Sen. Ted Cruz said Tuesday he is signing up his family for health care coverage through the Affordable Care Act, a law the Republican presidential candidate has vowed to repeal should he win the White House.
Cruz formally launched his presidential campaign on Monday, and his wife, Heidi Cruz, began an unpaid leave of absence from her job as a managing director in the Houston office of Goldman Sachs. That meant the family would soon lose access to health insurance through Mrs. Cruz’s job, triggering a need for the Cruz family to find a new policy.
The first-term senator from Texas said he is looking at options available on a health insurance exchange, or a clearinghouse of policies available to Americans who don’t receive coverage through their employers. The Democrats’ health care law, also known as Obamacare, created the exchange system.
Members of Congress and their staff not otherwise covered, such as via a spouse’s health care insurance, are required to enroll in a plan sold through an exchange under an amendment to the law crafted by Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa.
“We will presumably go on the exchange and sign up for health care, and we’re in the process of transitioning over to do that,” Cruz said in an interview with The Des Moines Register.
Cruz has been a vocal critic of the health care law and, in 2013, set in motion a partial government shutdown as part of an unsuccessful effort to choke off funding for the law.
In his campaign kick-off speech, Cruz pledged to dismantle the law. His advisers said that remains his plan and pointed to his comments to the newspaper from Iowa, which hosts the lead-off caucuses in early 2016.
“I believe in 2017, a new president, a Republican president, will sign legislation repealing every word of it,” Cruz told the Register.
Democrats highlighted that Cruz is now enrolling in a program he frequently criticizes.
“The Affordable Care Act, by design, helps Americans who have gaps in employment get coverage, and it’s working,” Democratic National Committee spokeswoman Holly Shulman said. “We encourage others to follow presidential candidate Ted Cruz to www.healthcare.gov and get covered.”
(AP)
3 Responses
first off there is cobra
second he is saying when he becomes president this rule will be off the books because we will have a better plan for health insurance (like an health savings plan)
1. Members of Congress are required to use Obamacare rather than the FEHBP (Federal Employee Health Benefits Plan). Previously they used the FEHBP.
2. Unlike the Clintons or Bushes, Cruz is middle class and therefore has to rely on insurance. In fact, unless his wife has a good job, his kids would qualify for need-based financial aid at all private and many public universities.
akuperma: Senators salaries are $174,000 besides benefits and pension.
While Cruz may not be rich, he certainly wouldn’t qualify for need-based financial aid.