Reform means that tens of millions of uninsured people will get a chance at security; and many millions more who have coverage can be sure they can keep or replace it.
…Americans now have a clear choice on solutions. The 2010 law offers a real fix, providing a base upon which to build. The House Republican solution is a sham and a giveaway.
Repealing health care reform will add to the deficit by an estimated $230 billion over 10 years.
[Republicans] …offer nothing but to undo what the Democrats have done, even against their own ground rules.
House Republicans plan to hold a vote on repealing the new health care law, but no replacement is in sight.
Making any meaningful changes will require the GOP to get serious about governing and not just grandstanding.
Instead of focusing on joblessness and other pressing priorities, the new GOP majority in the House appears stuck in the past.
This brief GOP proposal offers nothing in the way of solutions for a health care system that every politician, GOP or Democrat, had admitted was broken..
[Republicans] should help to figure out which parts of the law work and which parts don't, then focus on improving health care reform, not stopping it.
Republicans just don’t get it. Americans largely support the health care law’s key provisions.
GOP's health care repeal zealotry unlikely to sit well with the millions who stand to lose insurance coverage — or who prefer a smaller deficit.
[Repeal]…is purely theatrical - and woefully ill-advised.”
[Republicans]… have been long on promises and short on specifics.
... it's worth noting the substantial strides the Affordable Care Act has already achieved in making health care more accessible, and those coming in 2011.
Republican critics…[have misrepresented] the bill as an enlargement of the federal government that would lead to socialism and the creation of 'death panels.'.