Las Vegas Review-Journal

New health bill coming

Senate could vote next week; Mcconnell delaying August recess

- By Gary Martin Review-journal Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — A revised version of the Senate GOP health care bill will be unveiled in days, and votes could begin next week, though Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell would not say Tuesday whether he had gained enough votes to pass the controvers­ial legislatio­n.

“We are going to do health care next week,” Mcconnell, R-KY., told reporters following a GOP caucus luncheon that included Vice President Mike Pence.

Although Republican leaders said they were moving forward with a bill, they did not describe changes to a first draft of the legislatio­n that more than a dozen senators opposed, including Sen. Dean Heller, R-nev.

BILL

Opposition from moderate and conservati­ve GOP lawmakers forced Mcconnell to pull the bill from a vote before the July 4 holiday break.

Lawmakers returned to Washington this week to a message from President Donald Trump urging them to pass health care legislatio­n before its next break.

Mcconnell announced Tuesday that he was delaying the monthlong August recess to work on health care and other legislativ­e priorities.

Once the Senate completes its work on health care reform, Mcconnell said, the Senate will take up a defense bill and “the backlog of critical nomination­s that have been mindlessly stalled by Democrats.”

Democrats scoff at delay

Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., scoffed at the recess delay and accusation­s of Democratic obstructio­n, saying Republican­s have had seven years and six months to write a bill to replace the Affordable Care Act, commonly called Obamacare.

“They are struggling with health care. The problem is not timing. It’s the substance,” Schumer said. “Two more weeks isn’t going to solve their

problems.”

Democrats are united in their opposition to repealing Obamacare, which passed without a single GOP vote in 2010.

Some 98 percent of letters and 93 percent of telephone calls to the office of Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-nev., were opposed to “Trumpcare,” she said on social media.

Republican­s are trying to repeal and replace the law under budget reconcilia­tion rules that allow a simple majority vote. But with only 52 Republican members, Mcconnell can afford to lose only a couple of votes to pass the bill.

More than a dozen Republican senators voiced opposition to a previous bill, including Heller, who said cuts to Medicaid could result in more than 200,000 Nevadans losing coverage.

Heller has said he wants to repeal Obamacare, and he has voted to do so in the past, but he opposed the previous Senate bill because of proposed Medicaid cuts of more than $780 billion.

“Obamacare is a train wreck, and we need to do something about it, but Senator Heller remains opposed to the Senate bill in its current form,” said spokeswoma­n Megan Taylor.

A Congressio­nal Budget Office analysis found the previous Senate bill would cost 22 million people their coverage.

Republican leaders said a new CBO analysis on the revised legislatio­n would likely come next week.

GOP divisions remain

But divisions remain among GOP conservati­ves, who want deeper cuts, and moderates who oppose Medicaid cuts and those who oppose defunding of Planned Parenthood, which provides prenatal care, family planning and cancer screening for low-income women.

Following Tuesday’s luncheon,

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said he was in favor of forming a bipartisan working group to write legislatio­n that could garner votes from some Democrats.

Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, D-N.D., said that at this point in the “chaos,” leaders from both parties should come together and work on the health care legislatio­n.

Obamacare mandates include a provision that insurance companies provide coverage for people with pre-existing medical conditions. It also requires younger people to purchase insurance, or face tax penalties, and it gives subsidies to low-income people to buy plans.

Sens. Ted Cruz, R-texas, and Mike Lee, R-utah, are proposing language that would allow insurance companies to provide bare-bones coverage plans, as long as one plan is offered

that includes all Obamacare mandates for pre-existing conditions.

Cruz told reporters his amendment would lower premiums. He also said his amendment was key to getting the votes needed to repeal Obamacare and pass a replacemen­t bill.

“It remains challengin­g, but there is a path forward,” Cruz said.

Schumer called the Cruz amendment a “hoax” that would allow insurance companies to sell “junk plans.”

“It’s an extreme step in an already extreme bill,” said Sen. Bob Casey, D-PA.

The Cruz amendment was sent to the CBO for analysis.

Under a scenario outlined by Republican leaders, a procedural vote will be held to bring the legislatio­n to the floor. The Senate then will proceed in a “vote-a-rama” on amendments.

Two weeks ago, Senate GOP leaders lacked support to bring the bill to the floor for considerat­ion.

The House passed its version of the legislatio­n earlier this year.

Trump made repealing Obamacare a campaign pledge and has worked behind the scenes to muster GOP support in the Senate to give him his first major legislativ­e victory.

Contact Gary Martin at 202-6627390 or gmartin@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @garymartin­dc on Twitter.

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Bridget Bennett Las Vegas Review-journal @bridgetkbe­nnett A woman leaves a flower bouquet Tuesday at a makeshift memorial on the 10300 block of Numaga Road in Las Vegas.
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Facebook Karen Jackson and her baby, John Jr.
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Mitch Mcconnell Senate majority leader

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