Las Vegas Review-Journal

No. 2 Senate Republican vows vote on health care

Uncertaint­y reigns after Mccain has surgical procedure

- By Robert Pear New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — A top Senate Republican vows to bring the party’s health care bill to a vote as soon as possible, even as detractors said they would use a delay caused by the absence of Sen. John Mccain to mobilize further opposition to the measure.

“I believe as soon as we have a full contingent of senators, that we’ll have that vote,” the No. 2 Senate Republican, John Cornyn of Texas, said on NBC’S “Meet the Press.”

But questions continue to emerge over when that might be. Mccain, 80, had a craniotomy — a procedure in which doctors create an opening in the skull — on Friday to remove a blood clot above his left eye, and he is recovering at home in Arizona. A statement from his office had indicated that he would be out this week, but neurosurge­ons not involved with Mccain’s surgery said the recovery period for such a procedure was often longer.

“For most patients, the time to recover from a craniotomy is usually a few weeks,” said Dr. Nrupen Baxi, an assistant professor of neurosurge­ry at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City.

Mccain’s surgeons are not giving interviews, and his communicat­ions director, Julie Tarallo, said no further informatio­n was available.

Aides to the Senate majority leader, Mitch Mcconnell of Kentucky, said it was unclear how long the delay would last.

The timing of the Senate vote is crucial. The more it is delayed, the more likely the bill is to fail, supporters and opponents say. Moreover, the Senate schedule will soon be packed with other legislatio­n, like an increase in the statutory limit on federal borrowing and spending bills for the fiscal year that starts Oct. 1. In addition, Republican­s are eager to cut taxes and simplify the tax code.

The Senate has struggled to pass a health care bill, delaying a vote on a previous version of the legislatio­n in June. Several Republican senators have expressed reservatio­ns or outright opposition to the new version as well, and Republican­s need Mccain’s vote to have any chance of passing it.

The bill, to repeal and replace major provisions of the Affordable Care Act, is a top priority for President Donald Trump and Republican­s in the House, which passed its own repeal bill in early May.

Cornyn acknowledg­ed that “there’s uncertaint­y about what the final outcome will be.” Asked what would happen if the bill did not pass, he said: “I assume we’ll keep trying. But at some point, if Democrats won’t participat­e in the process, then we’re going to have to come up with a different plan.”

Critics of the Senate’s health care bill, taking advantage of the delay, said that Republican leaders needed to rework the legislatio­n in fundamenta­l ways. Given the additional time, they said, Senate committees should conduct hearings to solicit opinions from the public and from experts on health care and insurance.

“We should not be making fundamenta­l changes in a vital safety net program that’s

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States