(Bloomberg) — The Trump administration may stop enforcing the Affordable Care Act requirement that most Americans carry health insurance even before Congress repeals the law, Kellyanne Conway, a top adviser to the new president, said in interviews broadcast on Sunday.
Such a move would take the teeth out of the health care law, which Trump calls Obamacare, and could destabilize insurance markets, analysts say. It was not clear from Conway's remarks whether President Donald Trump would try to use his executive authority to make the change, which would be much faster than writing new regulations or waiting on lawmakers.
"What President Trump is doing is, he wants to get rid of that Obamacare penalty almost immediately, because that is something that is really strangling a lot of Americans, to have to pay a penalty for not buying government-run health insurance," Conway, whose title is counselor to the president, said Sunday on ABC News's "This Week"
When host George Stephanopoulos asked her if Trump would "stop enforcing that mandate," Conway responded: "He may."
Coverage gains
Trump campaigned on a pledge to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, a law he dubbed a "disaster." The Obama administration estimated that it has led to about 20 million people who didn't previously have health insurance gaining coverage, and the Congressional Budget Office said in a report last week that repealing the law without enacting an alternative policy would cause 32 million people to lose their insurance.
"We want to make very clear to everyone that those who are relying upon coverage will not lose it," Conway told Stephanopoulos.
On Friday, his first day in office, Trump signed an executive order declaring that his administration will seek "prompt repeal" of the law. The order also commanded federal agencies to try to waive or delay requirements of ACA that impose economic or regulatory burdens on states, families, the health care industry and others.
That may have been a reference to the so-called individual mandate that requires Americans to carry insurance. Conway, in an interview broadcast Sunday on NBC News's "Sunday Today With Willie Geist," appeared to indicate that the law's requirement that most employers offer coverage to their full-time workers would also end.
"We're doing away with this Obamacare penalty," she said in the NBC interview, which was conducted Thursday. "This tax has been so — such a burden on many Americans. And it's also been a burden on many small business owners, many of whom complained to us that that Obamacare penalty, along with so many other draconian regulations, are just a stranglehold."
Limits of orders
Presidents can't use executive orders to end laws unilaterally, so it's unlikely that Trump's order would entirely end the ACA mandates, according to Timothy Jost, a professor with expertise in health law at Washington and Lee University School of Law and a contributor to Bloomberg View. But the administration could give more flexibility for people to avoid the requirement by saying it poses a hardship.
Undoing the ACA's requirement that all people have coverage could destabilize the market. That's because healthier people might choose not to buy health plans, leaving only sick people covered. If the administration doesn't enforce the mandate, that could be enough to push some insurers from the market, according to California Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones.