Paul Connor, The Daily Caller.
2011
was supposed to be a bad year for President Obama’s health care law, with House
Republicans taking aim and federal lawsuits snaking their way through the
judiciary. And although the House of Representatives has had limited success in
dismantling the overhaul, key portions began to unravel all by themselves.
Here’s
a look at the Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act’s year in review.
–
Jan. 14: Kansas announces its intention to
become the 26th state to file suit against the federal government to stop
implementation of the health care overhaul.
–
Jan. 19: The House of Representatives votes to repeal the health
care law.
–
Jan. 26: Illinois-based pharmaceutical company Abbott Labs cuts 1,900 jobs “in
response to changes in the health-care industry, including U.S. health-care
reform and the challenging regulatory environment.”
–
Jan. 31: A second federal district judge rules that the law is unconstitutional.
–
Feb. 2: All 47 Republican senators vote to repeal the Affordable Care Act, but the
measure fails.
–
Feb. 16: Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius testifies before the Senate
Finance Committee and admits that the CLASS Act, a key portion of the law that
was touted as a $70 billion savings, is
“totally unsustainable.” But not to worry: Sebelius says her department has the
authority to rework the legislation to make CLASS tenable.
–
Feb. 18: The House votes to block federal
funding to implement the Affordable Care Act. The Congressional Budget Office
also estimates that repealing the law would add $210
billion to the combined federal deficits from 2012 to 2021.
–
Feb. 22: A federal judge tosses a lawsuit claiming that the Affordable
Care Act violates the liberties of those who choose to rely on God to protect
and heal them instead of buying health insurance.
–
March 3: The House votes to end an unpopular tax paperwork-filing
requirement for businesses
tucked into the health care law.
–
March 23: The law turns one year old. On the same day, the House
Committee on Energy and Commerce finds that the temporary Early Retirement
Reinsurance Program will spend its allotted $5 billion far earlier than its
Jan. 1, 2014 expiration date.
–
March 30: The CBO estimates that health care
reform will cost $1.1 trillion, an increase of $90 billion from its February
estimate.
–
May 17: The Daily Caller reports that 20 percent of new waivers from the
law have gone to gourmet restaurants, nightclubs and
fancy hotels in former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s district.
–
June 8: A McKinsey & Company survey of over 1,300
private sector employers found that 30 percent of employers would definitely or
probably stop offering insurance to their employees after the law is
implemented in 2014.
–
June 18: HHS announces that it is axing waivers from the law.
–
June 21: A glitch in the law, discovered after Obama signed it, would allow middle-class Americans to get
subsidized health care intended for poor people, the Associated Press reports.
Medicare’s chief actuary says the policy “doesn’t make sense.”
–
June 29: In the face of a constitutional challenge, the Sixth Circuit Court of
Appeals rules in favor of the law.
–
July 18: An Employment Policies Institute report finds that the Affordable Care Act would
incentivize employees to switch to a government-subsidized insurance exchange
even if employers were to continue their health care coverage, costing
taxpayers “significant[ly].”
–
July 19: The bipartisan “gang of six” puts forward a debt-reduction plan that
would repeal the CLASS Act.
–
Aug. 1: HHS issues a regulation requiring all group health insurance plans to
cover FDA-approved “contraceptive methods, sterilization procedures, and
patient education and counseling for all women with reproductive capacity.”
–
Aug. 12: The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals rules that the law’s individual
health insurance mandate is unconstitutional.
–
Sept. 8: The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals rejects a pair of challenges to
the law on procedural grounds. It does not rule on the law’s constitutionality.
–
Sept. 15: A bicameral Republican report accuses Democratic supporters of the
health care law of recklessness for promoting the CLASS Act despite knowing
that the program would eventually blow up the budget.
–
Oct. 5: The signatures of about 1.6 million petitioners pressing for the repeal
of the Affordable Care
Act are delivered to Capitol Hill at a press conference.
–
Oct. 13: A federal inspector general finds that the IRS is
having trouble collecting the 10-percent federal tanning tax established by the
law.
–
Oct. 14: HHS completes its 19-month review of the CLASS Act, determining that “we do not
have a path to move forward,” Sebelius says. CLASS remains on the books, but
the administration essentially gives up on it.
– Nov. 4: Tennessee Rep.
Phil Roe and 23 Republican colleagues send a letter to IRS
Commissioner Douglas Shulman objecting to a new IRS rule authorizing subsidies
for participants in the yet-to-be-created federal health care exchange program.
They argue that the agency is seeking to rewrite legislation, something it is
not allowed to do. Conservative experts say the IRS rules are covering up a
glitch in the original law that provides subsidies for people enrolled in state
exchanges, but not federal exchanges. Shulman does not agree with their
analysis.
–
Nov. 9: The National Federation of Independent Business releases a report saying that in 2012 the law’s
new health insurance tax will reduce private sector jobs by between 125,000 and
249,000.
–
Nov. 10: The Beckett Fund for Religious Liberty announces it is suing HHS
on behalf of Belmont Abbey College, a Catholic educational
institution. The lawsuit claims the Aug. 1 regulation violates the college’s
teaching on contraception, sterilization and abortion.
–
Nov. 14: The Supreme Court agrees to hear arguments on
the Affordable Care Act.
–
Nov. 16: Forty-seven percent of Americans favor repeal of the law, Gallup finds.
–
Nov. 29: Massachusetts Democratic Rep. Barney Frank joins the effort to repeal the Independent
Payment Advisory Board, a key portion of the law that would “recommend levels
at which Medicare recipients, including seniors, can be reimbursed for health
care expenses.”
–
Nov. 30: The House energy committee votes to repeal the CLASS Act.
–
Dec. 15: The Obama administration announces that the number
of young uninsured
Americans has fallen by 2.5 million, attributing it to his law’s provision
permitting young adults to stay on their parents’ health care plans until age
26.
–
Dec. 18: Health care experts doubt that the federal insurance exchange program
will be fully operational by the Jan. 1, 2014 deadline, since many states have
refused to implement the state exchange program, the Washington Post reports.
–
Dec. 19: The Supreme Court announces it will hear an
unprecedented week’s worth of arguments in March 2012 to determine whether the
health care overhaul law is constitutional.
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