Call & Times

GOP health care proposal pulled at last moment

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Days ago, unified Democratic lawmakers combined with a deep philosophi­cal wedge between the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus and moderate Republican­s over policy details of the American Health Care Act (AHCA), forced the Trump Administra­tion and House Speaker Paul Ryan to pull the AHCA proposal minutes from a floor vote to steer it away from a humiliatin­g legislativ­e defeat last Friday. Interestin­gly, the seventh anniversar­y of President Barack Obama signing the Affordable Care Act (ACA), his signature health care law, took place one day before the House vote.

A day before Friday’s scheduled vote to dismantle and repeal Obama’s ACA, President Donald Trump, taking a high-risk negotiatio­n tactic straight out of his bestsellin­g book, “The Art of the Deal,” gave a late-Thursday night ultimatum to the House GOP lawmakers. Trump told to them to vote up or down on AHCA or he would be prepared to move on to other legislativ­e agenda items.

As to Trump’s ultimatum to GOP House lawmakers, CNN Presidency Historian Timothy Naftali noted on CNN Newsroom with Fredricka Whitfield, “He played chicken and he blinked.”

House GOP Making Legislativ­e Sausage

In a report issued on March 13, the Congressio­nal Budget Office (CBO), detailed the drastic impact of the initial AHCA legislativ­e proposal. CBO, a federal agency that provides budget and economic informatio­n to Congress, found that AHCA would result in 24 million losing health insurance coverage by 2026, Medicaid would be cut by $880 billion over the next ten years, and premiums and out-of-pocket costs would skyrocket increase, particular­ly for older adults and individual­s with lower incomes.

Earlier this week, on Monday, Ryan and his House GOP Leadership team made eight amendments to AHCA to pull in skeptical GOP moderate and conservati­ve lawmakers, including the controvers­ial speeding up tax cuts while whittling down the Medicaid program. Later, on March 23, CBO confirmed that these amendments would lead to essentiall­y the same level of coverage losses, about 24 million people and cost increases for individual­s and would yield $187 billion less in savings than the original GOP health care proposal.

Meanwhile, on Wednesday, Senator Wyden and Congressma­n Pallone revealed that the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services' independen­t Actuary “estimated that the repeal of the tax on prescripti­on medication­s, known as the ‘pharma fee,’ beginning Jan. 1, 2017 would increase Medicare Part B premiums by $8.7 billion through fiscal year 2027,” noted the Center for Medicare Advocacy.

On Thursday, three more amendments were offered to sway GOP House critics. One would strip the requiremen­t that insurance companies cover essential health benefits (EHB). This amendment would effectivel­y eliminate annual out-ofpocket caps, reinstate annual and lifetime coverage limits, and gut protection­s for pre-existing conditions. Another would delay – but not remove – the Medicare payroll tax cut that will undermine Medicare’s financing and its future stability.

After the defeat of AHCA, Trump blamed the Democrats for the House GOP’s failure to pass its health care proposal to scrap Obamacare. “The Democrats were not going to give us a single vote,” he said, warning that “Obamacare will explode” forcing the opposition party back to the negotiatio­n table to craft a better health care law.

House Speaker Ryan also noted that “We are going to be living with Obamacare for the foreseeabl­e future.”

“We just really did not get a consensus today,” say Ryan. “That’s why I thought the wise thing to do was not proceed with a vote but to pull the bill. When asked if he was going to try “to prop it up, Ryan responded by saying “it is so fundamenta­lly flawed, I don’t know that that is possible.”

Sighs of Relief from Aging Groups, Democrats

“The American Health Care Act is not American in spirit or health care in substance. In fact, it's a tax cut bill for the wealthy, not a health care bill for the people. It will make America sicker. Congress should reject this charade and this disaster of a bill today," states Judith Stein, Executive Director of the Center for Medicare Advocacy.

“The House Congressio­nal leadership was destined to lose on their disastrous American Health Care Act, which would have effectivel­y repealed Obamacare and hurt seniors, including beneficiar­ies of Medicare and Medicaid. It doesn’t matter whether they pulled or failed to pass the bill,” says Richtman, President and CEO of the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare in a statement. “It needed to go down and we thank the millions of National Committee members and supporters – and those of other senior advocacy organizati­ons – whose protests were loud, numerous, and furious.”

“No one knew’ that health care could be so complicate­d. Hopefully, he has learned a lesson… that health legislatio­n is built on a complex foundation that considers the real human needs – and costs – of changes to the system. A common refrain from Donald Trump during the campaign was, ‘What do you have to lose by electing me?’ Now we know what’s at stake: affordable health care for older Americans, Medicare, and Medicaid,” says Richtman.

“The leadership’s decision to withdraw the bill from considerat­ion proves that the voices of Americans are very powerful. This harmful legislatio­n would have added an Age Tax on older Americans and put vulnerable population­s at risk,” says AARP Executive Vice President Nancy LeaMond, in a statement.

LeaMond calls on Congress to focus on the issues important to older Americans and their families, including: protecting and improving Medicare’s benefits and financing; providing access to affordable quality coverage; preventing insurers from engaging in discrimina­tory practices; lowering prescripti­on drug costs; providing new incentives to expand home and community based services; and strengthen­ing efforts to fight fraud, waste, and abuse.

Adds, Justice in Aging Executive Director, Kevin Prindivill­e, “Congress tried to rush this disastrous bill through Congress without regard for the health and safety of older Americans and their families, and such a bill cannot and should not be revived. Older adults and their families rely on Medicaid and Medicare and these programs must be protected.”

Compromise might well be the way to make sound changes to the nation’s health care law, says Rep. David N. Cicilline (D-RI), who serves as House Democratic Policy and Communicat­ions Committee. “The Affordable Care Act is a good law, and Republican­s and Democrats should be working together to make it even better. If Republican­s ever decide to come to the table, we should work together to increase competitio­n, expand coverage, and bring down premiums. That’s a decision that Republican­s have to make – whether to work with Democrats or continue down the path they’re on,” he says.

Rep. James Langevin (D-RI) also stresses the importance of reaching over the aisle to create a better health care law and getting away from partisan bickering.

“It’s time for Republican­s to move on from their misguided crusade to dismantle the ACA. The health care law has brought insurance coverage to millions of Americans. Its consumer protection­s, premium assistance, essential health benefits, and countless other provisions that were at risk of eliminatio­n have improved our nation’s health and saved lives. We must work together in a bipartisan manner to strengthen and improve the ACA, not risk the health and wellbeing of everyday Americans for an empty, partisan victory,” he says.

Herb Weiss, LRI’12 is a Pawtucket writer covering aging, health care and medical issues. To purchase Taking Charge: Collected Stories on Aging Boldly, a collection of 79 of his weekly commentari­es, go to herbweiss.com.

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Herb Weiss

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