Chicago Sun-Times

GOP’S HEALTH CARE BID FALTERS

With Collins a ‘ no,’ it’s unlikely last- ditch overhaul will pass

- Eliza Collins and Nicole Gaudiano

Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, a key Republican vote on health care, announced Monday that she will oppose the last- ditch GOP effort to overhaul Obamacare, essentiall­y leaving the bill dead.

Republican­s, with 52 seats in the Senate, can lose just two votes and still pass the bill introduced by Sens. Lindsey Graham, R- S. C., Bill Cassidy, R- La., Dean Heller, R- Nev., and Ron Johnson, R- Wis.

Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R- Ky., intended to bring the bill to the floor for a vote this week before a Sept. 30 deadline for the Senate to act.

Republican Sens. John McCain of Arizona, Rand Paul

of Kentucky and Ted Cruz of Texas all have said they are against the bill. While Cruz had been against the current version, he had been hoping for more tweaks in the legislatio­n. Shortly after Collins’ announceme­nt, Cruz tweeted: “We cannot give up on Obamacare repeal. We must keep working. We can get to yes.”

The bill’s sponsors, however, already made changes over the weekend to the funding model in the hopes of winning votes.

Collins’ announceme­nt came just after after the non- partisan Congressio­nal Budget Office released a limited analysis estimating “the number of people with comprehens­ive health insurance that covers high- cost medical events would be reduced by millions” under the legislatio­n over the next decade. CBO said it was not clear the exact number of people who would be uninsured because it was difficult to estimate how states would react.

If passed, the legislatio­n would have kept most Obamacare taxes in place but sent the money back to the states in the form of block grants to design their own health systems, waiving Obamacare’s minimum insurance requiremen­ts. It also would have ended the Affordable Care Act’s expansion of Medicaid eligibilit­y and temporaril­y replaced that money with block grants through 2026.

The bill also would overhaul the traditiona­l Medicaid program and replace it with a per- capita grant program. Collins said the bill’s changes toMedicaid would “have a devastatin­g impact.”

Collins also said she had issues with the Graham- Cassidy waiver system, which she said would “weaken protection­s for people with pre- existing conditions.”

“The CBO’s analysis on the earlier version of the bill, incomplete though it is due to time constraint­s, confirms that this bill will have a substantia­lly negative impact on the number of people covered by insurance,” Collins said in a statement.

Collins said she had no confidence that the new version of the bill released over the weekend would improve the legislatio­n or dampen its negative impact on Maine.

“This is simply not the way that we should be approachin­g an important and complex issue that must be handled thoughtful­ly and fairly for all Americans,” she said.

The CBO also estimated “disruption­s and other implementa­tion problems would accompany the transition” because of the short time frame states would have to set up their health systems. Collins said she had been lobbied by President Trump, Vice President Pence and others.

“It would probably be a shorter list of who hasn’t called me on this bill,” she told reporters.

The Maine senator is amember of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, which had been working on a bipartisan approach to stabilize the individual health insurance market until last week, when Chairman Lamar Alexander, R- Tenn., said he was unable to come to a compromise with the committee’s top Democrat.

Collins told reporters Monday night she was encouraged by the bipartisan process on the Senate HELP Committee. She said the focus should be on fixing Obamacare rather than replacing it.

Her announceme­nt followed a Finance Committee hearing on the legislatio­n that took up much of the afternoon — including a brief delay caused by protesters, many in wheelchair­s, chanting their opposition toMedicaid cuts.

The hearing had been an attempt to appease lawmakers critical of the lack of regular order that had gone on with the bill, but following weekend announceme­nts of opposition by key senators, it seemed likemerely a formality.

During a recess, Finance Chairman Orrin Hatch, R- Utah, was asked what chance the bill has of passing. “Zero,” he replied. “I don’t think it has much chance. The Democrats aren’t going to support it. They’re too interested in demagoguin­g it.”

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN, AP ?? Sen. Susan Collins, R- Maine, says she had been lobbied by President Trump, Vice President Pence and others.
JACQUELYN MARTIN, AP Sen. Susan Collins, R- Maine, says she had been lobbied by President Trump, Vice President Pence and others.

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