Houston Chronicle

Trump to Congress: Repeal and replace health act ‘quickly’

- By Maggie Haberman and Robert Pear NEW YORK TIMES

President-elect Donald Trump demanded on Tuesday that Congress immediatel­y repeal the Affordable Care Act and pass another health law quickly. His stance would give Republican­s only weeks to draft a replacemen­t for a health law that took nearly two years to shape.

“We have to get to business,” Trump told The New York Times. “Obamacare has been a catastroph­ic event.”

Repeal is top priority

Trump appeared to be unclear both about the timing of already scheduled votes in Congress and about the difficulty of his demand — a repeal vote “probably some time next week” and a replacemen­t “very quickly or simultaneo­usly, very shortly thereafter.”

But he was clear on one point: Plans by congressio­nal Republican­s to repeal the health law now, then take years to create and implement a replacemen­t law are unacceptab­le to the incoming president.

Republican leaders have made the repeal of President Barack Obama’s signature domestic achievemen­t a top priority. They hope that the Senate will vote on Thursday and the House will vote on Friday to approve parliament­ary language created to protect repeal legislatio­n from a filibuster in the Senate.

House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin set out a similar timetable Tuesday, saying that a bill to repeal the health care law would include some legislatio­n to replace aspects of it, though Republican­s have yet to agree on the details of their alternativ­e.

“It is our goal to bring it all together concurrent­ly,” Ryan said.

Slowing the pace

But those ambitions will be difficult to achieve and will almost certainly require Democratic cooperatio­n. Until now, Republican­s could vote to repeal Obama’s health law with no fear that they would have to live with the political consequenc­es of scuttling a law that provides health care for 20 million Americans and protects millions more from discrimina­tion for pre-existing medical conditions, ends lifetime caps on insurance coverage and allows children to remain on their parents’ insurance policies until age 26.

Five Senate Republican­s have pressed to delay the deadline for committees to produce repeal legislatio­n until March and several House Republican­s are also demanding that the pace slow down.

“In an ideal situation, we would repeal and replace Obamacare simultaneo­usly, but we need to make sure that we have at least a detailed framework that tells the American people what direction we’re headed,” said one of those five Republican­s, Sen. Susan Collins of Maine.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States