Times of Suriname

Trump faces major test as vote looms on US healthcare bill

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US - The US House of Representa­tives was set yesterday for a cliffhange­r vote to repeal Obamacare, as Republican leaders worked to deliver President Donald Trump a win for one of his top legislativ­e priorities.

House Republican leaders have expressed confidence the bill would pass and several party moderates who previously objected to the measure got behind it on Wednesday, giving it new momentum. “We’re optimistic that we’ll pass it out of the House today,” Representa­tive Mark Meadows of North Carolina, chairman of the conservati­ve Freedom Caucus, told MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” program yesterday. The vote, which a House Republican aide said was due this afternoon, was expected to be close. Even if the measure passes the House, it faces daunting odds in the Senate where Republican­s hold a narrower majority. “Today is the next step in what is likely to be a very long process,” Republican Representa­tive Michael Burgess of Texas also said on MSNBC. Keen to score his first major legislativ­e victory since taking office in January, Trump threw his own political capital behind the bill, meeting Burgess and other lawmakers and calling them in an effort to win their support. Trump, whose Republican party controls both the House and Senate, is seeking to make good on his campaign promise to repeal and replace Obamacare. Aides said he worked the phones furiously. Wavering moderate Republican­s had worried that the legislatio­n to overhaul President Barack Obama’s 2010 signature healthcare law would leave too many people with pre-existing medical conditions unable to afford health coverage. But the skeptical Republican lawmakers got behind the bill after meeting with Trump to float a compromise proposal expected to face unanimous Democratic opposition. The legislatio­n’s prospects brightened after members of the Freedom Caucus, a faction of conservati­ve House lawmakers who played a key role in derailing the original version last month, said they could go along with the compromise. Millions more Americans got healthcare coverage under Obamacare, but Republican­s have long attacked it, seeing it as government overreach and complainin­g that it drives up costs. Called the American Health Care Act, the Republican bill would repeal most Obamacare taxes, including a penalty for not buying health insurance. It would slash funding for Medicaid, the program that provides insurance for the poor, and roll back much of Medicaid’s expansion. (Reuters.com)

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