Trump is proving to be extremely self-absorbed, and directed to his own interests. His political perspective is to throw bones where needed to get what he wants. The last week has proven to be exactly what I thought this presidency would turn out to be, a total, complete, unmitigated disaster with the security of the US at high risk. A convenience "conversion" and a quick shift from a lifelong pro-choice position won't convince me, and the rest of the character hasn't changed. I would not compromise my principles, or my faith, to cast a ballot for Trump.
Jon's biggest concern, when it comes to health care, always comes around to how unfair he thinks it is that if health care is a basic human right, it should be collectively supported in order to make access to everything that is available equal for all people. It sounds like he resents having to be involved in some kind of shared responsibility, or to part with what he thinks is his fair share. I believe that's exactly where the moral hitch is when it comes to this subject. Unless you can get completely away from the idea that health care is solely an economic commodity, and should be distributed according to the law of supply and demand, which means that only those wealthy enough to afford it can experience its full benefit, then you don't believe it is a basic human right. That's like telling someone dying of thirst that they don't have any right to water if they haven't worked and earned enough to pay the price for it. It's pretty clear that the bottom line for you is money.
I'd suggest a literal reading of Acts, starting at 2"42, and going through 4:37. In that passage, it seems the early church did a lot of things Jon, or the Donald, wouldn't approve of, like gathering food for those who didn't work to pay for it, redistributing the wealth by selling possessions and goods and giving away the proceeds to those who didn't work to pay for it. They actually healed a lame beggar, who didn't work to pay for it, and who basically sat where he could just ask for a handout every day. Clearly he wasn't deserving of the medical care, and Peter and John were violating free market principles by healing him and not charging him for it. Gosh, they were inspired so much by what was going on that they prayed for boldness, the Holy Spirit shook the place, and they started providing free medical care all over Jerusalem. How anti-Trump was that?