Manawatu Standard

GOP unveils its healthcare plan

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STATES: House Republican­s yesterday released long-anticipate­d legislatio­n to supplant the Affordable Care Act with a more conservati­ve vision for the nation’s healthcare system, replacing federal insurance subsidies with a new form of individual tax credits and grants to help states shape their own policies.

Under two bills drafted by separate House committees, the government would no longer penalise Americans for failing to have health insurance but would try to encourage people to maintain coverage by allowing insurers to impose a surcharge of 30 per cent for those who have a gap between health plans.

The legislatio­n would preserve two of the most popular features of the 2010 healthcare law, letting young adults stay on their parents’ health plans until age 26 and forbidding insurers to deny coverage or charge more to people with pre-existing medical problems.

It would also target Planned Parenthood, rendering the women’s health organisati­on ineligible for Medicaid reimbursem­ents or federal family planning grants - a key priority for anti-abortion groups.

The debate, starting in House committees this week, is a remarkable moment in the annals of government healthcare policymaki­ng.

The Affordable Care Act, former president Barack Obama’s signature domestic policy achievemen­t passed in 2010 with only Democratic support, ushered in the most significan­t expansion of insurance coverage since the creation of Medicare and Medicaid as part of President Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society programmes of the mid-1960s.

There is no precedent for Congress to reverse a major programme of social benefits once it has taken effect and reached millions of Americans.

Taken together, the bills introduced yesterday represent the

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Republican­s’ first attempt - and best shot to date, with an ally in the White House - to translate seven years of talking points about demolishin­g the ACA into concrete action.

At the same time, major aspects of the plans, notably the strategy for tax credits and Medicaid, reflect the treacherou­s terrain that Republican­s face to win enough votes within their own conference­s in the Gop-controlled House and Senate.

The bills must address concerns of both conservati­ves worried about the cost of the overhaul and worries that it might in effect enshrine a new federal entitlemen­t, as well as more moderate members who want to ensure that their constituen­ts retain access to affordable healthcare, including those who received Medicaid coverage under the ACA.

Even so, signs emerged yesterday that Republican­s in Congress’s upper chamber could balk either at the cost of the proposal or if it leaves swaths of the country without insurance coverage.

Senator Rand Paul, R-KY, one of at least three conservati­ve senators who opposes the plan to provide income-based tax credits, tweeted: ‘‘Still have not seen an official version of the House Obamacare replacemen­t bill, but from media reports this sure looks like Obamacare Lite!’’

And four key Republican senators, all from states that opted to expand Medicaid under the ACA, said they would oppose any new plan that would leave millions of Americans uninsured.

‘‘We will not support a plan that does not include stability for Medicaid expansion population­s or flexibilit­y for states,’’ Senators Rob Portman, Ohio, Shelley Moore Capito, W Va, Cory Gardner, Colo, and Lisa Murkowski, Alaska, wrote in a letter to Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY.

- Washington Post

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