Chicago Sun-Times

Health care battle builds

White House presses its case ahead of budget estimate

- Richard Wolf @richardjwo­lf USA TODAY

Trump administra­tion officials mounted a vigorous defense Sunday of their effort to repeal and replace Obamacare while bracing for what could be a skeptical assessment from the Congressio­nal Budget Office.

Flooding the airwaves less than a week after Republican­s introduced the replacemen­t legislatio­n and pushed it through two House committees on partyline votes, members of Trump’s Cabinet claimed more Americans would be able to get health care at a reduced cost and no one would be worse off.

At the same time, they signaled their willingnes­s to accept changes to accommodat­e conservati­ves in the House and Senate who have accused their leaders of crafting a bill too much in the mold of the Affordable Care Act.

The rosy forecasts will come up against estimates on coverage and cost

from Congress’ official scorekeepi­ng agency as early as Monday. Health care analysts expect the budget office — headed by a Republican appointee — to project that millions of people who gained insurance under President Obama’s Affordable Care Act will lose it under the GOP plan.

Yet Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price preemptive­ly rejected such an assessment Sunday. Speaking on NBC’s Meet the Press, the former House Budget Committee chairman said the bill would lead to “more people covered than are covered right now, and at an average cost that is less.”

And Office of Management and Budget director Mick Mulvaney told ABC’s

This Week that the “truly indigent” will not lose out, as interest groups charge. “Medicaid is still there,” he said. “In fact, we think it’s going to be even better.” Mulvaney also argued that the budget office can’t produce a meaningful cost estimate of such sweeping legislatio­n: “Sometimes we ask them to do stuff they’re not capable of doing, and estimating the impact of a bill of this size probably isn’t the best use of their time.”

That received howls of derision from Democrats who argued this is exactly the budget office’s job.

Meanwhile, conservati­ve lawmakers continued to criticize their own party’s bill, led by Arkansas Sen. Tom Cotton, who flatly predicted passage in the House this spring could jeopardize Republican­s’ majority there in the 2018 mid- term elections.

“I would say to my friends in the House of Representa­tives, with whom I served, do not walk the plank and vote for a bill that cannot pass the Senate,” Cotton said on ABC.

The plan to repeal and replace Obamacare would retain some provisions of the former president’s signature domestic policy achievemen­t, including the requiremen­t that insurers cover people with pre- existing conditions. But it would phase out the expansion of Medicaid in 2020 — conservati­ves want to move up the date to the end of the year— while altering the system of tax credits and repealing penalties for those who do not buy insurance.

The bill cleared two House committees last week after marathon sessions. It must go through two other House committees before reaching the floor. Then it would go to the Senate, and any difference­s would have to be reconciled before it reached President Trump.

The White House sent Price, Mulvaney and Gary Cohn, director of the National Economic Council, to the Sunday news shows to make the case for the bill. Meanwhile, House Speaker Paul Ryan warned Republican­s on CBS’ Face the

Nation that they would be “breaking your word” if they do not pass the plan, risking what Trump has called a “bloodbath” in the 2018 elections.

Price said that he believes “nobody will be worse off financiall­y in the process that we’re going through, understand­ing that they’ll have choices that they can select the kind of coverage that they want for themselves and for their family, not the government forces them to buy.”

Administra­tion officials said Trump would consider changes to the bill.

“Anyone that comes up with an improvemen­t, we are more than happy to accept,” Cohn said on FoxNews Sunday.

 ?? AP ?? HHS chief TomPrice
AP HHS chief TomPrice

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States