In response to a WHYY News request for a response, Karoline Leavitt, Trump campaign national press secretary, said in an emailed statement that “President Trump is not running to terminate the Affordable Care Act.
“He is running to make health care actually affordable, in addition to bringing down inflation, cutting taxes, and reducing regulations to put more money back in the pockets of all Americans who have been robbed by Kamala Harris’ disastrous economic policies,” she added.
Donald Trump has long criticized the ACA — popularly known as “Obamacare”—since his first race for president.
“Obamacare has to be repealed and replaced,” Trump told reporters in October of 2016. “Otherwise, this country is in even bigger trouble than anybody thought.”
Despite the 2012 Supreme Court ruling that upheld the health care law as constitutional, Trump and Congressional Republicans made 33 attempts to repeal it up to and during his presidency—and managed to chip away at key components.
The ACA was instantly controversial when then-President Barack Obama introduced the bill, which Congress eventually passed on a bipartisan basis. Nearly 15 years later, the law designed to reduce overall health care costs for lower-income and middle-class families is very popular among Americans.
Trump promised to repeal it as recently as January. During the presidential debate in Philadelphia with Vice President Kamala Harris earlier this month, Trump said he was working on “concepts of a plan” that would replace the ACA. During Vance’s visit to Newtown on Saturday, a reporter asked if Vance would guarantee that if elected, President Donald Trump and Vice President Vance would not repeal the ACA until they had another health care plan in place.
The vice presidential nominee did not answer but said that health care in the country needed more “transparency.”
The report also repeats the assertion that Trump, who has taken credit for overturning Roe v. Wade, would seek to expand abortion bans, even to Pennsylvania. The campaign report adds that investigations into the deaths of two women in Georgia were likely the result of that state’s strict abortion ban and that an analysis shows an increase in maternal mortality in Texas after an abortion ban there.
This article has been updated to include the response from the Trump campaign that was requested before publication.