Chris Cunningham was so thrilled with Indiana Gov. Mike Pence's Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act, she readily accepted his invitation to an event celebrating its first anniversary in January.
Gaining Medicaid ended her eight years without health coverage and paid for her treatment of a thyroid problem, her lung disease and prescription drugs to help both. She stopped working in 2008 to care for her disabled husband.
"It was a game changer for me," the Indianapolis woman said late last week.
Election Day's game-changing results are on her mind now.
Pence was one of 10 Republican governors to expand Medicaid under Obamacare, but as President-elect Donald Trump's running mate, Pence is now calling for the health law's repeal and replacement.
If that happens, millions of low-income people around the country added to the state-federal insurance program since 2014 under the health law are at risk of losing their health insurance. Thirty-one states and the District of Columbia have expanded Medicaid, extending coverage to about 12 million Americans.
"I don't see how a compassionate human being can rip health care away from millions of people," Cunningham said.
What Pence did with Indiana's Medicaid program may place him in a conciliatory middle ground in the political battles to come over Obamacare's future. He called for the law's repeal even before joining Trump, but also pushed Medicaid's expansion in a conservative direction in advocating stricter eligibility requirements on low-income people receiving government-paid health care.