Houston Chronicle

GOP leaders facing hurdles on health vote

- By Alan Fram

WASHINGTON — Republican leaders pushed toward a Senate vote next Tuesday on resurrecti­ng their nearly flat-lined health care bill. Their uphill drive was further complicate­d by the ailing GOP Sen. John McCain’s potential absence and a dreary report envisionin­g that the number of uninsured Americans would soar.

The White House and GOP leaders fished Thursday for ways to win over recalcitra­nt senators, including an administra­tion proposal to let states use Medicaid funds to help people buy their own private health insurance. But there were no indication­s they’d ensured the votes needed to even start debating the party’s legislativ­e keystone, a bill scuttling and supplantin­g President Barack Obama’s health care law.

“Dealing with this issue is what’s right for the country,” said Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. He added, “It was certainly never going to be easy, but we’ve come a long way, and I look forward to continuing our work together to finally bring relief.”

As leaders tested revisions that might attract GOP votes, others began comparing the process with the trade-offs they scorned seven years ago as top Democrats pushed Obama’s overhaul.

“It’s almost becoming a bidding process — let’s throw $50 billion here, let’s throw $100 billion there,” said Sen. Bob Corker, RTenn. “It’s making me uncomforta­ble right now. It’s beginning to feel a lot like how Obamacare came together.”

In a blow, the Congressio­nal Budget Office said McConnell’s latest bill would produce 22 million additional uninsured people by 2026 and drive up premiums for many older Americans. Congress’ nonpartisa­n fiscal analyst also said it would boost typical deductible­s — the money people must pay before insurers cover costs — for single people to $13,000 that year, well above the $5,000 they’d be expected to pay under Obama’s statute.

“Many people with low income would not purchase any plan even if it had very low premiums” because of that exorbitant deductible, the budget office said.

That dire outlook resembled one the office released last month on McConnell’s initial bill, which the leader had to withdraw as Republican­s rebelled against it.

Thursday’s report seemed unlikely to do much better to help win over balking moderate Republican­s upset over millions of voters losing coverage and the proposed cuts in Medicaid.

Nursing a slender 5248 majority and adamant Democratic opposition, McConnell has been unable to muster the 50 GOP votes he’d need to approve his party’s health care overhaul. Vice President Mike Pence would cast the tiebreakin­g vote. Without McCain, the bill would fall if just two Republican­s vote against.

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