Senator said her efforts helped millions get health care | Fact check (2024)

As Election Day creeps closer, the race between U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., and challenger Eric Hovde, a Republican businessperson, remains closely watched.

Hovde, who is trailing Baldwin slightly among registered voters according to an April 17 Marquette Law School poll, has sought to tie his opponent to President Joe Biden, who has faced tough polling numbers in recent days.

Baldwin, meanwhile, is touting past accomplishments.

Lately, that has included the role she played in the passage of the Affordable Care Act, which occurred when she was serving in the U.S. House of Representatives.

“When I worked on the Affordable Care Act, I wrote the amendment that allows all young people to stay on their parentshealth insurance until they turn 26. Overnight, millions of young Americans got health care,” she wrote in a May 5 X post, saying Hovde “wants to rip it all up.”

We’ll focus on the first two parts of that statement. Did Baldwin author that amendment, a highly popular part of the overall law? And did the change take place overnight?

Let’s take a look.

Baldwin gets credit for authoring the under-26 provision

A Baldwin campaign spokesperson said that although members’ names don’t get attached to the thousands of provisions that make up a big bill like the Affordable Care Act, the senator (then the congresswoman) was credited with the idea on several occasions.

That includes a Feb. 7, 2012, letter from former U.S. Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., then-chairperson of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, thanking Baldwin for being the committee’s “leading voice” on the issue of young adults having access to health insurance.

“I was pleased that the amendment you drafted to allow young adults to gain access to their parent’s or guardian’s health insurance was included in the final House version of the legislation,” Waxman wrote.

Prior to its inclusion in the House version of the legislation, Baldwin and three colleagues from Maryland and Pennsylvania were credited with pushing House leadership to make the change.

When the House and Senate versions of the bill were meshed to create the Affordable Care Act, that provision remained, and Baldwin’s role in it is often mentioned among her achievements, particularly during her first run for the U.S. Senate against former Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson.

An Oct. 21, 2012, Wisconsin State Journal article on that race mentions Baldwin “authored the provision that allows children up to age 26 to stay on their parents’ health insurance plans.”

A Nov. 5, 2012, story in the Guardian says she “supported and even wrote part of the healthcare bill — the section enabling children to remain on their parents’ insurance until age 26.”

And former President Bill Clinton, stumping for Baldwin in November 2012, said, “It was her amendment that guaranteed in (former President Barack Obama’s) health care reform law that young people under 26 would be able to be carried on their parents’ insurance plans for the first time in history.”

Senator said her efforts helped millions get health care | Fact check (1)

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On this part of the claim, she’s spot-on.

“Overnight” exaggerates, but the change did happen fast

Turning to the second part of Baldwin’s claim: Did millions of young Americans get health care overnight?

The “millions” part is easy. A June 8, 2012, report from the Commonwealth Fund estimated that in 2011, 6.6 million young adults ages 19 to 25 stayed on or joined their parents’ health plans who would not have been able to do so prior to the provision taking effect.

But in politics, things rarely happen overnight.

This phrasing was an exaggeration, said Gerald Kominski, senior fellow at the University of California, Los Angeles Center for Health Policy Research — although not too far off.

Obama signed the Affordable Care Act March 23, 2010, Kominski said, and the provision to allow young people under 26 to stay on their parents’ health insurance was set to take effect six months later, on Sept. 23, 2010. On that date, insurance companies that offered dependent health benefits had to expand those benefits to adult children up to age 26, he said.

In the meantime, former Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius was pushing insurance companies to make the change faster, as soon as May of that year. More than 60 insurers agreed.

Once the provision took effect, though, parents had to notify their insurers or employers that they’d be claiming their children as dependents and add those children to their policies, Kominski said — making the process a bit less immediate than Baldwin’s post asserts. Still, he said, in political time, the change happened quickly.

Our ruling

Baldwin said, “When I worked on the Affordable Care Act, I wrote the amendment that allows all young people to stay on their parents’ health insurance until they turn 26. Overnight, millions of young Americans got health care.”

Multiple sources do credit her with authoring the draft of that provision.

And it did give millions of young Americans access to health insurance — though not quite as speedily as she contended.

Our definition of Mostly True is a statement that is accurate but needs clarification or additional information.

That fits here.

Senator said her efforts helped millions get health care | Fact check (2024)

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