The most surprising thing about President Obama's "If you like your plan, you can keep your plan" promise as the Affordable Care Act kicked in was that anybody believed him.
The three big factors in any health insurance policy are what it covers, how much of the cost for what it does cover still gets paid by the policyholder and which doctors and hospitals can be used. In the ACA, what's covered and how much folks can pay — two of the three — are fundamentally changing.
So how can anyone be surprised their health insurance plan is history?
It's like hearing a forecast of heavy snow for three days, then being shocked and aggravated to wake up and find your car buried in white powder.
"It's semantics, just like so much of the rhetoric being spun out there," said Christopher Schneeman, president of SevenHills Benefit Partners of St. Paul. "What Blue Cross and these other companies are saying is that [an existing policy] is not health insurance anymore. What you had doesn't meet the legal definition of health insurance."
See. Obama didn't really fib. You can keep your health insurance, if it's still health insurance.
Maybe what the president actually meant back in 2009 doesn't matter, since what's important is what elected officials do, not say. And anyone paying any attention had to understand that the ACA was making such fundamental changes to health insurance that any promise of no changes was suspect the moment it was said.
A lot of folks had been complaining that they couldn't quit their jobs because of a known medical condition that could keep them from getting new insurance coverage if they left their employer's plan. So, because of the ACA, that's changed.