Obama returns to White House to tout healthcare law with Biden
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[April 05, 2022]
By Jeff Mason
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Former President
Barack Obama will return to the White House on Tuesday for the first
time since leaving office in 2017 to tout the benefits of his signature
healthcare law and offer backing to his friend and former governing
partner, President Joe Biden.
Obama remains a popular figure within the Democratic Party, while Biden
faces low public approval ratings thanks in part to high inflation and
the lingering COVID-19 pandemic. As a result, Democrats face the risk of
losing control of at least one if not both chambers of Congress in
November, which would bring Biden's legislative agenda to a halt.
The Biden administration will unveil a measure on Tuesday to fix an
element of the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, known as the "family
glitch" that left family members of those with access to affordable
employer-provided health plans ineligible for certain subsidies.
Focusing on healthcare has helped Democrats politically in the past.
Obamacare was the former president's top legislative accomplishment, and
Republicans have repeatedly tried and failed to repeal it.
Obama and Biden became friends during Obama's time in office, meeting
for lunch weekly. Their families became close and Obama spoke at the
funeral of Biden's son, Beau.
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Then-U.S. President Barack Obama (R) sits down for a beer with
Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates (L), Cambridge, Massachusetts,
police Sergeant James Crowley (2nd R) and Vice President Joe Biden
to try to start a dialogue on better race relations in the Rose
Garden at the White House in Washington, July 30, 2009. REUTERS/Jim
Young/File Photo
The two men will have lunch on
Tuesday, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said.
"They are real friends, not just Washington friends, and so I'm sure
they will talk about events in the world as well as their families
and personal lives," Psaki told reporters on Monday.
The White House said the proposed adjustment to the Affordable Care
Act, put forward in a rule by the Treasury Department and the
Internal Revenue Service that must be finalized, would save hundreds
of dollars a month for hundreds of thousands of families.
It said the "family glitch" affects some five million people and
"has made it impossible for many families to use the premium tax
credit to purchase an affordable, high-quality Marketplace plan."
(Reporting by Jeff Mason; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)
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