Remember earlier this year when the GOP had a single-issue campaign strategy for the 2014 campaign — run against ObamaCare?
You haven’t heard much from the GOP about ObamaCare in recent months after a long stretch of good news about ObamaCare.
It turns out that even Tea-Publicans like their ObamaCare (just not the blithering idiot GOP politicians and pundits). Igor Volsky at Think Progress reports, Turns Out, Republicans Love Obamacare:
Conservative groups have invested millions of dollars in opposing the Affordable Care Act, but they appear to have had little success in turning Americans against the law. In fact, according to a new poll from the Commonwealth Fund, individuals and families who enroll in Obamacare — including the overwhelming majority of Republicans — are satisfied with the product:
Overall, 73 percent of people who bought health plans and 87 percent of those who signed up for Medicaid said they were somewhat or very satisfied with their new health insurance. Seventy-four percent of newly insured Republicans liked their plans. Even 77 percent of people who had insurance before — including members of the much-publicized group whose plans got canceled last year — were happy with their new coverage.
The study also found that the percentage of uninsured has dropped, from 20 percent to 15 percent, after the first open enrollment period, with 9.5 million fewer people now uninsured. Latinos, the most likely of any racial group to lack health insurance, are seeing the biggest gains in coverage. “The percent uninsured fell from 36 percent in July–September 2013 to 23 percent in April–June 2014,” Commonwealth reports.
Moreover, states that expanded their Medicaid programs experienced the biggest drop in uninsurance rates for low-income citizens. In the 25 states and the District of Columbia that implemented coverage expansion for poorer residents, the average uninsured rate for people living below the poverty level fell to 17 percent from 28 percent. The 26 states that have rejected Medicaid expansion continue to see the uninsured rate among low income individuals hover at 36 percent.
The number of uninsured young adults dropped the most, the survey found, from 28 percent to 18 percent.
Significantly, the survey also found that more than half of adults — 58 percent — “with new insurance said they were better off now than they were before.”
Looks like that single-issue campaign strategy of running against ObamaCare is a sure-fire loser.
UPDATE: Joan McCarter at Daily Kos has a rundown of all the surveys out this week, all good news for ObamaCare. The week a Republican Obamacare lie died.
Colombia with an O. Of course the rest of your writing is riddled with eccentric punctuation, capitalization, and mechanics. You must have gone to school in Arizona.
have you heard any comments on what happens AFTER they get this so called health insurance???
can the find a primary care doctor or get proper treatment???
example my carondelet clinic had 10 primary care doctors now down to (2_ two!
I lost (3) three primary care doctors-my doctor is now va new doctor just hired from Columbia. not Columbia university but the country of Columbia!