By: CNN’s Z. Byron Wolf
(CNN) — President Obama continues to refine his signature promise in selling the Affordable Care Act back in 2009 and 2010.
“If you like your plan, you can keep your plan,” he said back then.
But that simple pledge has had to change as the Affordable Care Act has been implemented and a small percentage of Americans, albeit millions of people, have received cancellation notices from their insurance companies. And for the second time in two weeks, he’s tweaked the line.
When President Obama spoke Monday night to a group of supporters, he said: “While virtually every insurer is offering new, better plans and competing for these folks’ business, I realize that can be scary for people if you just get some notice like that.”
“If you had or have one of these plans before the Affordable Care Act came into law and you really like that plan, what we said was, you could keep it if hasn’t changed since the law’s passed,” added Obama.
“You’re grandfathered in,” although he again noted insurance companies had the power to change it themselves.
The President made his comments in an address to Organizing for Action, the pro-Obama group formed from the President’s 2012 re-election campaign.
That’s a far cry from the shorter, bumper sticker ready pledge he made as he sought to calm nerves that health insurance reform would not ruin plans that Americans liked and were comfortable with even though many of those plans didn’t cover things like prescription drugs, hospital stays or maternity care.
It wasn’t a one off back in 2009 and 2010 and even later during his 2012 re-election campaign. New York Magazine put together a montage of the very many iterations of it.
But it turns out the president didn’t have the power to make that pledge. As insurance companies upgrade plans to comply with new Obamacare coverage rules, they are dropping plans for potentially millions of Americans who buy their insurance on the individual health insurance market.
Insurance companies appear to be doing this for a variety of reasons; some are pulling all their plans from certain states where they have fewer subscribers in order to save money, others seem to be.
Back in 2009, as a White House correspondent for ABC, CNN’s Jake Tapper challenged the president on his promise. And even back then, there appeared to be an asterisk.
“Well, no, no, I mean – when I say if you have your plan and you like it and your doctor has a plan, or you have a doctor and you like your doctor that you don’t have to change plans, what I’m saying is the government is not going to make you change plans under health reform,” Obama replied.
Ah … the government is not going to make you change plans. Though the government might impose a situation that would cause a change of plans. So the promise was never quite as presented. And yet the president kept presenting it that way.
But that caveat didn’t make it into the subsequent campaign speeches that featured the line.
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