Will The ’Skinny Repeal’ Be Popular?
The Senate is reportedly moving toward voting on a “skinny repeal” which would end the ACA’s individual mandate, its employer mandate, and its medical device tax. Yesterday, Harry pointed out one of the political virtues of this repeal strategy: It targets the individual mandate, one of the least popular elements of the ACA. While some in the GOP leadership clearly see the proposal as just a way to get to a conference committee, anything that is passed by the Senate has a real chance of becoming law.
That said, the Republicans shouldn’t leap to the conclusion that a “skinny repeal” would be as popular as the individual mandate is unpopular. Back when the ACA was being adopted and implemented, some Democrats argued that the Affordable Care Act would become more popular over time because its component parts polled better than the legislation itself. The table below, for instance, comes from a 2011 Kaiser Family Foundation poll that asked about support for 15 separate pieces of the ACA. As you can see, the law’s individual elements poll very well — even the Medicare tax on high earners gets 59 percent favorable ratings.
But notice that the law’s overall favorability — 37 percent — is just a shade above that of the lowest-rated element, the individual mandate, which polls at 35 percent favorable. (Remember, this Kaiser poll is from 2011; the ACA has become more popular since then.) In other words, citizens’ overall evaluations of the ACA are in no way an average of their feelings on the law’s individual elements. And if the “skinny repeal” leads to rising premiums and insurers’ withdrawal from the marketplaces, it’s unlikely to be as popular as the public’s opposition to the individual mandate would imply. In assessing bills, the whole picture is rarely a sum of the parts.
Tiger Brown, Saleel Huprikar and Louis Lin provided research assistance.
The ACA polls better in pieces
Share of survey respondents with favorable views of ACA provisions, 2011
| PROVISION | FAVORABILITY |
|---|---|
| Easy-to-understand health plans | 84% |
| Small business tax credit | 80 |
| Financial help to low/moderate income Americans | 75 |
| Medicare donutnut hole | 74 |
| Independent reviewer | 74 |
| Expand Medicaid | 69 |
| Pre-existing conditions | 67 |
| Government review premium increases | 66 |
| Eliminate co-pays and deductibles | 64 |
| Employer mandate | 63 |
| Insurance company rebates | 60 |
| Increase Medicare payroll tax | 59 |
| Increase premiums of high income Medicare people | 57 |
| Mandatory minimum package benefits | 53 |
| ACA overall | 37 |
| Individual mandate | 35 |
