Los Angeles Times

Predictabl­y cruel

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Re “Health bill in jeopardy after grim analysis,” June 27

Did anyone doubt what kind of healthcare President Trump and the Republican­s in Congress were going to offer?

The bill is in trouble because Senate Republican­s see what passing a bill projected to increase the number of uninsured in the U.S. by 22 million people over 10 years will do to their majority. The House Republican­s passed their similarly bad healthcare bill because many of them are in safe, gerrymande­red districts.

I hope the Senate bill passes so the people who elected these Republican­s will learn a lesson. This country should have known what it was getting voting for Trump and the Republican­s. Nato Flores Los Angeles

We have now seen the disastrous proposals the Republican­s have put forth and also the abominatio­n that the Democrats in Sacramento have laid before us. The only logical conclusion is that a group of people who first and foremost panders to the desires of the most extreme partisan elements cannot be trusted with the task of correcting the problems in our healthcare system.

We need people who have worked in and understand healthcare delivery, financing and education, and who realize that the needs of our population must take primacy over political expediency, to draft a proposal to be submitted to Congress and the public for debate.

If this is done right, the proposal will have bipartisan support, some opposition and the weight of its merit to be adopted. Richard F. Corlin, MD

Santa Monica The writer is a past president of the American Medical Assn.

Re “Join the life-and-death battle,” Opinion, June 25

Like nearly all of the critics who review the Republican attempt to modify Obamacare, Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) has a litany of reasons why it’s bad.

Just once I’d appreciate hearing from someone who has any practical ideas on how to fix Obamacare. From any party. Back in the day that was called “positive thinking” or “contributi­ng to the solution” or “finding common ground.”

In Washington, it is now “my way or the highway,” and Harris’ op-ed article is a case in point. After wrapping herself in the flag and then talking about a 9year-old boy fighting leukemia, Harris offers nothing to help. Max Bosetti Temecula

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite Associated Press ?? GOP SEN. Susan Collins of Maine said she opposes voting on the Republican healthcare bill this week.
J. Scott Applewhite Associated Press GOP SEN. Susan Collins of Maine said she opposes voting on the Republican healthcare bill this week.

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