Obama promised 37 times "no one will take it away"..
More than a dozen states plan to cancel health care policies not in
compliance with ObamaCare in the coming weeks, affecting thousands of
people just before the midterm elections.
"It looks like several hundred thousand people across the country
will receive notices in the coming days and weeks," said Jim Capretta of
the Ethics and Public Policy Center.
The policies are being canceled because states that initially granted
a reprieve at the request of President Obama are no longer willing to
do so.
In coming weeks, 13 states and the District of Columbia plan to
cancel such policies, which generally fall out of compliance with the
Affordable Care Act because they don’t offer the level of coverage the
law requires.
Virginia will be hardest hit, with 250,000 policies expected to be canceled.
And because federal law requires a 60-day notice of any plan changes,
voters will be notified no later than November 1, right before the Nov.
4 midterms.
Many of those forced out of their current plans and into ObamaCare
may not be able to keep their doctors. They also could face higher
deductibles and out-of-pocket expenses, making ObamaCare an election
issue on the eve of voting.
Obama had originally unequivocally promised that underhis health care plan, everyone could keep their doctors and plans.
In 2009, he told the American Medical Association, "If you like your
doctor, you will be able to keep your doctor. Period.If you like your
health care plan, you will be able to keep your health care plan.
Period.No one will take it away. No matter what."
The president later was forced to admit that any plan without the
additional benefits required under ObamaCare faced cancellation.
But that unleashed a nasty political backlash, forcing him to back
down and call for states and insurers to extend those policies forthree
more years.
Some said he didn’t have much choice. "There were some five or six
million people who were at stake here and the federal exchange was in no
condition to even process a few hundred thousand people much less
millions," said Joe Antos of the American Enterprise Institute.
Many states flatly refused to extend and now comes the new round of states that plan to cancel policies.
SOURCE HERE
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