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Trump says it 'doesn't seem fair' that 30 million Americans are uninsured and suggested he may expand Medicare or Medicaid

Apr 2, 2020, 22:22 IST
Alex Brandon/AP PhotoPresident Donald Trump speaks during briefing on coronavirus in the Brady press briefing room at the White House, Saturday, March 14, 2020, in Washington.
  • President Donald Trump appeared to suggest on Wednesday that he would consider opening up Medicare and Medicaid to more uninsured Americans as the coronavirus spreads across the US.
  • Trump has long slammed Democratic proposals to expand government insurance as "socialism" and he decided this week not to temporarily reopen the Obamacare marketplace to allow America's nearly 30 million uninsured to purchase coverage during the pandemic.
  • "It's something we're really going to look at because it doesn't seem fair," Trump said at Wednesday's White House briefing. "If you have it, you have a big advantage. And at certain income level you do."
  • The exchanges are still open to those who recently lost their jobs, including the millions of Americans who've recently become unemployed as a result of the pandemic.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

President Donald Trump suggested on Wednesday that he would consider opening up Medicare and Medicaid to nearly 30 million uninsured Americans as the coronavirus spreads across the US.

This is a remarkable concession from a president who supports striking down the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare - a move that would strip health insurance away from tens of millions of Americans.

During Wednesday's coronavirus briefing, Fox News White House correspondent John Roberts asked Vice President Mike Pence a series of pointed questions about the administration's decision this week not to temporarily reopen the Obamacare marketplace to allow uninsured Americans to purchase coverage during the pandemic.

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"There will be people who don't have insurance who get sick before any of these mitigation efforts are put into place," Roberts asked at Wednesday's briefing. "Without opening the health care exchanges, where can they find insurance? People who aren't insured by these companies that are covering the cost of the copays, where can people go now to get health insurance if ... before they get sick?"

Pence refused to answer the question and instead argued that Medicaid and some American health insurance companies are making "inspiring" decisions to waive copays on coronavirus testing and treatment.

Trump stepped in and conceded that Roberts' questions were "fair" and that Pence had skillfully dodged them. He added that it "doesn't seem fair" that so many Americans can't afford to purchase insurance, but don't qualify for Medicare or Medicaid, appearing to suggest those programs could be expanded to include more people.

"I think it's one of the greatest answers I've ever heard, because Mike was able to speak for five minutes and not even touch your question. That's what you call a great professional," the president said.

He went on, "John, I think it's a very fair question though, and it's something we're really going to look at because it doesn't seem fair. If you have it, you have a big advantage. And at a certain income level you do."

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Trump then went on to say he believed he would "get to" address the problem and accused the "other group," presumably Democrats, of ignoring it - despite Democrats having long made healthcare a critical policy issue. Sen. Bernie Sanders is aggressively pushing for Medicare for All, while former Vice President Joe Biden is advocating for a public option, or Medicare for all who want it.

"I think we're going to get to it," Trump said. "I think we're going to get to it. I don't think the other group will get to it. They haven't even spoken about it."

But Trump said Wednesday that he wasn't "committing" to do anything for the millions of uninsured Americans.

"I can't commit," he said. "I have to get approval from it. I have thing called 'Congress.' But it's something we're going to look at. And we have been looking at it."

Many Democrats and health insurance companies had pushed the White House to temporarily reopen the exchanges and criticized Trump's decision not to do so.

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"This callous decision will cost lives. Period," Biden tweeted Wednesday.

The exchanges will still be open to those who recently lost their jobs, including the millions of Americans who have recently become unemployed as a result of the pandemic.

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NOW WATCH: 6 times Trump contradicted public officials about the coronavirus pandemic

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