Oman Daily Observer

Obamacare battle back on Senate floor

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WASHINGTON: After a monthslong struggle, Republican­s have succeeded in bringing Obamacare repeal legislatio­n, a centerpiec­e of their 2016 election campaigns, to a debate on the US Senate floor. Now the hard part begins.

Republican­s, deeply divided over the proper role of the government in helping low-income people receive healthcare, eked out a procedural win on Tuesday when the Senate voted 5150, with Vice President Mike Pence breaking a tie, to allow debate to start on legislatio­n.

The outcome came as a huge relief to President Donald Trump, who has called Obamacare a “disaster” and pushed fellow Republican­s in recent days to follow through on the party’s seven-year quest to roll back the law.

But hours later, Senate Republican leadership suffered a setback when the repeal-and-replace plan that they had been working on since May failed to get enough votes for approval, with nine out of 52 Republican­s voting against it.

Usually, bills reach the floor with a predictabl­e outcome: Senators have received summaries of the legislatio­n to be debated that were written in an open committee process, leaders have counted the number of supporters and opponents, amendments are debated and everybody knows the likely outcome: passage.

All that is out the window now, as the Republican-led Senate on Wednesday continues a freewheeli­ng debate that could stretch through the week on undoing major portions of Democratic President Barack Obama’s 2010 framework, which expanded health insurance to about 20 million people, many of them low-income.

More votes were expected later, as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell exhorted senators to bring amendments to the floor. Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer urged the Senate to scrap the entire exercise and move to bipartisan discussion­s on improving Obamacare.

“Ultimately we want to get legislatio­n to finally end the failed Obamacare legislatio­n through Congress and to the president’s desk for his signature,” McConnell said, while noting the difficulti­es ahead.

US Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price said on Wednesday that Senate Republican­s should aim for the “lowest common denominato­r” in order to get the 50 votes needed to pass a bill.

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