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Race Shadows Every Assault On The Affordable Care Act

The attacks on the Affordable Care Act (ACA) have never been solely about cost or coverage — race has always been under the surface. From its roots as a measure with explicit equity-aimed provisions, the ACA’s battlefields have also been battlegrounds over who belongs in America’s social safety net.
#ACA #HealthEquity #BlackHealthMatters #Obamacare #RacialJustice #HealthcareAccess

By Stacy M. Brown
Senior National Correspondent
Black Press USA

The battles over the Affordable Care Act were never only about policy or the price of insurance. They were never simply arguments about federal subsidies, individual mandates, or the markets that hold the system together.

From the moment America elected a Black president and that president dared to place the health of the poor and the marginalized at the center of national law, a deeper truth rose to the surface. That truth has followed the country for centuries. It was waiting for its next target. The target became Barack Obama. The instrument became Obamacare.

Long before Republicans vowed to “repeal and replace,” the lines were already drawn. The same forces that spent years questioning Obama’s citizenship, intellect, and legitimacy turned their fury toward the most expansive health care protections in generations.

Black lawmakers and health equity advocates understood the stakes. They had spent years shaping the Affordable Care Act so it would cut into the country’s long trail of racial health disparities. Daniel Dawes, a leading figure in that fight, stated that the ACA was “the most comprehensive minority health law” in United States history and identified sixty-two provisions that “directly address inequities in health care.”

The law carried the fingerprints of the people who fought for it. For African-Americans who had faced a lifetime of inequitable access, predatory pricing, and the cruel arithmetic of race and illness, the ACA was a rare affirmation. Obama spoke about it using language palatable to a country still clinging to the mythology of a post-racial nation, but the communities that long suffered under the weight of indifferent systems knew exactly what the law meant.

The backlash knew it, too.

Republican attacks intensified the moment the bill became law, but the pursuit of its destruction began before a single vote was cast.

According to Michael Cohen’s memoir, Trump held “hatred and contempt” for Obama and even hired a man who resembled the 44th president so he could “ritualistically belittle the first Black president and then fired him.”

Trump continued his public fixation, calling Obama “the most ignorant president in our history” and declaring that he “founded ISIS.” He accused Obama of wiretapping him. He mocked him repeatedly, even years after leaving office. The Independent documented that Trump “repeatedly called Obama a jerk” and continued to attack him at rallies.

This hostility toward Obama cannot be separated from the fury directed at the ACA. Obamacare became a symbol of something beyond policy. It became a symbol of a Black man’s authorship over the nation’s moral priorities.

In a country still wrestling with its stitched-in contradictions, the ACA represented a rebuke of the belief that the poor must earn their right to live. It dared to reduce disparities. It dared to remove barriers. It dared to place humanity above profit.

Republicans answered year after year with votes to dismantle it. They drafted lawsuits aimed at wiping it from the books. They promised its end during the campaigns. Not once have they produced a plan that meets or exceeds its reach.

Politico, academic researchers, and public opinion studies have all shown that the hostility toward Obamacare has remained strongest among groups where resentment of Obama himself was strongest.

Republicans continue their assault on the Affordable Care Act, not because the law failed but because the law succeeded. It made the country fairer. It made the poor healthier. It gave millions access to care they had long been denied. And it stands as evidence that a Black president changed the material conditions of people who were never meant to be served.

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