Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Health bill short of votes, GOP leaders look to Trump

- The Associated Press

Short of votes for their health care bill, Republican congressio­nal leaders turned to President Donald Trump on Thursday to wrangle support for the divisive legislatio­n they hope to push through Congress before Easter.

But Trump sounded more like he was at the start of a negotiatio­n than ready to close the deal. And combined with opposition from Republican­s of all stripes, the president’s flexible stance suggested final passage of the bill could be delayed, potentiall­y exposing the legislatio­n to the same kind of extended public backlash that undermined former President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act from the start.

“It’s very preliminar­y,” the president said of the House GOP bill in a Fox News Channel interview Wednesday, when questioned about reports the legislatio­n would help Democratic voters more than those who elected him. “A lot of things aren’t consistent. But these are going to be negotiated . ... We will take care of our people or I’m not signing it, OK, just so you understand.”

The House Budget Committee narrowly voted Thursday to advance the troubled Republican health bill, with defections by three GOP conservati­ves underscori­ng the obstacles party leaders face in maneuverin­g to avoid a stinging setback to their showpiece legislatio­n after seven years of promises to repeal and replace “Obamacare.”

In another warning signal, four GOP governors wrote congressio­nal leaders saying the beleaguere­d bill would not work for their states.

Govs. John Kasich of Ohio, Rick Snyder of Michigan, Brian Sandoval of Nevada, and Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas said the legislatio­n “provides almost no new flexibilit­y for states,” fails to ensure enough resources to protect vulnerable residents and shifts significan­t new costs to states.

A copy of the letter was provided to The Associated Press.

The House GOP bill repeals elements of the Obama law, including the “individual mandate” that penalizes people who don’t have insurance. It sets up a new system of tax credits that is less generous, particular­ly to older Americans. It eliminates some of Obamacare’s requiremen­ts for services health plans need to cover, and it sunsets an expansion of Medicaid over several years, an element causing great consternat­ion with moderate-leaning Republican­s but one that conservati­ves want to move up faster.

The bill also cuts a slew of taxes, mostly to the benefit of the rich. Conservati­ves say it doesn’t go far enough in repealing the Obama-era law in full, and an analysis by the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office found 24 million people would lose their health insurance over a decade though the bill would also reduce the deficit.

Republican­s in the Budget Committee pushed nonbinding proposals to phase out the Medicaid expansion more rapidly, help low-income people more with tax credits and require ablebodied Medicaid recipients to meet work requiremen­ts. The provisions seemed a window into votes that leaders think may be needed to win support from conservati­ves.

“Anyone not willing to work, let him not eat,” asserted Rep. Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, in support of the Medicaid work requiremen­t, saying he was citing scripture.

House conservati­ves say they are negotiatin­g some changes directly with the White House, cutting out House GOP leaders, while rebellious GOP senators were stoking the opposition.

Neverthele­ss, House Speaker Paul Ryan tried to strike an optimistic tone as he addressed reporters Thursday for his weekly press briefing.

“We feel like we’re making great strides and great progress on getting a bill that can pass,” Ryan said.

But Ryan did not commit to a timetable for passage, and his acknowledg­ment that the bill needs changes to pass was itself a change. Last week, Ryan was pledging action next week by the House Rules Committee — the precursor to a floor vote — and confidentl­y predicting the bill would have the votes to pass.

Instead, Ryan spent part of his news conference disputing suggestion­s that he and Trump are at odds over the health bill, rumblings that originate with Ryan’s very reluctant support for Trump during the presidenti­al campaign.

“There is no intrigue, palace intrigue, divisions between the principals ... there really is no schism whatsoever,” Ryan insisted. “I’m excited at the fact that we have a president who likes closing deals.”

But some conservati­ves, having ousted the last House speaker, were beginning to grumble openly about Ryan’s leadership.

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