Last week, proponents of ObamaCare celebrated the one-year anniversary of the passage of the landmark health care law with several hundred events across the country. They have little reason to cheer, according to a sobering new study.
The one-year anniversary of the Affordable Care Act this week brings new reason to consider a major health-care announcement by Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick. Almost five years into his state’s Romneycare plan, it turns out that spending is out of control, threatening public-sector budgets and private-sector wealth generation.
One year ago, President Obama signed into law the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, otherwise known as the health care reform bill. We discuss the bill's successes -- and failures -- one year later.
The Senate is currently considering a new measure that would allow states to opt out of ObamaCare three years earlier than originally planned. It's attracted support from an unlikely source: President Obama.
In pressing his case for the overhaul, the president made several lofty promises — and assured Americans it would expand access to health care while improving quality and reducing costs.
Republicans and Democrats are currently jockeying for position in the fight over this year's federal budget. The two sides seem miles apart on spending cuts and other priorities.