๐ Link to the Text of the Act
๐ Why It Was Done
The ACA was enacted to expand access to affordable health insurance, improve quality of care, and reduce healthcare costs. It created health insurance marketplaces, expanded Medicaid, and prohibited insurers from denying coverage for preexisting conditions.
๐ Pre-existing Law or Constitutional Rights
Built upon the Social Security Act (Medicare and Medicaid provisions) and existing insurance regulations, but established the first nationwide mandate for health coverage and sweeping insurance reforms.
๐ Overreach or Proper Role?
Supporters view it as landmark healthcare reform and an essential expansion of coverage. Critics argue it imposed federal overreach, especially with the individual mandate (later reduced to zero penalty in 2017) and Medicaid expansion requirements (partially struck down by the Supreme Court).
๐ Who or What It Controls
- โขIndividuals (mandated to obtain insurance until 2017 tax penalty repeal)
- โขInsurers (required to cover preexisting conditions, essential benefits, no lifetime caps)
- โขEmployers (large employer mandate to provide insurance)
- โขStates (Medicaid expansion, health exchanges)
- โขHealthcare providers (quality and reporting standards)
๐ Key Sections / Citations
- โข42 U.S.C. ยง 18001 et seq. (core ACA provisions)
- โข26 U.S.C. ยง 5000A (individual mandate, now zeroed penalty)
- โข42 U.S.C. ยง 1396a (Medicaid expansion requirements)
๐ Recent Changes or Live Controversies
- โข2012 Supreme Court ruling (NFIB v. Sebelius): upheld most of the ACA but made Medicaid expansion optional for states
- โข2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act: reduced individual mandate penalty to $0
- โขOngoing litigation challenges (e.g., over contraception mandates, subsidies, and preventive services)
- โขPolitical debates over whether to expand, repeal, or reform ACA provisions
๐ Official Sources
- โข
- โข
- โข