No matter how the U.S. Supreme Court rules on the King v. Burwell challenge to the Affordable Care Act, Vermont lawmakers say they are optimistic about their state’s health exchange.

State Republican leaders are ratcheting up the pressure on Congress to overhaul the Affordable Care Act if the Supreme Court this month rules that subsidies on the federal exchange are invalid.

Republicans from 33 states have written to Congress as part of a coordinated message urging federal legislators to develop a plan that would free states from the pressure of setting up their own exchanges to salvage subsidies, according to the Foundation for Government Accountability, a conservative think tank.

While some people spend their lives in search of the Holy Grail or the Lost City of Atlantis, Huffington Post healthcare reporter Jeffrey Young has spent the past year and a half on a Lifelong Quest to discover the elusive, mysterious Republican Replacement Plan for the Affordable Care Act.

Along the way, his hunt has actually turned into more of a hobby; while some people collect bugs, stamps or rare coins, Young has developed quite an impressive collection of his own: Breaking News® about the Always Imminent, Always Just Out Of Reach Replacement Plan:

December 16, 2013:

Just in time! MT: @sahilkapur: Link to @reptomprice saying GOP will bring up a health care bill in 2014 http://t.co/HRoccJAK4g

— Jeffrey Young (@JeffYoung) December 16, 2013

March 16, 2014:

Hey, remember this from over a year ago???

Now, here's the thing: I'm not saying that Mr. Roy's 20% is wrong, or that McKinsey's 27% is wrong. Maybe they're correct. I've only documented about 10% of the QHPs as being off-exchange; perhaps it really is only 20 or 27% of the total. I'm just saying that there's too many unknowns for anyone to conclude that it is 20% or 27% for exchange QHPs either. It's still a big unknown.

Furthermore, I do appreciate him at least bothering to read my own analysis. He's a Big Established Expert and I'm just some web developer in Michigan. He's (from his Forbes bio) the Opinion Editor for Forbes, a Senior Fellow at the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, and was a health care policy advisor to Mitt Romney...while I create websites for small businesses, often while wearing a bathrobe.

But that doesn't mean that he's right, either...and unless I'm missing something important here, nothing that he's said proves that he is.

When the Republican Party replaced the director of the Congressional Budget Office, Doug Elmendorf, with "one of theirs" (Keith Hall, who previously worked as an economist for George W. Bush), there was understandably plenty of concern (or hope, depending on your politics) that CBO projections would suddenly become radically different from what they had been under a "Democratic" CBO director, especially when it comes to politicized issues such as the Affordable Care Act.

Well, according to a brand-new report from the CBO released just now, that's actually a fair assessment...but not in quite the way that Republicans probably expected:

Summary Over the past several years, a number of proposals have been advanced for repealing the Affordable Care Act (ACA), which became law in March 2010. In this report, the Congressional Budget Office and the staff of the Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) analyze the main budgetary and economic consequences that would arise from repealing that law.

Greg Sargent at the Washington Post does a nice job of summarizing the Republican response if they win their King v. Burwell court case at the Supreme Court:

The GOP argument is basically this: Obamacare is to blame for the awful outcome of millions of people losing Obamacare, so Republicans will protect all those people from Obamacare by temporarily restoring their Obamacare, before repealing it entirely for all its beneficiaries, and replacing it with … “oh, wow, look over there, a unicorn is wandering through the Capitol!”

Here it is in video form, compliments of South Park:

Over at Vox this morning, Ezra Klein has a good "big picture" look at the true impact of the plaintiffs winning King v. Burwell which goes beyond the specific numbers of people impacted or the dollar amounts involved. His main point, which I generally agree with, is that while the results would be pretty horrible, they wouldn't result in the law being repealed any more than the Medicaid expansion ruling did. In Klein's view, at worst (which, he admits, would be pretty bad), the 2-tier healthcare split between rational & irrational states would deepen...but only temporarily.

So King can't destroy Obamacare. What it can do is let Republican elected officials destroy Obamacare in states where they have a majority. That's a very different thing, and it will lead to very different political dynamics.

For the most part I agree with him, but there's two things I wanted to call attention to: One which he doesn't mention, another which I feel he shouldn't have.

I know I snarked about "nothing interesting happening" while I was out of town/unavailable yesterday/this morning, but the reality is that a whole mess of stuff is always going on in the healthcare/ACA field, so here's a quick roundup:

...lawmakers went along with Raimondo’s bid to raise the state’s $3.50-a-pack cigarette tax — already the third-highest in the nation — by 25 cents to reap an extra $7.1 million.

They backed a scaled-down version of the new health-insurance surcharge that Raimondo proposed to pay for the state-run health-care exchange that they expect to average 2.86 percent on individuals’ monthly premiums, and .59 percent on average for small-business groups’ monthly premiums.

There were also an estimated $120.9 million in spending cuts in the state’s fastest-growing subsidy program: Medicaid, including $70.5 million in projected state dollar savings.

Way back on April 30th I posted the first in a series of 2016 rate change request entries for Oregon. At the time, the initial news didn't look very good, with the weighted (by market share) average increase looking to be around 23%.

At the time, and since then, I've posted a whole bunch of stuff regarding the importance of keeping calm about these initial rate requests for a variety of reasons. One of those reasons is that none of the initial requests had actually been approved yet. Last year, many large rate increase requests were denied nationally, with only more modest increases being approved by state regulators, and the same is likely to happen in many cases this year.

THIS REMAINS LIKELY TO BE THE CASE OVERALL. However, there's another possibility which, while I always knew was possible, I wasn't aware of actually having happened until today:

Of the 14 "full" state-run exchanges remaining (i.e. running their own website platform), one of them (Hawaii) recently threw in the towel due to technological and funding issues. The other 13, funding issues aside, seem to mostly be operating pretty well, but a few are still having technical issues...one of which is tiny Vermont.

Fortunately, they've managed to resolve at least some of their lingering tech problems:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Vermont Health Connect June 18, 2015

Vermont Health Connect Reports on Progress toward Key Milestones
Number of Customers Awaiting Changes Reduced by 1,600

 ESSEX, VT –State officials delivered a regular monthly report on Vermont Health Connect to legislative oversight committees today. The report covered key performance indicators and enrollment data for the month leading up to recent system upgrades which greatly enhanced the speed at which Vermont Health Connect can process customer requests.

The Minnesota ACA exchange, MNsure, held their June board meeting yesterday and released some new enrollment numbers:

Cumulative QHP selections are up 2,122 since May 14, while Medicaid and MinnesotaCare are (combined) up 24,296 people in just a month.

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