Americans are
happy that Obamacare will keep functioning rather than having been gutted by the Supreme Court:
When told that the Supreme Court decided to keep the health care law as it is so that low and moderate income people in all states can be eligible for government financial help to buy health insurance, just over 6 in 10 (62 percent) say they approve of the Court’s decision and about a third (32 percent) say they disapprove. Approval is higher in this case than it was following the 2012 Supreme Court decision upholding most major provisions of the ACA. In the June 2012 Kaiser Health Tracking poll, the public was more evenly split, with 47 percent approving and 43 percent disapproving of the Court’s decision in the earlier case.
That 62 percent approval from a Kaiser Family Foundation poll is close to the
63 percent who told a CNN/ORC poll they supported the decision.
Republicans still want to repeal Obamacare, and they're still not saying what they'd replace it with. These polls are a clear sign that, however much suspicion the healthcare law faced in its first few years, the public is moving away from Republicans. The question is how long it will take Republicans to catch up.