9-26-2020
‘Insult to every family’:
Experts say Trump’s bogus healthcare ‘plan’ doesn’t actually do anything.
When President Donald Trump finally unveiled his long-anticipated health care “plan” on Thursday, it turned out to be comprised of only two toothless executive orders.
Journalists and politicians alike were quick to point out that the pair of orders did not actually compromise a “plan” at all,
-- as they were merely “requests for legislation.”
Trump, who repeatedly failed to repeal the Affordable Care Act despite years of promises, claimed on Thursday that
“Obamacare is no longer.''
“We’ve really become the health-care party — the Republican Party,” Trump claimed during a speech in Charlotte, N.C. “But nobody knows it.”
The first executive order declares protecting patients with pre-existing conditions to be the “policy” of the U.S.
--- But protections for pre-existing conditions were previously enshrined into law through Obamacare, legislation which the Trump administration is currently pushing to overturn in the Supreme Court after failing to do so in Congress.
“The historic action I’m taking today includes the first-ever executive order to affirm it is the official policy of the United States government to protect patients with pre-existing conditions.
We’re making that official.
We’re putting it down in a stamp even though
it was already “official” in a law which has been on the books for a decade.
Julie Rovner, the chief Washington correspondent at Kaiser Health News, pointed out that Trump’s executive order would do nothing if the Obamacare lawsuit backed by his administration succeeds.
“This. Requires. Legislation,” she tweeted.
The health care news outlet Stat News described Trump’s speech as “empty rhetoric,” which would neither “improve the quality of Americans’ health care or lower its cost.”
“The speech and executive order stood as a tacit admission that Trump had failed to keep his 2016 promise to replace his predecessor’s signature achievement with a conservative alternative. --- --- “Unable to repeal the law, Trump appeared open to simply rebranding it.”
The other executive order directs Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar to explore ways to address surprise medical bills if Congress does not act by Jan. 1.
Stat News reporter Lev Facher noted that the order was merely a “plan to work with Congress” on the issue.
“I am not sure how/why these are executive orders,they are requests for legislation.”
Along with the executive orders, Trump promised millions of seniors would receive $200 coupons toward the cost of prescription drugs.
Trump claimed that the coupons would be sent to 33 million Medicare beneficiaries “in the coming weeks,” but the White House has not released any details about the president’s plan.
It is unclear how it would actually be funded —
or if it is even legal.
A White House official told Bloomberg News that the money would come from a “demonstration program Medicare uses to test new payment systems” and be offset by savings from price cuts Trump ordered for medications bought by the Medicare program.
Stat News noted that the order has not been implemented, and the savings “do not currently exist.”
A top pharmaceutical lobby group told Bloomberg that it had already rejected the administration’s request to provide discount cards for Medicare patients, and drug companies are not aware of Trump’s plan for funding the program.
Trump also teased a comprehensive health care reform plan, though he offered no actual details.
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said Trump’s “bogus executive order” was not “worth the paper it’s signed on.”
“It is an insult to every family with someone with a pre-existing condition that President Trump thinks he can get away with this farce while he races a justice onto the Supreme Court to strike down the life-saving protections enshrined into law by the Affordable Care Act,” she said in a statement.
“For his entire administration, President Trump has used every tool and every chance he gets to weaken or rip away protections for people with pre-existing conditions. If President Trump cared at all about people with pre-existing conditions, he would drop his lawsuit to overturn the Affordable Care Act in the middle of a pandemic.”
“President Trump is lying to you about his ‘executive order,'” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. added.
“Protections for pre-existing conditions are the law.
The threat to these protections is from President Trump and the Republicans suing to end them.”