This is a guess as to what the midterms, a political setback for supporters of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), might mean for health reform. Exit polls indicate 58% of voters opposed the ACA, and cracks are beginning to show among progressives that implementation of the reform law will be difficult and fraught with political obstacles. During the campaign, Democrats fled from endorsing the health reform law, most of those supporting it lost, and Republicans will soon be holding hearings seeking to expunge or changes many of its provisions.
These cracks are beginning to show in the New England Journal of Medicine, long an echo chamber among supporters of Obamacare. Almost to the person, contributors to the “Perspective” section of the New England Journal of Medicinehave hued to the Obama health reform line, namely that the Affordable Care Act is a step in the right direction, that all will be well if only we follow its provisions to the letter, and that its implementation is inevitable and is needed to correct deficiencies in our health system.
In the October 28 NEJM issue, Henry Aaron, PhD, of the liberal Brookings Institute in Washington, D.C. sounds the alarm and breaks out of the chamber by saying, in effect, “Hey! Maybe this thing we call ACA isn’t going to work after all.”
He breaks ranks with conventional progressive wisdom by opening admitting the ACA may fail “The Midterm Elections– High Stakes for Health Policy.”


