The Borneo Post

McCain torpedoes Republican effort to repeal Obamacare

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WASHINGTON: US Senator John McCain announced his opposition to the latest Republican attempt to replace Barack Obama’s signature health care law, likely dooming the repeal effort.

It is the second time in two months that he has defied his party and President Donald Trump over efforts to replace the Affordable Care Act, often referred to as ‘Obamacare,’ which has long been in Republican­s’ sights.

“I cannot in good conscience vote for the Graham-Cassidy proposal,” McCain said of the bill proposed by fellow Republican senators Lindsey Graham and Bill Cassidy, adding he believed health reform legislatio­n needed to be a bipartisan effort.

President Trump, speaking in Alabama late Friday, acknowledg­ed the setback but vowed to fight on.

“I have to tell you, maybe – it’s a little tougher without McCain’s vote,” he said at a rally in Huntsville.

“You get knocked down and then the bad ones stay on the stool and they say ‘We quit, we quit.’ The great ones get up and they end up winning. That’s what we are going to do.”

In July, McCain made a dramatic return to Washington from Arizona after a brain cancer diagnosis to become one of three Republican senators who helped sink their party’s earlier bid to replace Obamacare.

Now, rebels within the party ranks appear set to torpedo what may be the party’s last chance to make good on a longstandi­ng Republican goal, and a signature pledge of the president.

With both McCain and the conservati­ve Rand Paul opposed, it would take just one more Republican defector to prevent the bill’s passage before a deadline of Sept 30, the end of the fiscal year. At least two party moderates – Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski – are known to have serious reservatio­ns.

The bill’s collapse would be yet another blow to the president and the Republican leadership, who have been unable to move forward on repealing Obamacare despite controllin­g Congress and the White House.

In coming out against the latest bill, McCain criticised the fact that it had bypassed regular Senate order, and noted that it would not be fully reviewed by the non-partisan Congressio­nal Budget Office (CBO) before the end of the month.

The senator said he could not “support it without knowing how much it will cost, how it will effect insurance premiums, and how many people will be helped or hurt by it.”

The bill’s supporters might be eager to avoid a CBO score.

In July, the non-partisan body projected that the ranks of the uninsured would grow by 23 million Americans, and premiums would rise 20 per cent annually, over the next decade if the previous Obamacare repeal bill became law.

The White House scrambled earlier this week to win over Republican­s skeptical of Graham-Cassidy, with Trump himself phoning lawmakers and state governors seeking to tilt the scales in favour of the bill. — AFP

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JOHN MCCAIN

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