...actually works? Then what will Republicans do?
From Ezra Klein's blog this morning (my emphasis):
A spin through HealthCare.Gov this morning went smoothly. The site
loaded quickly. The process progressed easily. There were no error
messages or endless hangs. I didn't complete the final step of
purchasing insurance but, until then, the site worked -- or at least
appeared to work -- exactly as intended.
My experience isn't
rare. There are
increasing reports that HealthCare.Gov is working better -- perhaps much
better -- for consumers than it was a few short weeks ago. "Consumer
advocates say it is becoming easier for people to sign up for coverage,"
report
Sandhya Somashekhar and Amy Goldstein in the Washington Post. "The
truth is, the system is getting stronger as it recovers from its
disastrous launch," writes Sam Baker in the National Journal. Applying "was no problem at all, with no delays," says Paul Krugman.
Reports
from inside the health care bureaucracy are also turning towards
optimism. People who knew the Web site was going to be a mess on Oct.
1st are, for the first time, beginning to think HealthCare.Gov might
work. Data backs them up: By mid-November, the pace of enrollment in the federal exchanges had doubled from what it was in October.
So, if the Affordable Care Act ends up working (like it already is in California, Kentucky and Connecticut), what will the GOP be saying before next fall's midterms? According to Martin Longman:
This makes me think that the Republicans are truly on another one of
their Moby Dick adventures, like Whitewater, like the White House Travel
Office, like Vince Foster, like l’affaire Lewinsky, like
Saddam’s WMD, like Fast and Furious, like Solyndra, like the New Black
Panther Party, like Benghazi, and like the most recent government
shutdown.
How much do you want to bet they won't be talking about the Affordable Care Act?
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