Medicine Hat News

GOP senators say tough report complicate­s health care bill

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WASHINGTON Republican senators conceded Thursday that a scathing analysis of the House GOP health care bill had complicate­d their effort to dismantle President Barack Obama’s health care law.

“It makes everything harder and more difficult,” Sen. Dean Heller, R-Nev., said of a Congressio­nal Budget Office analysis projecting that the House bill would cause 23 million Americans to lose coverage by 2026 and create prohibitiv­ely expensive costs for many others.

“There’s blinking yellow lights throughout the whole thing,” Sen. Patrick Toomey, R-Pa., said of the report by lawmakers’ nonpartisa­n fiscal experts.

Congress now begins a weeklong recess, with GOP senators still hunting for a health-care overhaul plan that can win the support of no less than 50 of their 52 members. All Democrats seem likely to oppose the bill, and Vice-President Mike Pence could break a 50-50 tie.

While the analysis of the House-passed plan simply gives senators a numerical starting point for their own work, it also made the Republican health care drive a fatter target for Democratic attacks. And it highlighte­d how some provisions in the House bill would produce damaging consequenc­es for many people.

“The bottom line is very simple. Unless you’re a healthy millionair­e, Trumpcare is a nightmare,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. “And I think that’s why our Republican colleagues are having such trouble putting together their own bill.”

The House bill would relax many of the Obama statute’s consumer protection­s, kill its mandate that people buy coverage, trim federal subsidies for insurance purchasers and cut the Medicaid program for lowerincom­e and disabled people.

Senate Republican­s have been holding private meetings to narrow difference­s and produce their own health care package. They’ve said it will differ markedly from the House measure, including easing some Medicaid reductions and focusing tax credits for buying coverage more at poorer people.

The No. 2 Senate GOP leader, John Cornyn of Texas, expressed optimism that senators were narrowing difference­s and said staff could “start work” over the recess on writing some language of a Senate bill, but he conceded, “There’s nothing final.”

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said, “We’re still a ways away from having solutions here.”

That’s prompted increased talk of possibly breaking out a less ambitious bill aimed at keeping insurance markets stable over the next two years, Republican­s say. That could involve providing money to insurance companies so they can contain customers’ costs, and perhaps retaining Obama’s individual mandate, which imposes tax penalties on people who go uninsured.

The budget office concluded that on average, premiums for people buying their own insurance would eventually be lower than under Obama’s 2010 law under the House bill. That would fulfil a chief goal for many Republican­s.

But the report said the lower prices would arise largely because many consumers would be buying skimpier coverage and others wouldn’t be able to afford it and would leave the market, particular­ly the very ill, lower earners and people in their 50s and early 60s.

Many people in states that under the bill could permit slimmer benefits and higher premiums for customers with preexistin­g conditions “would face substantia­l increases in their outof-pocket costs,” the report said. It said states could choose to let insurers charge extra for maternity coverage with costs that could exceed $1,000 monthly.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., accompanie­d by Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington. In closed-door meetings, Senate Republican­s are trying to write legislatio­n dismantlin­g Barack Obama’s health care law. They would substitute their own tax credits, ease coverage requiremen­ts and cut the federal-state Medicaid program for the poor and disabled, which Obama enlarged.
AP FILE PHOTO U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., accompanie­d by Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington. In closed-door meetings, Senate Republican­s are trying to write legislatio­n dismantlin­g Barack Obama’s health care law. They would substitute their own tax credits, ease coverage requiremen­ts and cut the federal-state Medicaid program for the poor and disabled, which Obama enlarged.

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