiled health plan. It was reported that were working on an Obamacare replacement plan. But in 2019, Trump again took up the health plan mantle with this March 26 : âThe Republican Party will become 'The Party of Healthcare!'â Two days later, in to reporters before boarding Marine One, Trump said that âweâre working on a plan now,â but again updated the timeline, saying, âThereâs no very great rush from the standpointâ because he was waiting on the court decision for Obamacare. This was a reference to , the lawsuit brought by a group of Republican governors to overturn the ACA. It is currently pending before the Supreme Court.
Backtracking from his earlier promises to repeal and replace Obamacare within his first 100 days in office, Trump on April 3 : âI was never planning a vote prior to the 2020 Election on the wonderful HealthCare package that some very talented people are now developing for me & the Republican Party. It will be on full display during the Election as a much better & less expensive alternative to ObamaCareâŚâ
June 16:
In an , Trump again said would be coming shortly.
âWeâre going to produce phenomenal health care. And we already have the concept of the plan. And itâll be much better health care,â Trump told George Stephanopoulos. When Stephanopoulos asked if he was going to tell people what the plan was, Trump responded: âYeah, weâll be announcing that in two months, maybe less.â
June 26:
But then, timing again changed as Trump promised a sweeping health plan after the 2020 election. âIf we win the House back, keep the Senate and keep the presidency, weâll have a plan that blows away ObamaCare,â in a speech to the Faith and Freedom Coalitionâs Road to the Majority conference.
Oct. 3:
He reiterated this post-2020 election pledge in a speech to Florida retirees. âIf the Republicans take back the House, keep the Senate, keep the presidency â we're gonna have a fantastic plan,â .
Oct. 25:
reporters that Republicans have a âgreatâ health care plan. âYouâll have health care the likes of which youâve never seen,â .
2020: âTwo Weeksâ
Feb. 10:
During a with governors, Trump commented on the Republican governorsâ lawsuit to undo the ACA and whether protections for preexisting conditions would be lost: âIf a law is overturned, thatâs OK, because the new lawâs going to have it in.â
May 6:
During the signing of a proclamation to honor National Nurses Day, Trump again Obamacare would be replaced âwith great healthcare at a lesser price, and preexisting conditions will be included and you wonât have the individual mandate.â
July 19:
Trump told Chris Wallace in a that a health care plan would be unveiled within two weeks: âWe're signing a health care plan within two weeks, a full and complete health care plan that the Supreme Court decision on DACA gave me the right to do.â
July 31:
With no sign of a plan yet, reporters asked Trump about it at a Florida event. Trump that a âvery inclusiveâ health care plan was coming and âIâll be signing it sometime very soon.â
Aug. 3:
Pushing the timeline once again, Trump said during a that the health care plan would be introduced âhopefully, prior to the end of the month.â
Aug. 7:
Citing his two-week timeline once again, Trump said during a that he would pursue a major executive order in the next two weeks ârequiring health insurance companies to cover all preexisting conditions for all customers.â Trump also said that covering preexisting conditions had ânever been done before,â despite the ACA provisions outlining protections for people who have preexisting conditions being among the lawâs most popular components. The Trump administration has backed the effort to overturn the ACA â including these protections â now pending before the Supreme Court.
Aug. 10:
In response to a reporterâs question about why he was planning to issue an executive order when the ACA already protects those with preexisting conditions, Trump said: âJust a double safety net, and just to let people know that the Republicans are totally strongly in favor of ⌠taking care of people with preexisting conditions. Itâs a second platform. We have: Preexisting conditions will be taken care of 100% by Republicans and the Republican Party.â
Just before publication, we asked the White House for more information regarding when exactly the plan might be unveiled. The press office did not respond to our request for comment.
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