Dayton Daily News

Ohio senator does not like health care deadline,

As Democrats taunt GOP, Ohio senator says, ‘Get it right.’

- By Jack Torry Washington Bureau

Calling it WASHINGTON — an “arbitrary deadline,” Sen. Rob Portman objected to plans by Senate Republican leaders to gain approval for a health care bill before the July 4 holidays, saying instead “we need to get it right.”

In a conference call with reporters Tuesday, Portman tersely acknowledg­ed he has not even seen the bill drafted by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., saying he doubted “you will find anyone who knows what is in it. If they have, I’d like to see it.”

Although Portman, R-Ohio, has backed an overhaul of the 2010 health law known as Obamacare, he fears “if we try to squeeze it in a short period of time we won’t get it right and we have to get it right.”

“I have never said we should have an arbitrary deadline,” Portman said.

Portman declined to directly criticize McConnell by name, but he made clear he prefers Senate hearings on any proposed health care bill. McConnell said Tuesday he wants to make the bill public by Thursday and push for a final floor vote next week.

But with Senate Republican­s holding just 52 seats, the bill will collapse if McConnell loses the votes of three Republican­s. And Portman said he was “not going to make any decisions” on the bill “until I see” details.

Republican frustratio­n with the secrecy of the bill erupted on Capitol Hill on Tuesday as Democrats headed by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., taunted Republican­s by saying “they want to bring the bill to the floor, rush it in the dark of night, for a simple reason – they are ashamed of their bill.”

The House last month approved its own version, but it has run into opposition from many of the Senate Republican­s while President Donald Trump called the House measure “mean.”

White House spokesman Sean Spicer said Tuesday Trump “clearly wants a bill that has heart in it. He believes that healthcare is something that is near and dear to so many families and individual­s.”

The non-partisan Congressio­nal Budget Office concluded last month that the House bill would reduce the number of people without insurance or government coverage by 23 million people by 2026.

Obamacare had extended coverage to millions of Americans through federally subsidized individual insurance plans and expanded eligibilit­y to Medicaid, the joint federal and state program which provides health care to low-income people.

Portman had sharply objected to the House bill for eliminatin­g federal dollars in 2020 to pay for Medicaid expansion. Gov. John Kasich used the expanded Medicaid program to provide coverage to nearly 700,000 low-income people in the state.

Instead, Portman has pushed for a more gradual phase out of the expanded Medicaid program by providing seven additional years of federal money to help Ohio and other states afford the program through at least 2027. But after that year, many people who would have qualified for expanded Medicaid would be without coverage.

 ?? AP ?? Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, pauses for a reporter’s question as he arrives at a closed-door GOP strategy session on the health care overhaul Tuesday.
AP Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, pauses for a reporter’s question as he arrives at a closed-door GOP strategy session on the health care overhaul Tuesday.

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