Obamacare’s Collapse: History Repeating Itself?

Louis Phillips /

As the disastrous Obamacare rollout continues to frustrate and anger more and more Americans, some analysts are noticing the striking similarities between Obamacare and the failure of another massive piece of social policy legislation, the Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act (MCCA).

Carl Hulse of The New York Times argues that the fate of the MCCA is a cautionary tale for Obamacare:

It illustrates the political and policy hazards of presenting sweeping health system changes to consumers who might not be prepared for them. And it provides a rare example of lawmakers who were willing to jettison a big piece of social policy legislation when the political risks became too grave.

Heritage Senior Fellow Robert Moffit first called attention to the similarities between the MCCA and the Affordable Care Act (ACA) in 2010, right after the latter’s enactment. As Moffit pointed out the 1989 repeal of the MCCA and the 1994 failure of the Clinton Health Plan were both caused by widespread public backlash as a result of major problems plaguing pieces of legislation—which Moffit warned then were also issues with Obamacare—namely:

Obamacare is a debacle and, unfortunately for millions of Americans losing coverage or watching their health care costs skyrocket, Moffit’s 2010 analysis is proving true. But, looking at the failed history of other health care overhauls, it appears what was a “done deal” in 2010 could very well still unravel.

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Lou Phillips is currently a member of the Young Leaders Program at The Heritage Foundation. For more information on interning at Heritage, please click here.

See: The American People Rose Up to Repeal a Health Care Law Once Before. They Can Do It Again.