President Barack Obama’s health-care law is becoming more entrenched,
with 64 percent of Americans now supporting it outright or backing
small changes.
Even so, the fervor of the opposition shows no
sign of abating, posing a challenge for Obama’s Democrats during
congressional races this year, as a Republican victory in a special
Florida election this week showed. In addition, 54 percent of Americans
say they’re unhappy with the president’s handling of the issue,
according to a Bloomberg National Poll.
That’s an improvement
since the last poll, in December, when Obama’s public standing on health
care hit a low of 60 percent disapproval after the botched rollout of
the insurance exchanges, according to the March 7-10 poll of 1,001
adults.
“Things definitely seem to be getting better,” said Paul
Attard, 50, a political independent in Evergreen, Colorado and a
program manager for a cell-phone company who wants the law modified
rather than repealed. “It seems like they are getting a lot more people
to join. It’s a sign that the system is working.”
Through March
1, 4.2 million Americans had enrolled in health plans via the Affordable
Care Act’s insurance exchanges, the government said this week. The
deadline for enrollment is March 31, and the Congressional Budget Office
has estimated that 6 million people will sign up this year for private
plans.
Fifty-one percent of
Americans favor retaining the Affordable Care Act with “small
modifications,” while 13 percent would leave the law intact and 34
percent would repeal it. That’s the highest level of public acceptance
for the law yet in the Bloomberg poll.
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