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Oddly, the individual mandate
-- the element of the law that angers conservatives the most -- started out as a Republican idea when the issue came before Congress in the 1990s. And as Romney points out, the Massachusetts law passed without imposing price controls on insurance companies or raising taxes. Obama's plan does not impose price controls on insurance companies. But it does provide closer regulation, including scrutiny of premium increases in the individual market. And beginning in 2018, it slaps a tax on high-cost health insurance plans. During the debate, Romney also defended the Massachusetts law by citing how strongly the state's residents support it. "The truth is, our plan is different, and the people of Massachusetts, if they don't like it, they can get rid of it. Right now, they favor it 3 to 1." That is true, according to a poll released in June by the Harvard School of Public Health and The Boston Globe. Less accurate was Romney's suggestion that the Massachusetts law has dramatically reduced the number of uninsured children in the state, while he blamed Perry for Texas' high rate of uninsured kids. "We have less than 1 percent of our kids that are uninsured," Romney said. "You have a million kids uninsured in Texas. A million kids. Under President Bush, the percentage of uninsured went down. Under your leadership, it's gone up." According to the state of Massachusetts, 99.8 percent of the state's children had health insurance in 2010. According to the U.S. Census bureau, 3.8 percent of Massachusetts children under age 18 were uninsured in 2010, the second lowest rate in the nation, but Massachusetts also had one of the lowest rates before Romney's changes. In Texas, 16 percent of children were uninsured in 2010, the nation's highest rate, but down from 23 percent in 2000, when Perry took office. As for Bush, Perry's predecessor, the rate of uninsured children rose 1 percent during his two terms.
[Associated
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