Texas Republican gubernatorial candidate Greg Abbott declared something the other day during his debate with Democratic opponent Wendy Davis that I cannot let stand.
“Obamacare,” he said, “is an abject failure.”
That’s it, then. The verdict is in. The Affordable Care Act isn’t working. It isn’t providing health insurance to Americans who couldn’t afford it. It isn’t saving lives. It isn’t saving people’s livelihoods.
How does he come to that conclusion?
Oh, wait. I think I know. He’s running for governor in a state that detests the ACA’s author, President Barack Obama. So it makes political sense for Abbott to declare the ACA a complete failure. It makes as much sense for the state’s attorney general to promise, as he did the other night, to bring “more health care to Texans.” The question, however, is this: How — precisely — does the governor do that?
I’ve noted already that the ACA rollout was full if fits and starts, hiccups, mistakes and all manner of “technical difficulties” with the healthcare.gov website that was supposed to be up and running.
However, Americans are enrolling in the ACA. They’re getting coverage now after being unable to get it prior to enactment of the law.
Will this process now proceed hitch-free? Probably not.
The ACA is just a few months old. It’s going to be fine-tuned, tinkered, tightened as we move along.
That’s the case — without exception — with all landmark laws.