Rick Perry: Congress should repeal PPACA, but let the states replace it

June 02, 2015 at 11:11 AM
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(Bloomberg Politics) — Former Texas Gov. Rick Perry said Tuesday that Congress should repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) but not try to replace it—that it should leave that task to states.

"The fact is that the alternatives lie in the states," the potential Republican presidential candidate said at an economic summit hosted in Orlando by Florida Gov. Rick Scott. "You cannot have one-size-fits-all."

Perry's remarks represent a break from many members of his party who want to eliminate the law but insist that Congress cannot return to the status quo of the days before the passage of PPACA.

"So obviously the repealing of Obamacare, we'll all say 'yes, that's what we're all going to do,'" Perry said. But when it comes to a replacement, Perry said he would prefer to "trust your states to come up with it, rather than Washington D.C."

Many Republicans have called for federal health care policy changes that would make it easier for states to set up their own systems. More than five years after PPACA was enacted, congressional Republicans have voted many times to repeal it but still haven't coalesced around alternatives.

Speaking before Perry, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, a presidential candidate, said the federal government should scrap PPACA and "envision, imagine, invent and implement a real cure." He didn't offer specifics.

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, another presidential hopeful, said "there has to be a transition" to a new system when repealing PPACA, and endorsed changes such as tax-advantaged health saving accounts and allowing the sale of insurance across state lines.  

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