Ask Republicans how they will reform the health insurance market if they succeed in repealing the Affordable Care Act and you will not get a substantive "replace" plan. You will, however, hear three desiderata: 1) give states more control of their insurance markets; 2) give insurers more freedom to design plans outside ACA-imposed constraints; and 3) give consumers in the individual insurance market more choice (though the ACA marketplace shelves in most regions at present are not what you would call bare).
If Republicans were sincere about changing the market in this direction, they would have enormous leverage to do so, both by working within the ACA's essentially federalist (or "state-deferential") structure and by negotiating changes to the law that Democrats would surely accept in exchange for an end to dead-end opposition.
Let's count the ways that Republicans in state government and Congress could shape the health insurance markets to their liking, starting with the tamest and moving toward the most aggressive.
If Republicans were sincere about changing the market in this direction, they would have enormous leverage to do so, both by working within the ACA's essentially federalist (or "state-deferential") structure and by negotiating changes to the law that Democrats would surely accept in exchange for an end to dead-end opposition.
Let's count the ways that Republicans in state government and Congress could shape the health insurance markets to their liking, starting with the tamest and moving toward the most aggressive.