President Obama will be enacting yet another delay for ObamaCare, but the networks were silent about the prospect of it on Tuesday night. The administration is set to allow insurers to keep offering health plans that don't meet ObamaCare standards, and the delay will be tailored around the November Congressional elections.
The Hill clearly saw the move as political – "easing election pressure on Democrats" – since it would avoid the "firestorm" of many health plans being cancelled right before the November elections. CBSNews.com reported the news, but none of the network evening news casts touched the story on Tuesday.
As CBSNews.com reported, Obama "enacted an administrative policy change allowing insurers to extend existing plans on the individual and small-group markets for a year. Now, the administration will extend that policy again, CBS News confirms."
The administration already delayed the employer mandate for businesses with 50 or more employees; now, for the second time, the mandate that insurers offer plans compliant with the law's standards will be extended at least another year.
Although the networks ignored the story Tuesday evening, Fox News picked up on it. Special Report host Brett Baier began, "We are preparing tonight for another major delay in the implementation of the President's health care law." Correspondent Jim Angle chipped in that Obama "prepares to offer yet another delay in ObamaCare, one to postpone the political pain of cancelling millions of plans in the individual market just like last fall."