These workers need affordable health care. It’s important to get there for them and for the employers. If everyone (political parties) worked together to make it work there would be less uncertainty. The adversary politicians are prolonging and contributing to the uncertainty that is difficult for our businesses. They are killing the jobs.
The whole reason for these kinds of problems is that the law wasn’t vetted in Congress, but passed in the dead of night with no time for debate which would have headed them off. Major laws in this country, especially those with such a dramatic impact have always been thoroughly debated by both parties in Congress, which is why we even hove the two houses. This is sadly no longer the case. Moreover, the law is a prime example of what happens when ideology prevails over practicality or real life. It was the product of “how things should be” vs. “how we can improve something” thinking. Additionally, drafting the language was left to bureaucrats with no congressional oversight, so we ended up with some 15,000 pages packed with all their wishes and dreams of another regulatory paradise and no time to vet them before moving on the bill. A bill as comprehensive as this should have taken much longer to draft and vet and, better yet, that process should have been done one part at a time.
More jobs killed!
These workers need affordable health care. It’s important to get there for them and for the employers. If everyone (political parties) worked together to make it work there would be less uncertainty. The adversary politicians are prolonging and contributing to the uncertainty that is difficult for our businesses. They are killing the jobs.
The whole reason for these kinds of problems is that the law wasn’t vetted in Congress, but passed in the dead of night with no time for debate which would have headed them off. Major laws in this country, especially those with such a dramatic impact have always been thoroughly debated by both parties in Congress, which is why we even hove the two houses. This is sadly no longer the case. Moreover, the law is a prime example of what happens when ideology prevails over practicality or real life. It was the product of “how things should be” vs. “how we can improve something” thinking. Additionally, drafting the language was left to bureaucrats with no congressional oversight, so we ended up with some 15,000 pages packed with all their wishes and dreams of another regulatory paradise and no time to vet them before moving on the bill. A bill as comprehensive as this should have taken much longer to draft and vet and, better yet, that process should have been done one part at a time.