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Republicans betray those who believed their health care promises

Republicans have betrayed those who believed their health care promises. Trump and Ryan haven't even tried to defend these broken commitments.
While most Republican rhetoric about health acre has been vague and unhelpful, at various points in recent months leading GOP officials have made a variety of specific promises. Today, with the passage of their regressive and unpopular American Health Care Act, those promises have been blithely cast aside.1. Donald Trump vowed, "We're going to have insurance for everybody…. Everybody's going to be taken care of." The Congressional Budget Office, scrutinizing an earlier version of the GOP legislation, projected that the ranks of the uninsured would grow by 14 million by next year, and that number would expand to 24 million by 2026. There's no new CBO score, but by most estimates, the new total is expected to be even higher.2. Trump promised, "I'm not going to cut Medicare or Medicaid." The Republican slashes Medicaid by hundreds of billions of dollars.3. Trump insisted the Republican plan would cover consumers with "much lower deductibles." While the CBO report points to a range of cost changes, based largely on age, it also found millions of Americans would pay higher deductibles.4. Trump vowed the GOP policy would offer "lower premiums" for consumers. The Republican plan would actually raise premiums considerably.5. The House Republican leadership assured the public, in writing, "Americans should never be denied coverage or charged more because of a pre-existing condition." The version of the GOP bill that passed today would gut protections for Americans with pre-existing conditions.6. Trump "guaranteed" that pre-existing-conditions protections "are in the bill," because he personally "mandated" it. The protections aren't in the bill.7. Paul Ryan vowed the Republican approach will make sure that "no one is left out in the cold" and "no one is worse off." Tens of millions of Americans will be worse off if the GOP plan becomes law.8. HHS Secretary Tom Price vowed that "nobody will be worse off financially" as a result of the Republican plan. That might be funnier now if it weren't so sad.9. Price said the GOP plan "will, in fact, cover more individuals than are currently covered." This is, of course, the opposite of the truth, and even most Republicans have backed away from this kind of rhetoric.10. Trump said his approach to health care would "end [the] opioid epidemic in America" and "dramatically expand access to treatment slots." The opposite appears to be true.If you're one of those Americans who took the Republican promises seriously, and were counting on GOP leaders to keep their word, I'm afraid I have some bad news for you.It's plainly obvious that Republicans have betrayed those who believed their health care promises. To date, GOP leaders -- including Trump and Ryan -- haven't even tried to defend these broken commitments.