The Phnom Penh Post

Trump lays blame as health care reform effort collapses

- Michael Mathes

AN ANGRY President Donald Trump railed on Tuesday against dissenters in his party who dashed his months-long effort to dismantle his predecesso­r’s landmark health care law, as moderates balked at Republican plans to scrap Obamacare without a replacemen­t.

With several efforts to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act (ACA) now squashed, the Senate’s top Republican said he would forge ahead with what could be a last-gasp vote – on a new plan to kill off most of the 2010 reforms of Trump’s predecesso­r with no replacemen­t at the ready.

A vote to proceed to the bill will be held “early next week”, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told colleagues, even though the effort appeared doomed, with three Republican­s declaring their opposition to the plan.

The previous day, four Republican­s had lined up against McConnell’s earlier health overhaul, flat lining it in the chamber, where the party can afford only two defectors in order to get the measure passed.

And with Senator John McCain home in Arizona through this week and perhaps longer as he recovers from surgery to remove a blood clot, the room for manoeuvre is even narrower.

McConnell nonetheles­s prepared to force a vote to see where his members stood on his latest ploy, the repeal-only measure.

The dramatic implosion effectivel­y means that Trump, who marks his first half-year in office today, has no major legislativ­e victory in hand, squanderin­g months of political capital.

Trump fired off a morning tweet storm complainin­g about how he was “let down” by Democrats “and a few Republican­s” opposed to the repeal.

He had campaigned relentless­ly on a pledge to abolish most of the ACA, proclaimin­g at an October campaign rally that it would be “so easy” to immediatel­y repeal and replace the law.

But he has run into the uncompromi­sing reality of American politics: even with a president’s party enjoying a majority in both chambers, crafting and passing landmark legislatio­n can be perilous in the US Congress.

The White House insisted that success remained within reach, with deputy spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders saying “we are not done with the health care battle”.

But Trump could not hide that he was “disappoint­ed”, and repeatedly offered that now it would be easier to just “let Obamacare fail”.

He also stressed he wanted nothing to do with the blame for the collapse.

“We’re not going to own it. I’m not going to own it. I can tell you the Republican­s are not going to own it,” he said.

“We’ll let Obamacare fail and then the Democrats are going to come to us” to collaborat­e on a solution.

‘Time to start over’

McConnell’s new bid would repeal much of Obamacare outright, but with a two-year delay of implementa­tion, in order to allow Congress time to craft a replacemen­t.

A straight repeal bill passed Congress in 2015. That was during Obama’s presidency, and Republican­s knew they would pay no political price for their votes, as Obama vetoed the measure.

It is no longer a dress rehearsal, and some Republican­s are concerned they would be on the hook for any ensuing disruption to the health care system.

Two years ago, the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office warned that simply repealing Obamacare would essentiall­y kick 18 million people off health care in the first year compared to current law, a figure that would balloon to 32 million by 2026. That is far worse than the 22 million that the CBO forecast would lose coverage under the latest repeal-and-replace legislatio­n.

With a number of Senate Republican moderates voic- ing concern about how the latest bill could adversely impact millions of people insured through Medicaid, the health coverage programme for the poor and the disabled, McConnell’s bid floundered.

“I cannot vote to repeal Obamacare without a replacemen­t plan that addresses my concerns and the needs of West Virginians,” Senator Shelley Moore Capito said in a statement.

Her state has significan­t numbers of residents on Medicaid.

Another Republican opposed to the new plan, Senator Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, acknowledg­ed that McConnell had the nearly impossible task of corralling enough votes from his caucus’s rival conservati­ve and moderate factions.

“The majority leader is trying to keep all the frogs in the wheelbarro­w, and it’s a tough job,” Murkowski said. “But he’s doing a good job.”

While Democrats celebrated, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer extended an olive branch to his Republican rivals and encouraged them to work with Democrats to improve Obamacare.

“It’s time to move on. It’s time to start over” on health care, he said.

Meanwhile a bipartisan group of 11 governors urged the Senate to “immediatel­y reject” the repeal-only effort and work with state executives on bettering the current system.

“The best next step is for both parties to come together and do what we can all agree on: fix our unstable insurance markets,” said the governors, including Ohio Republican John Kasich and Democrat Terry McAuliffe of Virginia.

 ?? DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP ?? Activists march around the US Capitol to protest the Senate GOP health care bill, on Capitol Hill, on June 28, in Washington, DC.
DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP Activists march around the US Capitol to protest the Senate GOP health care bill, on Capitol Hill, on June 28, in Washington, DC.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia