Gulf News

Trump demands vote on health care

The legislatio­n remained short of votes amid cascading negotiatio­ns

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Abandoning negotiatio­ns, President Donald Trump demanded a make-or-break vote on health care legislatio­n in the House, threatenin­g to leave “Obamacare” in place and move on to other issues if yesterday’s vote fails.

The risky move, part gamble and part threat, was presented to GOP lawmakers behind closed doors Thursday night after a long and intense day that saw a planned vote on the health care bill scrapped as the legislatio­n remained short of votes amid cascading negotiatio­ns among conservati­ve lawmakers, moderates and others.

At the end of it the president had enough and was ready to vote and move on, whatever the result, Trump’s budget director Mick Mulvaney told lawmakers.

“‘Negotiatio­ns are over, we’d like to vote tomorrow and let’s get this done for the American people.’ That was it,” Rep. Duncan Hunter of California said as he left the meeting.

“For seven and a half years we have been promising the American people that we will repeal and replace this broken law because it’s collapsing and it’s failing families, and tomorrow we’re proceeding,” House Speaker Paul Ryan said, then walked off without answering as reporters demanded to know whether the bill had the votes to pass.

The outcome of Friday’s vote was impossible to predict. Both conservati­ve and moderate lawmakers had claimed the bill lacked votes after a long day of talks. But the White House appeared ready to gamble that the prospect of failing to repeal former President Barack Obama’s health law, after seven years of promising to do exactly that, would force lawmakers into the “yes” column.

Asked whether Republican­s would be unified on vote, freshman Rep Matt Gaetz of Florida said, “I sure hope so, or we’ll have the opportunit­y to watch a unified Democratic caucus impeach Donald Trump in two years when we lose the majority.”

Thursday’s manoeuvres added up to high drama on Capitol Hill, but Friday promised even more suspense with the prospect of leadership putting a major bill on the floor uncertain about whether it would pass or fail.

The legislatio­n would halt Obama’s tax penalties against people who don’t buy coverage and cut the federal-state Medicaid programme for low earners, which the Obama statute had expanded.

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