Obamacare: 74% of newly insured Republicans are happy with the plans they bought

Lakhota

Diamond Member
Jul 14, 2011
167,893
93,943
Republicans who signed up for Obamacare this year are liking their new insurance coverage, according to a new survey.

A poll of Obamacare enrollees published Thursday by the Commonwealth Fund found that 74 percent of newly insured Republicans are happy with the plans they bought. Overall, 77 percent of people who had insurance prior to the rollout of the Affordable Care Act said they are pleased with the new coverage they obtained in the last year.

Republicans Who Signed Up For Obamacare This Year Are Pretty Happy

Newest Health Insurance Customers Are Generally Happy - The New York Times

Gaining Ground: Americans' Health Insurance Coverage and Access to Care After the Affordable Care Act's First Open Enrollment Period - The Commonwealth Fund

Looks like Obamacare (Affordable Care Act) is here to stay. What we really need is Single-Payer.
 
A lot of good this poll does when the employer mandate is at least a year away.
 
  • Thanks
Reactions: 007
Thread is horse shit.

No more needs to be said.

The vast majority of Americans WERE and STILL ARE against obamacare, even after the kenyan ILLEGALLY DELAYED provisions of it to DELAY the FINANCIAL PAIN that is STILL COMING.

Thread is horse shit.

FAIL.
 
Thread is horse shit.

No more needs to be said.

The vast majority of Americans WERE and STILL ARE against obamacare, even after the kenyan ILLEGALLY DELAYED provisions of it to DELAY the FINANCIAL PAIN that is STILL COMING.

Thread is horse shit.

FAIL.

I want to thank you for all the credible facts and statistics you presented.
 
Last edited:
CaféAuLait;9421167 said:
Help me out here Lakhota, I have looked at the poll twice and I did not see any political party mentioned at all.





Gaining Ground: Americans' Health Insurance Coverage and Access to Care After the Affordable Care Act's First Open Enrollment Period - The Commonwealth Fund

You apparently failed to navigate The Commonwealth Fund link. Maybe this will help:

collins_gaining_ground_2nd_infographic.jpg
 
Famously, Obama-Biden had created the "Make-Work-Pay-Refundable-Income-Tax-Credit" to help get the low-income market out of the GOP created, Great Recession. Throughout history, usury has been condemned, and improperly. The Inverse of Usury suggested in Matthew 20:1-16, like in the refundable credit, pays instead an equal amount to the first and last. Successively greater usury, to successively lower incomes, easily creates a prosperity able to go to the market place--even of ancient Israel, and purchase. Famously, in 2010, Boehner's GOP took that away from Americans, and of course, ran the Mormon for President, instead(?)!

Obama-Biden also passed the Affordable Health Care Act. Boehner and those GOP in the House spent the next two years, getting paid to vote against it, without doing very much else.

74% of Republicans, in the most recent major poll, actually like their ACA plans. All of that lack of federal cooperation, now is shown for nought.
Study: Obamacare Reduces Uninsured Rate Dramatically - Business Insider
http://www.businessinsider.com/study-obamacare-reduces-uninsured-rate-2014-7

Probably nothing that Boehner's Republicans do, actually makes very much sense to moderate Republicans. As for the United States, in general--that clearly goes without saying. It turns out that 74% of Republicans who admit to it, are actually happy with their new ACA plans. The 25 Red States that failed at expanding MediCaid, or supportive of immigration reform, or at least hoping to shoot unaccompanied Hispanic children in the brain(?): Are the only places where coverage really did not expand under ACA. The plague still has a home, in the Red States, GOP of Speaker Boehner.

Republicans in Mississippi found out that federal social spending actual creates a voter turnout, instead. Senator Landrieu, in neighboring Louisiana, can be said to compare overtly favorably, to Governor Jindal. The governor was recently shown carrying big rocks to shore up the coastline. The same Governor Jindal, GOP, is more recently opposed to federal high tech standards in education. Senator Landrieu instead creates assistance from the Army Corps of Engineers, instead. Obama budgets have been friendly to Savannah, GA. A House Republican may at least win the GOP primary, there. A Senator Nunn can again emerge from Georgia.

Anyone sees a partisan kind of difference in the agenda. Moderate Republicans themselves, are likely, easily to climb on board. The concept of a midterm "tide" has even Gone With The Wind.

"Crow, James Crow: Shaken, Not Stirred!"
(Many White Eyes still favor famous William Tell, of famous legend of shooting even fruity things from young warriors hair(?). . . .probably chocolate-coated(?)! World still miserable place for unescorted, little kids!)
 
Last edited:
The key words there are very or somewhat satisfied there is a big difference between very and somewhat satisfied. Think of it this way after sex would you want your partner to tell you they were very satisfied or just somewhat satisfied?
 
Thread is horse shit.

No more needs to be said.

The vast majority of Americans WERE and STILL ARE against obamacare, even after the kenyan ILLEGALLY DELAYED provisions of it to DELAY the FINANCIAL PAIN that is STILL COMING.

Thread is horse shit.

FAIL.

I want to thank you for all the credible facts and statistics you presented.

:slap:
 
The key words there are very or somewhat satisfied there is a big difference between very and somewhat satisfied. Think of it this way after sex would you want your partner to tell you they were very satisfied or just somewhat satisfied?

How many people are realistically EVER going to say they are "very satisfied" with health insurance?
 
CaféAuLait;9421167 said:
Help me out here Lakhota, I have looked at the poll twice and I did not see any political party mentioned at all.





Gaining Ground: Americans' Health Insurance Coverage and Access to Care After the Affordable Care Act's First Open Enrollment Period - The Commonwealth Fund

It's displayed by clicking the picture to the right that says "What do Americans think about their Obamacare Coverage?" and also the link below that says "Quick View"

Thanks kindly.

I noted it states this "number includes people who are on Medicaid and did not sign up through Obamacare or exchanges. People self-identified as Republican or Democrat", in the fine print.

Why not just include ACA in this survey? Or is all Medicaid now considered Obamacare for some reason I am unaware of?
 
CaféAuLait;9421167 said:
Help me out here Lakhota, I have looked at the poll twice and I did not see any political party mentioned at all.





Gaining Ground: Americans' Health Insurance Coverage and Access to Care After the Affordable Care Act's First Open Enrollment Period - The Commonwealth Fund

You apparently failed to navigate The Commonwealth Fund link. Maybe this will help:

collins_gaining_ground_2nd_infographic.jpg

Well maybe you can explain the fine print there?

number includes people who are on Medicaid and did not sign up through Obamacare or exchanges. People self-identified as Republican or Democrat
 
Most Americans still don't support obamacare.

President Obama celebrated when sign-ups for his health care law topped 8 million, far exceeding expectations after a slipshod launch. Most Americans, however, remain unimpressed.

A new Associated Press-GfK poll finds that public opinion continues to run deeply negative on the Affordable Care Act, Obama's signature effort to cover the uninsured. Forty-three percent oppose the law, compared with just 28 percent in support.

ObamaCare still fails to impress Americans, poll finds | Fox News
 
CaféAuLait;9421387 said:
CaféAuLait;9421167 said:
Help me out here Lakhota, I have looked at the poll twice and I did not see any political party mentioned at all.





Gaining Ground: Americans' Health Insurance Coverage and Access to Care After the Affordable Care Act's First Open Enrollment Period - The Commonwealth Fund

You apparently failed to navigate The Commonwealth Fund link. Maybe this will help:

collins_gaining_ground_2nd_infographic.jpg

Well maybe you can explain the fine print there?

number includes people who are on Medicaid and did not sign up through Obamacare or exchanges. People self-identified as Republican or Democrat

Explain it to yourself. It is what it is. Maybe this will help:

Study: Obamacare Reduces Uninsured Rate Dramatically - Business Insider
 
CaféAuLait;9421387 said:
You apparently failed to navigate The Commonwealth Fund link. Maybe this will help:

collins_gaining_ground_2nd_infographic.jpg

Well maybe you can explain the fine print there?

number includes people who are on Medicaid and did not sign up through Obamacare or exchanges. People self-identified as Republican or Democrat

Explain it to yourself. It is what it is. Maybe this will help:

Study: Obamacare Reduces Uninsured Rate Dramatically - Business Insider

Again the SAME study YOU first cited.


Please answer the simple question.

The study clearly states THEY USED newly insured people who did not sign up for Obamacare and DID NOT sign up through exchanges, but used Medicaid patients.

IMO this skews any study and claims about ACA or exchanges, wouldn't you agree?
 
Thread is horse shit.

No more needs to be said.

The vast majority of Americans WERE and STILL ARE against obamacare, even after the kenyan ILLEGALLY DELAYED provisions of it to DELAY the FINANCIAL PAIN that is STILL COMING.

Thread is horse shit.

FAIL.

I want to thank you for all the credible facts and statistics you presented.

:slap:

How many links ya want? This thread is bull shit. It's not hard to find the truth... just google it... and this "republican" slant, pure bull shit... left wing propaganda, PERIOD...

Health Care Law - Rasmussen Reports?

RealClearPolitics - Election Other - Public Approval of Health Care Law

http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-m...are-has-never-been-favored-majority-american/

Poll: 54 percent against Obamacare - Kevin Robillard - POLITICO.com

Poll: Most Americans Oppose Obamacare Repeal Despite Rollout Troubles - NationalJournal.com

Poll: Fifty-four percent oppose ObamaCare | TheHill
 
Last edited:
Any poll of partisan opinion generally has no verifiable basis of documenting, just who is what. It is not likely that the pollsters were provided data about the people they interviewed being verifiably Medicaid or Not. There would be lots of statute violations.

The poll would mainly support that going into the elections, then more likely there will be a Senator Nunn from Georgia, and a Senator Landrieu from Louisiana, and no more a Senator Mitch McConnell from Kentucky, and on and on, even unto a Senator Franken, likely from whoever did that.

"Crow, James Crow: Shaken, Not Stirred!"
("Who was that mascale, anyway(?)!" "He's the l-o-o-o-n-e, White Man! Tune In, and see if he's dead yet!)
 
Last edited:
CaféAuLait;9421374 said:
CaféAuLait;9421167 said:
Help me out here Lakhota, I have looked at the poll twice and I did not see any political party mentioned at all.





Gaining Ground: Americans' Health Insurance Coverage and Access to Care After the Affordable Care Act's First Open Enrollment Period - The Commonwealth Fund

It's displayed by clicking the picture to the right that says "What do Americans think about their Obamacare Coverage?" and also the link below that says "Quick View"

Thanks kindly.

I noted it states this "number includes people who are on Medicaid and did not sign up through Obamacare or exchanges. People self-identified as Republican or Democrat", in the fine print.

Why not just include ACA in this survey? Or is all Medicaid now considered Obamacare for some reason I am unaware of?

It included people who signed up for Medicaid as part of expansion of Medicaid, since the vast, VAST majority of people who signed for Medicaid the first time are going to be part of the expansion. The study is limited to the ~9.5 million that up in late 2013 and 2014.
 
Last edited:
The key words there are very or somewhat satisfied there is a big difference between very and somewhat satisfied. Think of it this way after sex would you want your partner to tell you they were very satisfied or just somewhat satisfied?

How many people are realistically EVER going to say they are "very satisfied" with health insurance?

I have no idea I'm just citing the words used in the survey.
 

Forum List

Back
Top