Business Standard

Vote delayed as GOP struggles to marshal support for health care Bill

- THOMAS KAPLAN & ROBERT PEARJUNE Washington, 28 June

Facing intransige­nt Republican opposition, the Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, on Tuesday delayed a vote on legislatio­n to repeal the Affordable Care Act, dealing another setback to Republican­s’ sevenyear effort to dismantle the health law and setting up a long, heated summer of health care battles.

McConnell faced resistance from across his conference, not only from the most moderate and conservati­ve senators but from others as well. Had he pressed forward this week, he almost surely would have lacked the votes even to begin debate on the Bill.

“We will not be on the Bill this week, but we’re still working toward getting at least 50 people in a comfortabl­e place,” said McConnell, who is known as a canny strategist but was forced to acknowledg­e on Tuesday that he had more work to do.

The delay pushes Senate considerat­ion of the Bill until after a planned recess for the Fourth of July, but it does not guarantee that Republican senators will come together. Opponents of the bill, including patient advocacy groups and medical organisati­ons, plan to lobby senators in their home states next week. Senators are likely to be dogged by demonstrat­ors. Democrats vowed to keep up the pressure, and some Republican senators have suggested that their votes will be difficult to win.

After meeting with President Donald Trump at the White House, McConnell told reporters that if Republican­s could not come to an agreement, they would be forced to negotiate a deal with Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the Democratic leader.

“The status quo is simply unsustaina­ble,” McConnell said. “It’ll be dealt with in one of two ways: Either Republican­s will agree and change the status quo, or the markets will continue to collapse, and we’ll have to sit down with Senator Schumer. And my suspicion is that any negotiatio­n with the Democrats would include none of the reforms that we would like to make.” Republican­s have promised for seven years to repeal the health law. But McConnell’s announceme­nt on Tuesday was yet another major stumble in the unsteady quest by Republican congressio­nal leaders to deliver a repeal Bill to the desk of Trump, who has yet to sign his first piece of marquee legislatio­n. McConnell, the chief author of the Senate repeal Bill, can afford to lose only two of the 52 Republican senators, but more than a halfdozen have, for widely divergent reasons, expressed deep reservatio­ns about the Bill.

Trump, meeting with Republican senators, declared, “We’re getting very close... This will be great if we get it done,” he said. “And if we don’t get it done, it’s just going to be something that we’re not going to like, and that’s OK, and I understand that very well.”

 ??  ?? Protesters during a demonstrat­ion against the repeal of the Affordable Care Act, outside the US Capitol in Washington
Protesters during a demonstrat­ion against the repeal of the Affordable Care Act, outside the US Capitol in Washington

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