A day after President Donald Trump said the Affordable Care Act has been repealed, officials reported that 8.8 million Americans have signed up for coverage on the federal insurance exchange in 2018.
Sen. Susan Collins, whose vote was pivotal in pushing the GOP tax bill forward last week, thought she had a deal to bolster health care protections in exchange for her support.
Having failed to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, Congress is now working on a tax overhaul. But it turns out the tax bills in the House and Senate also aim to reshape health care.
Health care appears to have played an unexpectedly robust role in Tuesdays off-year elections, as Democrats swept statewide races in Virginia and New Jersey and voters told pollsters it was a top concern.
Early retirees, part-time workers and self-employed workers and other healthy Americans who buy their own insurance coverage and are facing premium increases of as much as 50 percent.