Yeah, I know about the Republican plan (or however many variants they've tried to pass already), but with all this getting mad at the congressional Republicans I'm trying to work out what the POTUS himself is actually proposing - all I've heard from him is a promise to repeal Obamacare with a system that'll be cheaper and have more people covered, which would obviously be fantastic but he never specified how and I'm honestly wondering if I missed anything.
Then again, I wouldn't be surprised if he were a fan of single-payer in his heart of hearts given the way he praised Australia's healthcare system when visiting Malcolm Turnbull.
I don't disagree about single-payer, but like I say I'm in one of (many) countries that uses that and the public books here are in great shape. I remember reading somewhere (I don't have the numbers on hand so I'd have to confirm this again) that the US government spends a higher proportion of its budget on healthcare than most (if not all) other OECD countries but still has a much lower rate of citizens who are covered. That seems pretty inefficient right there.
The current system came about because people were sick of eight years of Bush and swept the Democrats to power in all three houses. I imagine it would take a similar push happening again to make Obamacare less bastardised. The plaform they're rolling out suggests they're (finally) starting to get the picture ("A Better Deal" being a throwback to the New Deal, and putting more focus on jobs, healthcare and 21st century energy - issues that actually affect their entire base as opposed to the train wreck of a campaign they ran last year), so time will tell on that front I guess. The recent polling on the ACA suggests the issue is more or less theirs to lose.