“It’s 100 days into the Trump Presidency and looking more and more like President Trump is no more effective at running the country than his business interests. His book, The Art of the Deal was meant to tout his negotiating skills, but the results were never very successful.”
I wrote this piece for Huffington Post in 2017, after President Trump’s first 100 days as president.
“And neither are his legislative efforts; with no repeal of Obamacare, or tax reform, an immigration ban, new trade policy, and sanctuary city victories in the offing anytime soon because of poorly thought out strategies. Instead, he threatens judges, sanctuary cities, Congress, and even other countries when they don’t support his various executive orders,” I said then.
President Trump’s real intentions are becoming clear on just his second day of his second term in office. He and his Oligarchs want to steal the US Government blind, as the saying goes, by keeping Americans and the media as blind as possible to what he intends.
Will he be more successful in passing his promises in his second term? We should ignore some of his most nonsensical executive orders, such as attempting to amend the 14th Amendment by decree that guarantees citizenship for anyone born in the U.S. 50 states and territories, which he knows can’t be done by decree or executive order.
But the furor that it and the immediate release of 1500 January 6 Capital attackers from prison, mostly convicted felons, will generate enough attention that it will cloak his real intention; reduce or eliminate as many government programs as possible that make life better for ordinary Americans, such as Medicaid, in order to fund more tax cuts.
He has already rescinded the Biden executive order to cap Medicaid spending on drugs that would save Medicaid $billions in costs.
“In reversing the executive order Biden signed in 2022, Trump halted an effort to cap the copayment for generic medications at $2 for Medicare beneficiaries, along with another program that would see Medicare pay less for drugs that receive accelerated approval from the Food and Drug Administration,” according to MarketWatch’s Jessica Hall.
And there is also the question of what Trump will do with regard to the prescription-drug provisions in the Inflation Reduction Act, which would be substantially more consequential. Under the Inflation Reduction Act, Medicare can negotiate the prices of certain prescription drugs with the aim of making drugs more affordable for older adults and people with disabilities.
We can’t blame it just on Trump. Republicans have been trying to deprive Americans of affordable healthcare managed by the government for years. The efforts became serious in the more than 30 unsuccessful attempts to repeal Obamacare since it was passed during President Obama’s first two years in office. It became an obsession in Trump’s first term that I wrote about in Huffington Post at the time.
“What if conservatives succeeded in repealing Obamacare (ACA)? “Republicans' Obamacare repeal bill would leave 17 million more people uninsured next year, and 32 million more in 2026, the Congressional Budget Office said in an estimate Wednesday. It also said premiums would double by 2026. …By 2026, three quarters of the population would live in areas with no insurers participating in the non-group market, due to upward pressure on premiums and downward pressure on enrollment, the report found.”
The accrued savings in health care spending relative to their projected growth prior to the ACA are substantial: Medicare alone is now projected to spend $1 trillion less between 2010 and 2020.
The lobbies behind the Obamacare repeal effort have not succeeded in making more Americans ill. I don’t even want to imagine what the results would be if he and Republicas succeed in downsizing Medicaid benefits as well.
Harlan Green © 2025
Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen
No comments:
Post a Comment