President’s First Major Reform to Reform Law May Be DOA

President’s First Major Reform to Reform Law May Be DOA

President Obama now backs an effort to let states opt out of significant elements of the health reform law sooner than currently allowed. However, the president's decision to concede an aspect of his overhaul may not be much of a concession, as the legislation is unlikely to pass.

After months of legal battles and an in-progress Republican effort to overturn the federal health law, nearly half of Americans think the law already has been repealed or aren’t sure.

President Obama’s announcement on Monday — that states should be able to immediately opt out of elements of the law — probably won’t clear up popular confusion. But, will it help Obama’s efforts to win political support for the overhaul?

Speaking at the National Governors Association meeting on Monday, Obama said he backs a bipartisan proposal (S 248) to allow states to obtain waivers for provisions in the federal health reform law as early as 2014, three years before the overhaul currently permits, if states can prove they are able to meet the law’s central goals on their own.

It’s the first time that the president has supported a major modification to his overhaul. However, the shift represents “political calculations, as much as policy ones,” the New York Times notes, and the well-publicized effort may not lead to any substantive changes.

Move Designed To Blunt Conservative Criticism …

Given Republicans’ multipronged attack on the health law — from their repeal effort in Congress to myriad legal challenges moving through the courts — the White House hopes that the concession will reduce criticism of the law and assuage disgruntled governors.

According to Drew Altman, president of the Kaiser Family Foundation, many states “contend they can do more with less if they get the flexibility to be more creative. … This puts the onus back on them and calls that into question.”

The move also reflects Obama’s effort to shift toward the political center. The president does not want to cede to governors’ calls to cut Medicaid enrollment, but “is trying to look flexible” in other ways, according to the Times.

… While Winning Over Liberal Base …

In an off-the-record call, the White House positioned the move as an opportunity to adopt more comprehensive reforms — such as expansive approaches to public insurance — and many liberal groups are hailing the opportunity.

According to Consumer Watchdog, the waivers free California and other states to rapidly adopt “ambitious reform plans that can pass at the ballot box in 24 states but would never get the time of day in Washington,” according to the group’s president, Jamie Court. For example, Vermont lawmakers are pushing for a single-payer plan and say the bill allows for necessary flexibility.

… But May Be Non-Starter With GOP

However, few Republican governors have come out in support of the proposal, and several were explicitly critical. Obama’s shift “doesn’t help us any,” according to South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley. Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal acknowledged that “anything that gives the states more flexibility is a positive thing,” but states still face “onerous mandates” under the law. States also could face challenges proving they could meet the requirements for the federal waiver.

Meanwhile, House Republican leaders on Monday reiterated that they are seeking a full repeal of the law — and not just tweaking around the edges.


White House support for the legislation may actually strengthen Republican opposition to it, according to Washington Post columnist Ezra Klein. Rather than use the waiver proposal as an alternative to critique the current law, GOP leaders who back the bill could be perceived “as helping the White House in its efforts to defend the [federal health law] against repeal,” Klein writes.

California Healthline will continue to track efforts to reform — or repeal — the federal health reform law. Meanwhile, here’s what’s making news across the nation.

In the Courts

On the Hill

Administration Actions

In the States

Analyzing the Overhaul

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