Why Health Care Reform Now? Strategic Framing and the Passage of Obamacare
In: Social policy and administration, Band 50, Heft 4, S. 467-481
Abstract
AbstractEconomic reform and health care reform were both focal points outlined in President Obama's policy agenda, with increasing pressure to address economic and social insecurity given that President Obama entered office during the Great Recession (2007–09). The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (commonly known as 'Obamacare') successfully passed in March 2010 in the context of the economic crisis. We argue that the strategic framing of the economic crisis, through reasoning and arguments linking health care reform with economic downfall, is important in understanding the successful passage of Obamacare, and that this is reflected through strategic frames in speeches delivered by the President on health care reform. Health care reform has been successful not in spite of but rather because of the economic crisis of 2008, that allowed President Obama to use a strategic frame focusing on costs and economic problems. The two main frames identified are the 'market' and 'rights' frames. President Obama's strategic frames specifically surrounding the economic and cost‐containment priority of health care reform are categorized as a 'market' frame in this article. He used this frame until the passage of the law in 2010, when the frame shifted to 'rights' frames, largely portrayed through anecdotes and focused on the concept of 'access' to care rather than the 'cost' of care. This is observable through tracking speeches and statements made in support of health care reform between 2009 and 2013.
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