I recently interviewed a dozen people in three small towns near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania—a region that went for Trump by wide margins—and found several broad reasons for dissatisfaction with the Affordable Care Act. Americans have grown too lazy and entitled, some feel, and the Trump administration’s health-care proposals should promote greater personal responsibility. Others are simply confused by the law, what exactly it changed, and where they fit within the new health-care regime. But others liked the idea of universal health insurance and thought the law would help them. When it didn’t, some turned to Trump to tear it all down and start again.

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Kelly Kaiser, the owner of the Grace Kelly salon, has seen her health insurance premiums rise every year since Obamacare was implemented. Unlike people with employer-provided health care, small-business owners and independent contractors must buy insurance on their own through brokers or the Obamacare exchanges. That’s especially true for someone like Kaiser, who is single, so she’s not covered by a spouse’s plan. Things got even worse for her this year, when several insurers pulled out of Pennsylvania’s Obamacare exchange, leaving her with just a few options, she said. Now, she pays $655 a month, and her deductible is $10,000. “Welcome to my shoes,” she said.

Kaiser has hit one of Obamacare’s snags: For many people, it’s still very expensive, especially if, as Kaiser does, they make a bit too much money to qualify for the subsidies. And even if they’re benefitting from the slew of other things the law changed, they either don’t notice it, or the cost of their plan doesn’t seem worth it.

Kaiser likes Obamacare’s under-26 provision and its ban on discriminating against people based on pre-existing conditions. She’s even fine with the mandate to buy insurance. Still, she wants Obamacare repealed.

I told her that some experts think doing that might make things even worse—that repealing Obamacare might cause insurance markets to collapse, giving people even fewer options, if any. But, she said, “there’s nothing now!” How could it get any worse?

She trusts Trump to dream up something better. “He’s a business person, that’s why we all voted for him,” Kaiser said. “He's been successful all on his own. We need to run this country like a business.”

The financial pinch she’s feeling is compounded by her sense that other people are getting health care for free. “If I close my doors, being single, I could make more money than working here, with all the stuff they’ll give me” she said. “They have their health care, their food stamps, their iPhones ... They got it made!”

She, too, said she doesn’t mind if high earners are made to spend more on health care— “but everybody's gotta get out there and get a job to help pay for it.”