As of now, efforts by Republicans to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act (ACA) have faced significant challenges and varying degrees of support within the party. While some Republican lawmakers continue to advocate for repeal, others recognize the complexities and potential repercussions of dismantling existing health care reforms. The political landscape remains fluid, and any concerted effort to replace the ACA would require broad consensus, which has proven difficult to achieve. Ultimately, the future of health care reform will depend on ongoing negotiations and public sentiment.
No, Republicans have been vocally opposed to the bill, and even though it passed and was upheld by the Supreme Court, they still want to repeal it. This is surprising, given that many of the ideas it contains were originally championed by Republicans, and the law itself is modeled after a law Mitt Romney created when he was governor of Massachusetts.
According to most objective sources, Republicans have now (as of mid-March 2013) tried on more than 34 separate occasions to repeal the Affordable Care Act.
GOP House never tried to repeal Social Security.
Republicans DO want all American citizens to have access to affordable healthcare. The difference with Democrats lies in the way they seek to achieve that end. Republicans believe that what the Democrats are doing will make the availability of healthcare worse, while also diminishing its quality. They want to enable the free market to deliver faster, cheaper, and higher quality healthcare to the masses.
The main Fair Deal policies that did not happen were national health insurance, the repeal of the Taft-Hartley Act, aid to education, and the spread of public utilities.
Who knows. They're still formulating a strategy (I guess 4 years late is better than never...) Honestly, the repeated "repeal" attempts were solely a PR exercise, and one of dubious value.
I assume by "appealed" you are asking did the Republican Party repeal the health care law, commonly referred to as "Obamacare". The Republican members of the House of Representatives, where the GOP has the majority, did repeal the law. However the Democratic Party retained control of the Senate and defeated Republican efforts to repeal the law. So the law remains in force.
A large number of repeal organizations were formed as time passed and the failures of National Prohibition became increasingly apparent. Some of the better known were:The Association against the Repeal AmendmentThe Constitutional Liberty League of MassachusettsThe CrusadersLabor's National Committee for the Modification of the Volstead ActModeration League of New York (Despite its name, this was a nation-wide Repeal organization.)Molly Pitcher ClubThe National Constitutional Liberty League of America for Repeal or Modification of the 18th AmendmentRepublican Citizens Committee Against National ProhibitionUnited Repeal CouncilVoluntary Committee of LawyersWomen's Committee for Repeal of the 18th AmendmentWomen's Organization for National Prohibition Reform and theWomen's Moderation Union
A law can't just be cancelled. It has to be replaced with another law. If you pay attention to what is happening with the health care law you can see the process of what happens.
Repeal
I have no choice but to repeal the promotion I gave you.
From Mitt Romney's campaign website: "Our next president must repeal Obamacare and replace it with market-based reforms that empower states and individuals and reduce health care costs. States and private markets, not the federal government, hold the key to improving our health care system." He wants everyone to be covered, in terms of health care insurance. This is something that his competitor, Rick Santorum, disagrees with.