To the extent that health care was a part of the 2024 campaign cycle, it was only because health care was effectively absent from the 2024 campaign cycle. During September’s Republican presidential primary debate, for example, Fox News’ Dana Perino asked whether the Affordable Care Act was “here to stay.” No one on the stage wanted to answer.
About a month later, The Wall Street Journal reported that the issue had simply “disappeared” from the political landscape.
That was in early November. A lot can happen in a month.
Donald Trump, who’d largely ignored the ACA since leaving office nearly three years ago, has begun going after “Obamacare” in increasingly explicit terms, apparently indifferent to the fact that the landmark reform law is working well and about as popular as it’s ever been.
He’s not alone. Last week, former Ambassador Nikki Haley also appeared to open the door to repealing the ACA.
Roughly 24 hours ago, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis joined the parade. NBC News reported:
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that he would replace Obamacare with a “better plan.” … “Obamacare hasn’t worked,” DeSantis said in the interview with moderator Kristen Welker, which aired Sunday morning. “We are going to replace and supersede with a better plan.”
The Florida Republican described an imaginary health care blueprint that would feature “more transparency, more consumer choice, more affordable options, less red tape, [and] less bureaucracy weighing everybody down.”
And while that certainly sounded nice, DeSantis presented literally zero details about how, exactly, he intended to achieve these lofty goals — which have eluded his party for over a decade — and the governor has not unveiled anything even resembling a health care plan, though he said the public would “probably” see his plan in the spring.
In other words, under the GOP candidate’s vision, a prospective DeSantis administration would knock…
Read the full article here