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ROUNDUP: As Senate GOP Races to Vote, The Country Won’t ‘Get Over It’ If Republicans Pass Their Historic Medicaid Cuts

This Week, Protect Our Care Held Events and Generated Coverage Across the Country, As a Lite-Brite, Mobile Billboard, and Projection on the RNC Put the Pressure on Washington Republicans As They Push This Bill Through the Senate

Protect Our Care supported partners’ actions across D.C., including a rally by SEIU members in front of the White House.

This week, Protect Our Care continued organizing advocates and everyday Americans around the country, as people across the political spectrum speak out against Trump and Congressional Republicans’ “Big, Ugly Bill”. While advocates and U.S. Representatives Don Davis (NC-01), Maggie Goodlander (NH-02), and Nanette Barragán (CA-44) headlined local events across the states, Protect Our Care organized a projection on the RNC, a lite-brite on the Senate steps, and a mobile billboard featuring ads targeting six key GOP Senators to blast Washington Republicans as they race to pass their massive health care cuts. 

The GOP bill makes the largest health care cuts in history, slashing Medicaid and dismantling the Affordable Care Act in order to fund tax breaks for big corporations and the wealthy. Millions of Americans would lose life-saving coverage, including seniors, children, veterans, people with disabilities, workers who don’t get insurance through their jobs, and people who take care of their children or elderly parents. Not only will hardworking families lose their health care, but seniors will be forced to leave their nursing homes, people fighting cancer or addiction will lose access to critical treatment, and everyday Americans will face higher costs. Hundreds of rural hospitals would close, causing job cuts and hurting local economies. Poll after poll shows that Americans across the political spectrum overwhelmingly disapprove of this bill. As it heads to the Senate floor in the next few days, the country is counting on GOP Senators like Lisa Murkowski, Susan Collins, Thom Tillis, and Josh Hawley to stand up for everyday people instead of billionaires, and reject such devastating health care cuts.

D.C. ACTIONS

Protect Our Care’s mobile billboard which circled Capital Hill and the Mall on Friday, June 27, featuring ads targeting six key Senate Republicans: Lisa Murkowski (AK), Dan Sullivan (AK), Susan Collins (ME), Thom Tillis (NC), Shelley Moore Capito (WV), and Jim Justice (WV).

A lite-brite held on the Senate steps of the Capital on Thursday, June 26, telling Washington Republicans “Hands Off Health Care,” as the GOP Senate rushes to pass their devastating bill.

On Wednesday, June 25, Protect Our Care projected images onto the Republican National Committee in D.C. calling out Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) and Senator Joni Ernst (R-IA) for their comments dismissing concerned constituents, revealing what Republicans are really thinking: They don’t care that their scheme to give tax breaks to the wealthy by slashing health care will hurt people. Instead, people who lose Medicaid so the rich can get richer will have to “get over it,” according to Mitch McConnell.

STATE EVENTS AND COVERAGE

ALASKA

  • Tuesday, June 24 – Medicaid Memorial Outside Senator Dan Sullivan’s Mat-Su Office with Alaska Caregivers, Mat-Su Residents and Mat-Su United for Progress
  • Wednesday, June 25 – Medicaid Memorial Outside Senator Dan Sullivan’s Anchorage Office with Alaska Caregivers, Patients and Anchorage Residents
  • Wednesday, June 25 – Medicaid Memorial Outside Senator Dan Sullivan’s Ketchikan Office with Alaska Caregivers and Ketchikan Residents
  • Thursday, June 26 – Vigil at Senator Sullivan’s Office with Advocates in Soldotna
  • Friday, June 27 – Vigil at Senator Sullivan’s Office with Advocates in Fairbanks

CALIFORNIA

  • Friday, June 20 – Congressman David Valadao Accountability Save Our Hospital Event with Congresswoman Nanette Barragán and Health Care Advocates.  

MAINE

  • Friday, June 27 at 12PM ET – Medicaid Hospital Closure Event with State Representative Annie Graham.

MISSOURI

  • Wednesday, June 25 – Rural Hospitals Event with State Senator Patty Smith and Health Care Advocates
    • St. Louis Dispatch: Missouri health providers and advocates raise alarms ahead of vote on ‘big, beautiful’ bill
    • Missouri Independent: Federal spending bill could be ‘devastating’ for Missouri Medicaid patients, rural hospitals
    • KRCG (CBS Columbia): Missouri rural areas may experience hospital closures, economic impacts from Medicaid cuts
    • Maryville Forum: Federal spending bill could be ‘devastating’ for Missouri Medicaid patients, rural hospitals
    • Columbia Missourian: Proposed cuts could impact access to Medicaid and rural hospitals
    • KRCG: Missouri officials sound the alarm on Medicaid cuts (also ran during the subsequent 10pm, 4am, and 6pm broadcasts)

NEW YORK 

  • Monday, June 23—SEIU “High Noon” Rallies at Hospitals Across the New York City Metro Area
    • ABC (Broadcast): Thousands of health care workers in New York area to rally against Medicaid cuts
    • ABC (Online): Thousands of health care workers in New York area to rally against Medicaid cuts
    • NYN First Media: June 23, 2025
    • Spectrum Noticias: Trabajadores de la salud protestan contra los cambios propuestos al Medicaid
    • BK Reader: Brooklyn Healthcare Workers Rally Against Possible Medicaid Cuts
    • Daily Voice: Thousands Of NY Hospital Workers Rally Against Health Care Cuts, Warn Of Closures
    • Finger Lakes 1: Medicaid cuts spark protests as hospitals brace for impact
    • QNS: Queens healthcare workers join statewide rally against federal Medicaid cuts, warn of hospital closures

NEW HAMPSHIRE

  • Wednesday, June 25 – Congresswoman Maggie Goodlander Joined Protect Our Care NH for Urgent Briefing on Threats to Medicaid and the ACA in New Hampshire

NORTH CAROLINA

  • Wednesday, June 25 – Rural Hospitals Event with Congressman Don Davis, State Senator Natalie Murdock, and Dr. David Hill
    • NC Newsline: NC Democratic lawmakers decry impact of GOP mega-bill on rural health care
    • WRAZ: Congressman Davis and Senator Murdock to discuss possible cuts to Medicaid
    • WNCT: Congressman Davis partners with Protect Our Care

FACT SHEET: Republicans’ Big Ugly Bill Will Kick Seniors Out Of Nursing Homes And Shutter Over A Quarter Of Facilities

Over A Quarter Of Nursing Homes Will Be Forced To Close Under The GOP Bill

Republicans are charging through the Senate with their reconciliation bill, which makes the largest cuts to health care in American history—including billions in critical funding for nursing homes. These Republican cuts will force more than a quarter of nursing homes to close their doors. If Senate Republicans are successful in passing the bill, millions of Americans will lose their access to care, kicking seniors in nursing homes to the curb, shuttering rural hospitals, and forcing people to travel further and wait longer for lifesaving care. By closing care facilities across the country, the GOP bill will not only rip care away from seniors, people with disabilities, and hard-working families across the country—thousands will lose their jobs and local economies would suffer. Families will be forced to choose between getting their loved one the care they need and putting food on the table, sick people will go without care, and people will die. The Republican big, ugly tax scam will kick 16 million Americans off their health care, cut Medicare, and throw our entire health care system into chaos.

By The Numbers: 

  • Medicaid pays for over six in ten (63%) residents in nursing homes. Without this care, seniors and people with disabilities will be left without the assistance they need for basic activities such as bathing, dressing, and walking.
  • Medicaid is the largest payer of long-term care in America. Medicaid paid for 44 percent of the $147 billion spent on institutional long-term care in 2023. 
  • The GOP is proposing $800 billion in Medicaid cuts at a time when 80 percent of nursing homes are on the brink of closure. These cuts would force more than a quarter of nursing homes to close their doors.
  • GOP Medicaid cuts will undermine the care workforce. More than half of nursing homes would be forced to cut staff at a time they are already facing widespread shortages. An estimated 477,000 health workers will lose their jobs as a result of GOP cuts to Medicaid, from nurses to physical therapists. 

How GOP Policies Will Hurt Nursing Homes, Seniors, and Americans With Disabilities

  • More Than A Quarter Of Nursing Homes Across The Country Will Be Forced To Close Their Doors. 774 nursing homes have already closed since the pandemic, displacing over 28,000 residents and leaving 40 additional U.S. counties without nursing home care. GOP cuts to Medicaid will exacerbate the nationwide nursing home shortage, forcing more than a quarter of U.S. nursing homes to close their doors and leaving numerous Americans without options for their loved ones’ care at time when 57 percent of nursing homes already have a waitlist for new residents.
  • Seniors and People With Disabilities Will Be Kicked To Curb. The Congressional Budget Office estimates at least 1.3 million seniors and people with disabilities will lose Medicaid due to GOP proposals, leaving them without coverage for long-term care. Republicans are pushing for the largest cuts to Medicaid in history which will also force states to cut back on the services they cover and potentially limit seniors’ access to nursing home care. The $800 billion in proposed cuts to the federal Medicaid budget is equivalent to 72 percent of federal funding for long-term care. Policies such as provider tax and state-directed payment restrictions will also make it harder and harder for states to financially support long-term care for a rapidly aging population with the number of adults over age 85 expected to more than double by 2040.
  • Families Will Go Into Debt Struggling To Afford Care For A Loved One. Since Medicare generally does not cover long-term care, families will be left without affordable options for long-term care for their moms, dads, and grandparents. The average cost of a nursing home is over $111,000 a year – a price tag out of reach for most families without assistance. Families who need help may be forced to go into financial debt to get their loved ones the care they need. Third Way estimates GOP proposals will push at least 5.4 million Americans into medical debt and result in $50 billion increase in total medical debt. Families who cannot afford more debt will be forced to cut back on their hours, quit their jobs, or make other sacrifices to look after their loved one.
  • The Already Struggling Care Workforce Will Be Devastated. Nursing homes across the country are already struggling with staffing shortages that can lead to poor quality of care. CMS estimates nursing facilities are nearly 80,000 short of the workers they need to provide adequate care. In 2024, 20 percent of nursing homes closed a unit, wing, or floor due to labor shortages. According to a recent survey from the American Health Care Association, more than half of nursing homes will be forced to cut staff due to GOP cuts to Medicaid. Nursing homes employ over 1.4 million Americans and 30 percent of direct care workers rely on Medicaid themselves for their health care and would be in danger of losing their coverage.

ADVISORY: Protect Our Care’s Mobile Billboard to Circle Capitol Hill Urging Key Senate Republicans to Stand Up for Constituents, Not Billionaires, and Reject Health Care Cuts

***MEDIA ADVISORY FOR FRIDAY JUNE 27*** 

View the Ads Here

Washington, D.C. – Protect Our Care is organizing a mobile billboard which will circle Capitol Hill and the Mall, targeting six key Senate Republicans as they race to pass their “Big, Ugly Bill” this weekend. On Friday, June 27 from 10 AM ET to 6 PM ET, the mobile billboard will play Protect Our Care’s ads targeting Lisa Murkowski (AK), Dan Sullivan (AK), Susan Collins (ME), Thom Tillis (NC), Shelley Moore Capito (WV), and Jim Justice (WV). 

The GOP bill makes the largest health care cuts in history, slashing Medicaid and dismantling the Affordable Care Act in order to fund tax breaks for big corporations and the wealthy. Millions of Americans would lose life-saving coverage, including seniors, children, veterans, people with disabilities, workers who don’t get insurance through their jobs, and people who take care of their children or elderly parents. Not only will hardworking families lose their coverage, but rural hospitals will shut down, seniors will be forced to leave their nursing homes, and people fighting cancer or addiction will lose access to critical treatment. Senate Republicans need to stand up for their constituents and reject this bill or face the consequences at the ballot box. 

WHAT: Mobile Billboard

WHERE: Capitol Hill and the Mall

WHEN: 10 AM ET to 6 PM ET

Sample Ad Script for ME:

Narrator: With everyday costs as high as they are, no one can afford to lose their health care. Yet, right now, some in Congress are trying to pass the biggest cut to Medicaid in history. 

Their plan means sixteen million Americans could lose health care. Seniors, veterans, and children with disabilities. All to give another tax break to billionaires and big corporations.

Our Senator, Susan Collins, can stop this from happening.

Call Senator Collins and tell her we’re counting on her to stop these cuts to our health care.

ADVISORY: Protect Our Care Urges Senate Republicans to Reject Catastrophic Health Care Cuts With Lite Brite Display and Mobile Billboard

***MEDIA ADVISORY FOR THURSDAY JUNE 26 AND FRIDAY JUNE 27***

View the Ads Here

Washington, D.C. – Protect Our Care is holding two events this week as Senate Republicans march towards a vote on their Big, Ugly Bill ahead of their self-imposed July 4th deadline. On Thursday, June 26 at 9 PM ET, a Lite-Brite display telling Republicans “Hands Off Health Care” will be held on the east front of the Senate steps. On Friday, June 27 from 10 AM ET to 6 PM ET, a mobile billboard will circle Capitol Hill and the Mall playing ads targeting six key Senate Republicans: Lisa Murkowski (AK), Dan Sullivan (AK), Susan Collins (ME), Thom Tillis (NC), Shelley Moore Capito (WV), and Jim Justice (WV). The action follows Protect Our Care’s projection on the RNC building in D.C. which blasted Senators Mitch Connell and Joni Ernst for their comments mocking and dismissing constituents worried about Medicaid cuts. 

The GOP bill makes the largest health care cuts in history, slashing Medicaid and dismantling the Affordable Care Act in order to fund tax breaks for big corporations and the wealthy. Millions of Americans would lose life-saving coverage, including seniors, children, veterans, people with disabilities, workers who don’t get insurance through their jobs, and people who take care of their children or elderly parents. Not only will hardworking families lose their health care, but rural hospitals will shut down, seniors will be forced to leave their nursing homes, and people fighting cancer or addiction will lose access to critical treatment. Senate Republicans need to stand up for their constituents and reject this bill or face the consequences at the ballot box. 

THURSDAY

WHAT: Lite-Brite Display

WHERE: East front of the Senate steps

WHEN: 9 PM ET

FRIDAY

WHAT: Mobile Billboard

WHERE: Capitol Hill and the Mall

WHEN: 10 AM ET to 6 PM ET

Sample Ad Script for ME:

Narrator: With everyday costs as high as they are, no one can afford to lose their health care. Yet, right now, some in Congress are trying to pass the biggest cut to Medicaid in history. 

Their plan means sixteen million Americans could lose health care. Seniors, veterans, and children with disabilities. All to give another tax break to billionaires and big corporations.

Our Senator, Susan Collins, can stop this from happening.

Call Senator Collins and tell her we’re counting on her to stop these cuts to our health care.

SHAMEFUL: As Hospitals Sound the Alarm, Senate Republicans Float Barely a Band-Aid to Help Rural Hospitals Survive

Washington, D.C.— According to reporting from Punchbowl, Senate Republicans are circulating a proposal for a $15 billion pity fund for rural hospitals. This is a drop in the bucket compared to the more than $400 billion in projected losses for hospitals in the next 10 years due to GOP proposed cuts to health care. The proposal comes as several Republican Senators express concern over the hospital closures their Big, Ugly Bill would cause. Even with this meager “fix,” hundreds of hospitals will close at the hands of Republicans, who are dead set on handing out trillions in tax breaks to the rich by passing the largest cuts to Medicaid in history. Read more in our latest report.

“This fund is a band-aid over a bullet hole,” said Protect Our Care President Brad Woodhouse. “Senate Republicans are trying to provide themselves political cover for their wildly unpopular and dangerous bill, but the American people will know the truth. $15 billion for rural hospitals is no consolation prize after they pass a trillion dollars in cuts to Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act. Hospitals will still close, people will be left without care, and many will suffer and die. These Republican policies will kill people, and this fund won’t stop that hard truth.”

HEADLINES: SCOTUS Hears Arguments In Kennedy v. Braidwood, The Case That Puts Free Preventative Care At Risk

Yesterday, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Kennedy, et al. v. Braidwood, a case in which far-right extremists are seeking to invalidate a key portion of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) that requires insurers to cover lifesaving preventive services for free, including cancer screenings, statins to address high cholesterol levels, mental health screenings, and HIV prevention medication. Providing no-cost coverage of lifesaving screenings and services has saved innumerable lives, improved health outcomes, and reduced disparities in care. In total, over 150 million Americans have benefited from this provision of the ACA. Read more about the case here. Last week, Protect Our Care held a press call warning of the threats to American health care posed by the case.

Court watchers report the Supreme Court seems poised to reject the right-wing plaintiffs’ claims, but the threat does not stop there. Given the Trump administration’s ongoing attacks on experts, science, and health care, they are likely to undermine the availability of free vaccines, contraception, mental health, and other critical services.

Politico: Supreme Court Appears to Reject Conservative Argument Over Obamacare Provision.

  • “But while President Joe Biden’s Justice Department argued that eliminating the coverage requirements would harm the public’s health, Trump’s attorneys focused exclusively Monday on Kennedy’s supervisory power. That argument has made progressive health advocates who filed amicus briefs in the case nervous — particularly given Kennedy’s views about vaccines and other preventive health care that contradict the medical community’s consensus, as well as his reported desire to overhaul other HHS advisory committees.”

Jezebel: This Supreme Court Case Underscored How Much Power RFK Jr. Has Over Our Health Insurance.

  • “Leslie Dach, a former HHS aide who now leads the group Protect Our Care, told Politico: ‘We are very, very nervous that they will take a sledgehammer to vaccines, take a sledgehammer to contraception and a number of other preventative services that the American people benefit from and need.’”

Axios: ACA Preventive Care Case Reaches Supreme Court.

  • “Progressive advocacy groups remain concerned that the Trump administration could use its authority to limit coverage of vaccines, contraception and other scientifically backed preventive services. ‘We’re going to have to remain very, very vigilant in seeing how the administration, which thankfully is defending the law now, behaves when the power is in their hands,’ Leslie Dach, chair of Protect Our Care, told reporters last week.”

Politico: Obamacare Returns to SCOTUS, With Preventive Care on the Line.

  • “‘It’s important that they’re looking to protect this authority, but we’re hoping that they’re not just doing it because they want the ability to ruin our health care,’ said Leslie Dach, a former senior counselor at HHS who now leads the group Protect Our Care. ‘We are very, very nervous that they will take a sledgehammer to vaccines, take a sledgehammer to contraception and a number of other preventative services that the American people benefit from and need.’”

The Hill: SCOTUS to Hear Obamacare Free Care Case.

  • “‘The minute that provision gets struck down … we will be back at the mercy of the insurance companies. They’ll still get the same premium from you, but they’ll offer less services,’ said Leslie Dach, executive chair of the Democratic-aligned group Protect Our Care.” 

Politico Pulse: Obamacare in Court … Again.

  • “‘It’s important that they’re looking to protect this authority, but we’re hoping that they’re not just doing it because they want the ability to ruin our health care,’ said Leslie Dach, a former senior counselor at HHS who now leads the group Protect Our Care. ‘We are very, very nervous that they will take a sledgehammer to vaccines, take a sledgehammer to contraception and a number of other preventative services that the American people benefit from and need.’”

AP News: US Supreme Court Appears Likely to Uphold Obamacare’s Preventive Care Coverage Mandate.

  • “The case could have big ramifications for the law’s preventive care coverage requirements for an estimated 150 million Americans. Medications and services that could be affected include statins to prevent heart disease, lung cancer screenings, HIV-prevention drugs and medication to lower the chance of breast cancer for high-risk women.”

ABC News: Supreme Court Divided Over Obamacare Mandate for No-Cost Preventive Health Benefits.

  • “‘The ACA’s preventive services requirement has been a game-changer, providing access to evidence-based preventive care and early detection of serious medical conditions,’ said Wayne Turner, a senior attorney at the National Health Law Program, a nonprofit group that advocates for low-income communities. ‘The ACA’s coverage and cost-sharing protections are especially important for low-income persons, who will be harmed most if the Supreme Court refuses to allow the ACA provision to stand.’”

The New York Times: Supreme Court Wrestles With Challenge to Affordable Care Act Over Free Preventive Care. 

  • “But the case, Kennedy v. Braidwood Management, could have broader implications for tens of millions of Americans who receive a wide array of free health care services, including cancer and diabetes screenings, medications to reduce heart disease and strokes, and eye ointment for newborns to prevent infections causing blindness. A ruling in favor of the challengers could mean that insurers would no longer be required to offer free coverage for any care the United States Preventive Services Task Force has recommended since 2010.”

CBS: Dispute Involving Affordable Care Act’s Preventive Care Coverage Faces Supreme Court.

  • “If the Supreme Court affirms the decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, major hospital associations and leading nonprofits advocating on behalf of breast cancer and HIV patients have warned it would limit access to life-saving medical care for millions of patients, as insurers would no longer be required to cover at no cost to patients the services recommended by the task force.”

CNN: Supreme Court Could Help Preserve Obamacare’s No-Cost Preventive Care Task Force.

  • “At stake is the ability of millions of Americans to access cost-free services under the Affordable Care Act such as cancer screenings, statins that help prevent cardiovascular disease, PrEP drugs that help prevent HIV infections, and counseling referrals for pregnant and postpartum women at increased risk of depression. The task force’s recommendations were challenged by a Texas business, Braidwood Management, that objected on religious grounds to covering certain preventive services, including the PrEP medications.”

The Washington Post: Challenge to ACA Preventive-Care Panel Draws Skepticism From Supreme Court.

  • “Health-care providers and nonprofit organizations say the closely watched case could affect critical health services for many Americans who might otherwise not have access to them.”

Fierce Healthcare: Supreme Court Appears Willing to Save ACA Preventive Services Task Force.

  • “‘Stepping back and looking at the bigger picture, the challengers’ claim is supposedly about political accountability,’ said Andrew Pincus, a partner at law firm Mayer Brown. ‘But if that is what they really were after, it’s been achieved: the government agrees that the Secretary can control whether recommendations become binding on private parties through his power to appoint and remove USPSTF members and his power to issue regulations determining when and whether recommendations become effective.’”

The Advocate: Justices Kavanaugh & Barrett Signal They May Uphold Access to PrEP and Preventative Care Protections. 

  • “The case began as a religious objection to PrEP and has expanded into a full-blown assault on the ACA’s preventive care guarantees. LGBTQ+ and public health advocates warn that a ruling in favor of the plaintiffs would allow insurers to begin denying or charging for services currently guaranteed to be free—like STI testing, diabetes screening, contraception, and maternal care.”

Mother Jones: The Latest Supreme Court Case Targeting the ACA Comes from a Longtime Anti-Gay Activist.

  • “‘The people who are going to be hurt most are the people who can’t just pull out a credit card and pay full cost for a service, or pay a $50 co-pay or an $80 co-pay,’ says Wayne Turner, senior attorney at the National Health Law Program. ‘It is a literal lifesaver for people to be able to have some early detection.’” 

Fierce Healthcare: ‘At the Mercy of Insurance Companies’: Supreme Court Braces for ACA Preventive Coverage Suit Oral Arguments.

  • “‘I think at the end of the day, we need to make sure we understand this is going to mean more deaths at even a higher cost to Americans, and there’s no question that there’s savings down the line when we do this,’ said Georges Benjamin, M.D., executive director at the American Public Health Association. If the provision is overturned, it will lead to more deaths from cancer, strokes and drug use, he added.”
  • “‘It was an easy choice,’ said Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison in a press briefing April 16. ‘First, the plaintiff’s argument doesn’t hold up and relies on bad faith reading of the appointments clause, and the court could also take steps to repair the provision in question without destroying these essential programs.’”

STAT: In Braidwood v. Kennedy, Supreme Court Is Hearing Challenge to ACA Rule Requiring Free Preventive Care.

  • “‘This is about giving them the power, to some extent. This is a fight to say, the secretary has the power. If they win, they can uphold the experts’ recommendations or attempt to veto them, which then would likely trigger a court challenge,’ said Andrew Pincus, a lawyer representing the American Public Health Association in an amicus brief filed to the Court.”

Washington Examiner: Supreme Court Skeptical Of Undoing Obamacare Preventive Coverage Mandates.

  • “Braidwood Management, a Texas Christian-owned business, argued that the task force members ought to be construed as ‘primary officers,’ meaning it is unconstitutional for them to be appointed by the secretary of Health and Human Services, as they are today. Instead, they should be subject to presidential appointment and Senate confirmation under the appointment clause of the Constitution.”
  • “If the court rules in favor of Braidwood, all changes that the task force has made since 2010 would be invalidated, including the HIV medication PrEP, cancer screenings, and certain maternal care measures.”

STAT: Opinion: Employers Should Continue Waiving Preventive Care Out-Of-Pocket Costs Regardless Of How Supreme Court Rules.

  • “The Supreme Court has several options in this case: It could rule narrowly or broadly in favor of the plaintiffs, rule against them, or avoid making a substantive ruling altogether. A narrow ruling for the plaintiffs might apply only to their specific circumstances, leaving preventive care provisions intact for other employers. A broader ruling could eliminate the requirement for insurers to cover services recommended by the USPSTF without cost-sharing — potentially limited to those recommendations issued after 2010, including PrEP. A very broad decision could strike down all preventive service mandates under the Affordable Care Act. Alternatively, the court may rule against the plaintiffs entirely or decline to decide the case on procedural grounds.”
  • “Preventive health care coverage has proven to be a worthwhile benefit that saves lives and improves health. Regardless of the Supreme Court decision, there are compelling reasons for employers to maintain coverage of preventive services without cost sharing like deductibles and copays.”

FACT SHEET: Trump’s Crusade Against The ACA Continues With Renewed Attacks On The Law In His Second Term

Since its passage 15 years ago, the Affordable Care Act (ACA) has become the bedrock of American health care, with millions relying on its coverage and protections. But undoing the ACA and its protections for over 100 million people with pre-existing conditions has been one of Donald Trump’s core fixations since announcing his presidential campaign ten years ago. He spearheaded a failed attempt to repeal and replace the law in 2017, supported efforts to overturn it in court, and spent his first term working to undermine the ACA at every turn by ending outreach, limiting enrollment, and promoting plans circumventing the law. Now in his second term, Trump has picked up right where he left off in 2020, working overtime to revoke Biden-era executive protections, slash outreach, and limit enrollment once again. But he isn’t stopping there. This time, he is determined to target the law’s core features – including Medicaid expansion and free coverage for preventive services like vaccines – and is even working to gut the very agency that ensures the ACA is properly administered, implemented, and enforced. The Trump-led plan to gut health care will only take us backward and throw the entire health care system into chaos.

The Second Trump Administration’s First Executive Actions Have Targeted the ACA. The second Trump administration has relentlessly targeted the ACA’s consumer protections and health care coverage provisions that provide affordable care to millions of Americans. In January 2025, within days of retaking office, Trump revoked a Biden administration order that prioritized protecting and strengthening the Affordable Care Act by pushing federal agencies to extend enrollment periods and dedicate extra funding for the third-party Navigators that help people enroll in ACA insurance. Trump also revoked a Biden administration executive order that aimed to lower prescription drug costs for people on Medicaid – including those enrolled thanks to Medicaid expansion – by analyzing new payment models.

The Trump Administration Is Gutting ACA Enrollment Outreach. In February, the Trump administration officially cut nearly 90 percent of ACA Navigator funding, mirroring a similar move in 2017 that coincided with a dramatic reduction in ACA Marketplace enrollment throughout the first Trump administration. On March 1, the White House unilaterally designated English as the official language of the U.S., rescinding requirements that government entities provide language assistance to individuals who do not speak English. Although the order does not direct agencies to change existing policies or programs, the action could limit outreach to consumers seeking health care with limited English proficiency.

The Trump Administration Is Working To Curb ACA Enrollment By Shorting The Enrollment Period, Imposing New Requirements, and Barring ‘Dreamers’ From Marketplaces. In March, the administration announced new rules designed to significantly curb enrollment by shortening the enrollment period, taking away low-income families’ ability to sign up for coverage outside of the six-week enrollment period, imposing more paperwork burdens for enrolling and proving eligibility for tax credits, and barring immigrants with ‘Dreamer’ status from enrolling in ACA Marketplace plans. In 2017, the Trump administration similarly halved the duration of Open Enrollment, reducing the period from three months to just 45 days.

The Trump Administration Is Slashing The Federal Workforce Overseeing Open Enrollment. Trump and Elon Musk are working to cut the bureaucratic apparatus that ensures that the ACA continues to be enforced and implemented without interruption. They fired around 1,900 probationary workers from the Department of Health and Human Services, and the Trump administration hinted they could fire as many as 5,200.

The Trump Administration Endorsed Plans To Cut ACA Medicaid Expansion Funding. In February, President Trump endorsed a budget resolution later passed by House Republicans that included budget cuts of nearly $1 trillion – a threshold that would require cuts to Medicaid. One of the proposed cuts includes reducing the federal match rate for Medicaid expansion under the ACA, which would force states to spend more than 25 percent more to foot the bill to the tune of nearly $50 billion. Reducing the federal match rate would threaten state budgets and would even end Medicaid expansion automatically in states with “trigger laws” designed to rescind Medicaid expansion if the federal match rate drops below a certain level.

The Trump Administration Is Targeting Services Covered Under the ACA. The Trump administration is undermining preventive services covered through the ACA by postponing the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) meeting – which offers guidance on vaccine approvals and influences which shots insurers are required to cover under the ACA. Additionally, new rules introduced by the Trump administration in March include a ban on ACA Marketplace insurers covering gender-affirming care as an essential health benefit.

GOP War on Health Care: Trump Administration’s Sabotage of ACA Open Enrollment Will Result in Millions of Americans Losing Coverage

Trump’s Navigator Funding Cuts, Much Like in His First Term, Are an Effort to Cripple and Repeal the ACA

Washington, D.C. – The Trump administration today announced that it is cutting nearly 90 percent of ACA Navigator funding that currently helps people enroll in affordable health coverage. Navigators help connect people in underserved communities to health care, ensuring that language barriers or confusing paperwork don’t stand in the way of families getting covered. When Trump cut the ACA Navigator program during his first term in office, enrollment in ACA coverage dropped by over one million people. In response, Protect Our Care Chair Leslie Dach issued the following statement:

“Donald Trump is doing everything he can to rip health care away from millions of Americans. Today, his administration announced they are slashing critical funding that has helped millions of Americans obtain coverage. Over one million Americans lost their coverage when Trump carried out this same attack on ACA Navigator funding the last time he was in office, and hardworking families will once again suffer from this appalling decision. These drastic cuts make clear that the Trump administration will stop at nothing to deliberately sabotage this country’s health care system and leave millions of Americans uninsured.”

Background 

Trump’s Navigator Funding Cuts During His First Term Contributed To People Losing Their Coverage. Trump cut the ACA Navigator program by over 80 percent during his first term in office, from $63 million in the final year of the Obama administration to just $10 million per year from 2018 to 2020. During the first Trump administration, enrollment in ACA coverage dropped by over 1.27 million people and a KFF consumer assistance survey found that there was a significant need for enrollment help while navigating the complex application and enrollment process. 

The Biden-Harris Administration Made Historic Investments In The Navigator Program. Ahead of the 2022 open enrollment cycle, the Biden-Harris Administration invested $80 million to the Navigator program, quadrupling the Navigator budget at that time and helping increase enrollment that year from just over 12 million to 14.5 million people. For the 2023 open enrollment cycle, the Biden-Harris administration invested a historic near $100 million into the Navigator program to help consumers navigate the application and enrollment process for the ACA Marketplace, Medicaid, and CHIP to make health care more affordable and accessible to everyone.

During The First Open Enrollment Period, 10.6 Million Americans Were Assisted By Navigators. “More than 4,400 Assister Programs, employing more than 28,000 full-time-equivalent staff and volunteers, helped an estimated 10.6 million people during the first Open Enrollment period.” [Kaiser Family Foundation, 7/15/14]

Trump Regime Launches Cover Up Of Its Health Care Sabotage


Washington DC — As reported by the Associated Press, the Trump White House is claiming it has done nothing to “sabotage” the Affordable Care Act. In a report expected to be released today, the Council of Economic Advisers is trying to claim that the administration’s relentless war on Americans’ health care does not constitute “sabotage.” This is blatantly false. Brad Woodhouse, executive director of Protect Our Care, issued the following statement:

“We’re just over a month into 2019 but this whopper is already in the running for the lie of the year. The Trump administration’s relentless sabotage of our health care system is well-documented. In November, voters took to the polls and rejected the Republican war on health care, and the fact that this administration is launching a massive cover-up of their sabotage means that they’re already bracing themselves against the wrath of voters in 2020.”

Don’t believe us? Take a look at our sabotage tracker:

February 2019

  • Trump predicts the Affordable Care Act will be “terminated” through the Texas lawsuit seeking to overturn the law.
  • In an effort to restrict access to information about women’s reproductive health, the Trump administration removes web pages associated with the ACA and its contraceptive coverage from HHS’s Office of Population Affairs website.

January 2019

  • Thanks to GOP sabotage, the uninsured rate surges to the its highest level since 2014. Roughly seven million fewer people are estimated to have health care now than did two years ago.
  • The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) proposes changes to the ACA’s benefit and payment parameters, reducing subsidies available to those who purchase health care through the exchange, increasing premiums, and raising the out-of-pocket maximum for people with employer-sponsored health care.
  • In a win for big Pharma, the Trump administration proposes changes to the rebate system that would raise premiums, benefit pharmaceutical companies, and contain no mandate to lower list prices of drugs.

December 2018

  • Hand-picked Federal Judge Reed O’Connor rules in favor of twenty conservative states to overturn the Affordable Care Act, jeopardizing coverage for 17 million people and ripping away the ACA’s vital consumer protections such as protections for people with pre-existing conditions.
  • Under the Trump administration’s relentless sabotage, the uninsured rate increases for the first time since 2010. As the Kaiser Family Foundation finds, “In 2017, the uninsured rate reversed course and, for the first time since the passage of the ACA, rose significantly to 10.2% [from 10%].”

November 2018

  • Trump administration issues new guidance urging states to “tear down basic pillars of the Affordable Care Act, demolishing a basic rule” that federal subsidies can only be used to purchase ACA-compliant plans. Experts warn against this move, saying it will push affordable, comprehensive care further out of reach for individuals with pre-existing conditions.
  • Under the Trump administration, the number of uninsured children grows for the first time in nearly a decade. After a decade of steady decreases in the number of uninsured children, in 2017 the number of uninsured children increased from 3.6 million to 3.9 million.

October 2018

  • Republicans appoint Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court. Kavanaugh is known to be hostile to the Affordable Care Act.
  • The Trump administration issues guidance that allows federal subsidies to be used to purchase junk plans that can deny coverage to people with pre-existing conditions.

September 2018

  • The Trump administration’s Department of Justice joins twenty conservative states in court in opening arguments to argue that the Affordable Care Act’s protections for people with pre-existing conditions should be overturned.
  • Nearly 4,600 Arkansans are unable to meet Arkansas’ reporting requirements for the state’s Medicaid work requirements and lose Medicaid coverage.

August 2018

  • Trump administration finalizes rule for bare-bones short-term plans that are exempt from key consumer protections, such as the requirement that insurance covers prescription drugs, maternity care, and hospitalization.

July 2018

  • CMS halts risk adjustment payments, that enable insurance companies to cover everyone, regardless of whether they are healthy or sick.
  • Trump Administration slashes funding for non-profit health navigator groups, that help people shop for coverage, from $36 million to $10 million. CMS encourages groups to use the remaining funds to push people to sign up for junk plans that skirt important consumer protections.
  • President Trump nominates Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court. Kavanaugh has previously forced a young woman to continue a pregnancy against her will and has criticized Justice Roberts for upholding the Affordable Care Act’s constitutionality.

June 2018

  • Department of Justice takes to the courts to argue that insurance companies should be able to discriminate against as many as 130 million Americans with a pre-existing condition.
  • Republican coalition, the Health Policy Consensus Group, released their latest proposal to repeal the Affordable Care Act, which would gut protections for people with pre-existing conditions, let insurance companies charge older people an age tax, and deny key coverage for basic services like maternity care.
  • Trump Administration finalizes proposal to expand access to association health plans that skirt key consumer protections.

May 2018

  • President Trump boasts about health care sabotage: “We will have gotten rid of a majority of Obamacare.”
  • Trump Administration enlists help of former drug lobbyist in writing its drug plan.
  • Congressional Republicans try to use annual farm bill to authorize $65 million in taxpayer funding to set up association health plans, which can  exclude prescription drug coverage, mental health care, and maternity care.

April 2018

  • House Republicans vote on a balanced budget amendment that would cut Medicaid by $700 billion over ten years, $114 billion in a single year alone.
  • Trump Administration limits access to assistance for consumers who want to enroll in marketplace coverage. This change removes the requirement that every area has at least two “navigator” groups to provide consumer assistance and that one be local. Now, just one group could cover entire states or groups of states.

March 2018

  • Republicans sabotage efforts to pass a bipartisan bill that would have stabilized Affordable Care Act marketplaces by insisting the bill restrict access to abortion.

February 2018

  • The Trump Administration announces that it will expand access to short-term health plans that do not have to comply with key consumer protection provisions required by the Affordable Care Act.
  • Urban Institute calculates that repeal of the individual mandate and expansion of short term plans will increase individual market premiums by an average 18.2 percent in 2019.
  • Trump Administration releases budget that calls for the Affordable Care Act to be replaced by Graham-Cassidy, in a move that experts predict would reduce health coverage for 32 million Americans.

January 2018

  • The Trump Administration announces that it will support states that impose onerous work requirements on Americans covered by Medicaid, and approves Kentucky’s worst-in-the-nation waiver the next day.
  • The Trump Administration announces a move to allow providers to discriminate by allowing them to deny patient care for almost any reason.
  • The Trump Administration makes plans to announce even more exemptions from the requirement people have health coverage before this provision is repealed altogether.

December 2017

  • The Trump Administration proposes a rule to expand association health plans, which would gut consumer protections, raise costs for people with pre-existing conditions and further destabilize the insurance markets.
  • Congressional Republicans pass their tax scam, which doubles as a sneaky repeal of the Affordable Care Act  by kicking 13 million people off of their insurance and raising premiums by double digits for millions more.

November 2017

  • Republicans refuse to move forward on the bipartisan Alexander-Murray bill to address the CSR crisis even though it had a filibuster-proof majority in the Senate.

October 2017

  • The Trump Administration takes direct aim at birth control by rolling back a rule that guaranteed women access to contraception. (A court has since questioned the legality of the action.)
  • President Trump signs an Executive Order to roll back key consumer protections that will result in garbage insurance, raise premiums, reduce coverage and again expose millions of Americans to discrimination based on pre-existing conditions.
  • The Trump Administration dramatically cuts in-person assistance to help people sign up for 2018 health coverage.
  • After threatening for months to stop funding cost-sharing reduction payments (CSRs) that help lower deductibles and out-of-pocket costs, the Trump Administration stops the payments altogether. The CBO finds that failing to make these payments will increase premiums by 20% and add nearly $200 billion to the debt.

September 2017

  • The Administration orders the Department of Health and Human Services’ regional directors to stop participating in Open Enrollment events. Mississippi Health Advocacy Program Executive Director Roy Mitchell says, “I didn’t call it sabotage…But that’s what it is.”

August 2017

  • The Administration cuts the outreach advertising budget for Open Enrollment by 90 percent, from $100 million to just $10 million – which resulted in as many as 1.1 million fewer people getting covered.

July 2017

  • The Trump Administration uses funding intended to support health insurance enrollment to launch a multimedia propaganda campaign against the Affordable Care Act.
  • President Trump, again, threatens to end cost-sharing reduction payments.

June 2017

  • Senate Republicans embark on a monthslong failed attempt to pass BCRA, Skinny Repeal and Graham-Cassidy, all repeal bills that would have caused millions of Americans to lose their health coverage and raised premiums by double digits for millions more. They would have ended Medicaid as we know it, putting the care of children, seniors and people with disabilities at risk.

May 2017

  • House Republicans vote for and pass a health care repeal bill that would cause 23 million people to lose coverage and gut protections for people with pre-existing conditions. It would have imposed an age tax and allowed insurers to charge people over 50 five times more for coverage and ended Medicaid as we know it, putting the care of seniors, children and people with disabilities in jeopardy.

April 2017

  • The Trump Administration cuts the number of days people could sign up for coverage during open enrollment by half, from 90 days to 45 days.
  • In an effort to convince Democrats to negotiate a repeal of the Affordable Care Act, President Trump threatens to cut off cost-sharing reduction payments (CSRs) that help low-income marketplace customers pay for out-of-pocket costs.

March 2017

  • The Trump Administration sends a letter to governors encouraging them to submit proposals which include provisions such as work requirements that make it harder for Medicaid beneficiaries to get affordable care and increase the number of people who are uninsured.

February 2017

  • The Trump Administration proposes a rule to weaken Marketplace coverage and raise premiums for millions of middle-class families.

January 2017

  • On his first day in office, President Trump signs an Executive Order directing the administration to identify every way it can unravel the Affordable Care Act.
  • Also on January 20th, the Department of Health and Human Services begins to remove information on how to sign up for the Affordable Care Act.
  • The Trump Administration pulls funding for outreach and advertising for the final days of 2017 enrollment. This move is estimated to have reduced enrollment by nearly 500,000.

Reminder: Those Who Know Health Care The Best Say The Texas Lawsuit Is the Worst

Tomorrow, oral argument will be held in the case Texas, et al. vs. United States, et al., which not only threatens protections for people with pre-existing conditions, but a whole host of provisions of tens of millions of Americans rely upon for their care and coverage. If the court rules in favor of the Republican states and the Trump administration, critical Affordable Care Act protections would vanish overnight, unleashing chaos in our entire health care system. Just see what the experts say.

Patient groups, physicians, and hospitals emphasize how much the lawsuit could threaten care for people across the country:

  • American Public Health Association’s Executive Director, Dr. Georges Benjamin, Says the Lawsuit Could Be The Most Dangerous Effort To Destabilize The American Healthcare System Yet. “Overturning the ACA will result in a catastrophic loss of coverage for millions of Americans. According to a new analysis by the Urban Institute, if the ACA is invalidated, more than 17 million people would lose coverage in 2019. That would be a 50% increase in the number of uninsured in just one year, including 12 million people who receive insurance through the marketplaces created by the ACA and 2.3 million young adults who gained coverage through its expansion of dependent care. Striking down the ACA will jeopardize the healthcare of those who need it most. Nearly 12 million low-income Americans who were enrolled in Medicaid through the ACA would likely lose coverage…This lawsuit could be the most dangerous effort to destabilize the American healthcare system yet. That’s why the American Public Health Association has submitted friend-of-the-court briefs opposing this suit, along with many other health organizations, insurers, economists and members of the business community.” [Los Angeles Times, Benjamin, 9/4/18]          

 

  • American Cancer Society, American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network, American Diabetes Association, American Heart Association, American Lung Association, and National Multiple Sclerosis Society: “Striking Down These Provisions Would Be Catastrophic And Have Dire Consequences For Many Patients With Serious Illnesses.” Invalidating the ACA in whole or in part “would be devastating for the millions of Americans who suffer from serious illness or have preexisting conditions and rely on those protections under current law to obtain life-saving health care. If either the plaintiffs’ or the administration’s position were adopted by the court, people with serious illness are likely to be denied coverage due to their preexisting conditions or charged such high premiums because of their health status that they will be unable to afford any coverage that may be offered. Without access to comprehensive coverage, patients will be forced to delay, skip, or forego care. Striking down these provisions would be catastrophic and have dire consequences for many patients with serious illnesses.” [American Cancer Society et. al, 6/14/18

 

  • American Medical Association, The American Academy of Family Physicians, The American College of Physicians, The American Academy of Pediatrics, and the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry: “​Invalidating The Guaranteed-issue And Community Rating Provisions—or The ​Entire A​CA—Would Have A Devastating Impact On Doctors, Patients, And The American Health Care System As A Whole.” “Congress declined to do what the Plaintiffs ask this Court to do for a reason: the consequences of repealing the ACA would be staggering…Plaintiffs’ proposed remedies . . . would strip health care from tens of millions of Americans who depend on the ACA; produce skyrocketing insurance costs; and sow chaos in the nation’s health care system​…The ACA’s ‘nationwide protections for Americans with pre-existing health conditions’ has played a ‘key role’ in allowing 3.6 million people to obtain affordable health insurance. Severing those vital insurance reforms would leave millions without much-needed insurance.” [AMA et. al, 6/14/18]

 

  • American Hospital Association, Federation of American Hospitals, The Catholic Health Association of the United States, and Association of American Medical Colleges: “A judicial repeal would have severe consequences for America’s hospitals, which would be forced to shoulder the greater uncompensated-care burden that the ACA’s repeal would create.” The relief sought by Texas and its allies “would have devastating consequences, kicking millions of Americans off of coverage and inflicting on them all the harms that come with being uninsured. These harms would fall on the low-income families least able to cope with them. ​And a judicial repeal would have severe consequences for America’s hospitals, which would be forced to shoulder the greater uncompensated-care burden that the ACA’s repeal would create.” [American Hospital Association et. al, 6/14/18]

 

  • Public Health Scholars and the American Public Health Association: “The Foreseeable Public Health Consequences Of The Injunction Are Nothing Short of Catastrophic.” “Without the ACA, the health of millions of Americans would be harmed. Consider the grim analyses of proposed legislation partially repealing the ACA: In 2017, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (“CBO”) assessed the impact of a bill partially repealing the ACA and found (among other things) that it would, in “the first new plan year following enactment of the bill” alone, increase the number of uninsured Americans by 18 million. That number would grow to 27 million after the “year following the elimination of the Medicaid expansion,” and then to 32 million by 2026. Still more is at stake here: Unlike the injunctive relief plaintiffs seek, the bill analyzed by CBO would have staggered its partial repeal of the ACA to avoid catastrophic results. Here, plaintiffs ask the Court to eliminate, as preliminary injunctive relief, a complex statute in its eighth year of implementation—a statute whose repeal through democratic means has been attempted innumerable times but has never succeeded.” [Public Health Scholars et. al, 6/14/18]

 

  • AARP: Before ACA’s Protections, Discrimination Against Those With Pre-Existing Conditions, Age Rating, And Annual And Lifetime Caps Made Accessing Health Care Out Of Reach For Older Adults. “Uninsured pre-Medicare adults faced nearly insurmountable challenges to securing insurance because they were denied coverage based on preexisting conditions or offered costly policies that excluded coverage for needed care. Even without preexisting conditions, insurance premiums for older adults were as much as 11 times greater than their younger counterparts solely based on their age. Even a healthy person who was age 50 to 64 with no preexisting conditions faced markedly higher insurance premium rates than a younger person. Age rating put the cost of insurance out of reach for many pre-Medicare adults. Annual and lifetime caps—which were easily exceeded by treatment for a single illness such as cancer, heart disease, or diabetes—meant that many older adults either went without treatment until they became eligible for Medicare or incurred financially ruinous medical debt.” [AARP, 6/14/18]

Health insurance companies warn that the lawsuit could lead to mass coverage losses:

  • America’s Health Insurance Plans: “Abruptly threatening or even cutting off billions of federal dollars that allow individuals to purchase insurance and that fund benefits offered through Medicaid or Medicare would have devastating effects.”“The healthcare system, while constantly evolving, cannot pivot to a new (or, worse yet, non-existent) set of rules without consequences. Abruptly threatening or even cutting off billions of federal dollars that allow individuals to purchase insurance and that fund benefits offered through Medicaid or Medicare would have devastating effects.​ Enjoining enforcement of federal laws like the federally-facilitated marketplaces and the products sold on them would be similarly disruptive.” [AHIP, 6/14/18]

 

  • The Ability Of Millions Of Low-Income, Medically Vulnerable People To Access Necessary Treatments Would Be Cast Into Doubt. “The Medicaid program would likewise experience significant disruptions​. Stopping the funding for individuals made newly eligible for Medicaid under the ACA would harm the 34 states that have chosen to expand their Medicaid programs and potentially disrupt healthcare coverage for the 12 million people added as a result of that expansion​…The coverage of millions of low-income and medically-vulnerable patients—and their ability to receive necessary treatments and prescription drugs—would be cast into doubt. At the same time, state Medicaid programs would see drug costs increase considerably for all enrollees (including children, disabled, and elderly) due to the loss of the ACA’s enhanced prescription drug rebates​.” [AHIP, 6/14/18]

Small businesses, economists, and the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) demonstrate how DOJ’s lawsuit would jeopardize Americans’ health while harming the economy:

  • Small Business Majority Foundation: “Before the enactment of ACA, this linkage pressured individuals to seek out and then stay put in jobs that provided affordable health insurance—a phenomenon known as ‘job lock’—because people clung to jobs with affordable health coverage even when they might have otherwise chosen to start businesses or pursue more attractive job opportunities with growing small businesses.” Small business owners, their employees, and self-employed individuals have benefited significantly from the many different reforms enacted as part of the Affordable Care Act, especially the creation of the individual marketplaces with tax credits, the optional expansion of Medicaid, and small group market reforms. Millions more working Americans, who are self employed or employees of the Nation’s small businesses, now have health insurance that they would not have had without the Act. The harm they will suffer if the Act is enjoined is just one of many reasons why the public interest is not served by Plaintiffs’ sweeping requested injunction.” [Small Business Majority Foundation, 6/14/18]

 

  • Service Employees International Union (SEIU): “A Decision Striking Down The ACA Not Only Would Strip Health Coverage And Protections From Nearly 30 Million People And Remove Quality Care Incentives For Providers But Also Would Have Catastrophic Economic Consequences.” “Loss of the ACA would cause an enormous surge in the number of uninsured Americans, which would in turn increase the burden of uncompensated medical care costs borne by hospitals and other medical care providers by an estimated $1 trillion between 2019 and 2028. The massive reduction in federal funding would lead to the loss of up to 2.6 million jobs. And because the health care sector accounts for such a large percentage of the overall U.S. economy, eliminating the ACA would result in a $2.6 trillion reduction in total business activity between 2019 and 2023.” [SEIU, 6/14/18]

 

  • Linda Blumberg, Fellow At Urban Institute’s Health Policy Center, And Sherry Glied, Dean Of Public Service At New York University: Lawsuit Would “Damage A Broad Swath Of The American Economy.” “We are economists, so we cannot address the legal questions. But we know what would happen if the court eliminated the ACA’s protections for people with health problems or invalidated the law entirely. The Urban Institute estimates that 17.1 million more people would become uninsured in 2019, a 50 percent increase in the number of uninsured. A decision for the plaintiffs would go beyond coverage losses. The ACA is complex and touches virtually every area of health care. Consumers and providers have relied on it for over eight years. Invalidating the law would eliminate extensions of coverage for those with employer insurance or Medicare, including preventive services with no cost-sharing, dependent coverage for young adults, and closure of the Medicare ‘donut hole’ that lowers prescriptions costs for seniors. It would throw the Medicare payment system into chaos and would require states to change the systems they built for determining Medicaid eligibility. It would damage a broad swath of the American economy.” [Austin American-Statesman, 8/30/18]

Law professors and the American Medical Association question the legality of the Justice Department’s argument:

  • Josh Blackman, Professor At South Texas College Of Law: Writing Off This Case Would Be A Mistake. “Writing off this case would be a mistake, warned Josh Blackman, a professor at South Texas College of Law and frequent commentator on the healthcare law. ‘If the history of the Affordable Care Act teaches us anything, it is that we should not dismiss legal challenges too quickly,’ he said.” [Los Angeles Times, 9/4/18]
  • Law Professors From Both Sides Of The Aisle, Including Jonathan Adler, Ilya Somin, Nicholas Bagley, Abbe Gluck, and Kevin Walsh, Note That Despite Their Different Policy Perspectives, They Agree That DOJ’s Arguments About Severability Are Inconsistent With The Law. “[A] court’s substitution of its own judgment for that of Congress would be an unlawful usurpation of congressional power and violate basic black-letter principles of severability. Yet that is what the plaintiff States and the United States invite this Court to do.​..This time-shifting of congressional intent misapplies severability doctrine. By expressly amending the statute in 2017 and setting the penalty at zero while not making other changes, Congress eliminated any need to examine earlier legislative findings or to theorize about what Congress would have wanted. Congress told us what it wanted through its 2017 legislative actions.” [Jonathan Adler et. al, 6/14/18]

 

  • American Medical Association, The American Academy of Family Physicians, The American College of Physicians, The American Academy of Pediatrics, and the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry: DOJ Seeks To “Change The Federal Government’s Health Care Policy Through The Courts.” “The plaintiffs do not seek redress for any real, concrete injury because they have suffered none. They simply seek to change the federal government’s health care policy through the courts, rather than through the legislature.” [AMA et. al, 6/14/18]