Passing that legislation took a very long time. There was so much "possible" about what could be in the bill, I think that, once the final form took shape, those were given out quickly simply to assaug the immediate fears of some corps regarding costs. Even though the provision kick-ins are slow, over a few years.
If the GOP doesn't like something in there, they simply have to bring a bill to the floor to eliminate that part.
It's a very good bill, but it actually favors insurance companies a bit (something people don't realize) Good portions of this bill are essentially what the GOP proposed a few years back, based upon recommendations from the insurance companies (which is why 100% GOP obstructionism was so hilarious to watch).
The "repeal" in whole is nonsensical as very good benefits have already kicked in (especially as the GOP has zero "replace" plan created), it certainly can be adjusted, added to, changed. Like Medicare, it should be a work in progress.
My parents are on Medicare, and they don't like Obama and don't like the healthcare bill - I asked them a week ago how they liked that their donut hole costs were now cut in half, and that their preventive visits were now free with no copay. "Oh, really? Well, that's good!" Yeah, it is
Today a "replacement" bill (pushed hard by the insurance companies) was supposed to be proposed in Congress encompassing selling insurance across state lines. Selling insurance across state lines would be a terrible thing for the public, as it would release insurance companies from virtually all regulatory controls, which are done on the state, not the national level (why the companies have pushed that for years, and are still pushing it now) Why is Connecticut the home base for so many insurance companies? Little to no regulatory control.
It's like when my insurance company rescinded (6 months later) paying for an expensive surgery I received, that they had already promised the doctor and hospital they'd pay for - as my state insurance board told me, "there's nothing we can do, there are no regulations preventing them backing out of the contract they have with you at their whim". They can't do that any more.
The latest polls show that now, after only the initial provisions have kicked in, only 18% to 26% are in favor of complete repeal. Everyone else says keep it, or make it stronger, or change things as needed. The GOP's promise of "repeal and replace" sounded good as a campaign promise months ago, but now that the public is more aware of the benefits of the bill, and the majority of the public doesn't want it to go anywhere.