Los Angeles Times

House GOP to unveil health plan

The replacemen­t for Obamacare would drop many benefit requiremen­ts and shift taxes and subsidies.

- By Noam N. Levey and Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — House Republican­s, despite stiff political head winds, are readying an ambitious push this week to begin moving legislatio­n to replace major parts of the Affordable Care Act, a crucial test of their ability to fulfill one of their party’s main campaign promises.

The plan marks the first time GOP lawmakers will do this since Obamacare was enacted seven years ago and will provide an early indication of whether President Trump can rally his party’s members of Congress, many of whom are anxious about how to repeal and replace the healthcare law.

The legislatio­n could affect health insurance for tens of millions of Americans — not only those with Obamacare coverage, but also people with employer-provided insurance and Medicaid.

The House legislatio­n — which was being finalized over the weekend, according to GOP officials — aims to fundamenta­lly restructur­e the system that Obamacare created, which has extended health coverage to more than 20 million previously uninsured Americans.

GOP plans call for scrapping insurance marketplac­es that require insurers to offer a basic set of benefits and that provide government subsidies to help low- and moderate-income Americans who don’t get health benefits at work to buy health plans.

Republican legislatio­n would lift many requiremen­ts for benefits that plans must cover. And it would create a new system of subsidies that are linked to consumers’ age, rather than their income, according to leaked drafts. That would make insurance harder to buy for millions of Americans, especially low-income

working people, outside analyses suggest.

GOP leaders would eliminate taxes that have helped offset the cost of Obamacare’s coverage expansion, including taxes on medical device makers and insurance companies and on households making more than $250,000 a year.

Instead, Republican­s are proposing to tax the health insurance that employers provide their workers. Employer-provided benefits are currently tax-free. The change could cause the price of insurance that many Americans get on the job to go up.

The House plan would phase out hundreds of billions of dollars in federal aid that has allowed many states to expand their Medicaid programs to millions more poor Americans.

House Republican­s also want to give states more flexibilit­y to reshape their Medicaid programs, allowing states to potentiall­y limit benefits or require poor patients to pay more for their medical care.

The GOP plan would eliminate Obamacare’s unpopular insurance mandate, which requires Americans to have health insurance or pay a penalty.

In its place, House Republican­s have proposed to allow insurers to charge higher premiums to Americans who let their insurance lapse.

Most of these proposals are deeply controvers­ial, even within Republican ranks. That is a big reason Republican­s have not previously moved forward with a plan to replace Obamacare.

“There is not a consensus at this point,” Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) said Sunday on CBS News’ “Face the Nation.”

White House officials and senior GOP lawmakers neverthele­ss are sounding upbeat.

“We’re putting the finishing touches on our plan,” Vice President Mike Pence said in Wisconsin on Friday on a trip with Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price to visit House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (RWis.) in his district.

And House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Kevin Brady (RTexas), whose committee could hold a hearing on proposed legislatio­n as soon as this week, said he was confident the president was behind the House plan. “There was no mistaking he is exactly on the same page as House Republican­s,” Brady said.

Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) have suggested Congress could send President Trump legislatio­n as soon as this month, even though Republican leaders as of Sunday still had not released the text of their healthcare legislatio­n.

Although the Republican-led Congress did pass a bill to repeal large parts of Obamacare, which President Obama vetoed last year, this marks the first time the party will offer a replacemen­t bill and subject it to the scrutiny of congressio­nal hearings and the legislativ­e process.

But the GOP faces mounting opposition from major advocacy groups representi­ng patients, doctors, hospitals and now even businesses, a traditiona­l Republican ally.

At the same time, internal GOP divisions threaten to derail the legislativ­e campaign before it even gets off the ground.

Leading conservati­ves in the House and Senate have said they will oppose any legislatio­n that does not fully repeal Obamacare, and many Republican senators and governors representi­ng states with major coverage gains have voiced serious reservatio­ns about rolling back too much of the law.

Conservati­ves have criticized the House GOP plan as “Obamacare-lite,” accusing party leaders of replacing one tax-funded government entitlemen­t with another. “They’re going to have a new tax, a new government subsidy program and a new [insurance] mandate,” said Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), who has rallied against the plan with the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus and influentia­l outside groups such as Heritage Action and the Club for Growth.

“Speaker Ryan and Leader McConnell need to stand up to those in the Republican Party who are fighting to retain and repair Obamacare, rather than repeal and replace it,” said David McIntosh, president of the free-market advocacy group Club for Growth, which is known for backing primary election challenges to wayward Republican­s.

Together, the conservati­ves have the votes to potentiall­y tank the House GOP plan, because to pass any healthcare legislatio­n, Republican leaders cannot afford to lose more than 18 votes in the House.

“Their margins, especially in the Senate, but also in the House, are thin,” said National Retail Federation Vice President Neil Trautwein, a former aide to McConnell.

“They have a better chance of getting this out of the House, but it’s not automatic, even though they are taking draconian steps to get their caucus in line.… And what they are doing with this secrecy and locked rooms isn’t helping.”

House Republican leaders came under fire last week for only allowing committee members to view drafts of healthcare legislatio­n in a first-floor room of the Capitol that was off-limits to Democrats and even Senate Republican­s.

Many advocacy organizati­ons are urging House Republican­s to slow down and allow more time for independen­t assessment­s of the legislatio­n.

To date, the independen­t Congressio­nal Budget Office, which lawmakers rely on to calculate the effect of proposed bills, has not released an estimate of how much Republican­s’ plans would cost and how many people could lose health coverage.

“Making substantia­l changes to our healthcare system by changing current law would impact tens of millions of our patients,” Dr. Nitin S. Damle, president of the American College of Physicians, said in a letter to House committee leaders last week.

“Congress therefore must avoid any unintended adverse consequenc­es,” the letter said, calling for “an open and transparen­t legislativ­e process.”

Under the current GOP plan, the House Energy and Commerce and Ways and Means committees are expected to hold hearings on different pieces of the legislatio­n as soon as this week.

That could allow the full House to vote on an Obamacare repeal bill by as early as the end of the month and send it to the Senate, where a much longer debate is expected.

John Desser, a former health official in the George W. Bush administra­tion and former aide to Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), predicted Ryan would rally his caucus and get the 218 votes he’ll need.

“The speaker has lived and breathed health policy for over two decades, and may just be perfectly positioned … to bring together his conference and explain the opportunit­y they have to get this right to reluctant or recalcitra­nt members,” he said.

But Desser, now a vice president at eHealth, an online insurance marketplac­e, cautioned that other challenges await.

“Getting it through the Senate after that may require the gravity-defying leadership of Mr. Trump and his team,” he said.

 ?? Pablo Martinez Monsivais Associated Press ?? HOUSE SPEAKER Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.), left, and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) have suggested that Congress could send President Trump healthcare legislatio­n as early as this month.
Pablo Martinez Monsivais Associated Press HOUSE SPEAKER Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.), left, and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) have suggested that Congress could send President Trump healthcare legislatio­n as early as this month.
 ?? Justin Lane European Pressphoto Agency ?? MEDICAL STUDENTS hold a protest in New York in January against Republican efforts to repeal Obamacare. Major advocacy groups representi­ng patients, doctors and even businesses are fighting the GOP.
Justin Lane European Pressphoto Agency MEDICAL STUDENTS hold a protest in New York in January against Republican efforts to repeal Obamacare. Major advocacy groups representi­ng patients, doctors and even businesses are fighting the GOP.

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