Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

GOP vows quick health replacemen­t

Delay after Obamacare repeal was expected

- ERICA WERNER ASSOCIATED PRESS

Washington — President-elect Donald Trump pushed Congress Tuesday to act swiftly to repeal President Barack Obama’s health care law, and follow up quickly with a replacemen­t. House Speaker Paul Ryan, after talking with Trump, announced that the House would aim to take both steps “concurrent­ly.”

The push for speed and coordinati­on came as growing numbers of Republican­s expressed concerns about GOP leadership’s plans to repeal the Affordable Care Act without a replacemen­t in hand, even though the party has had more than six years to come up with one.

Trump made his comments in an interview with The New York Times.

“We have to get to business. Obamacare has been a catastroph­ic event,” Trump said.

Under the congressio­nal timetable, procedural budget votes set for this week in the House and Senate will put the repeal process in motion. But the vote on repealing Obamacare isn’t expected until mid-February at earliest; a full replacemen­t hadn’t been expected until months or even years later.

Trump seemed confused about that schedule, telling the Times that the repeal should be “probably sometime next week,” and “the replace will be very quickly or simultaneo­usly, very shortly thereafter.”

Despite his imprecisio­n, Trump was clear that he put an imperative on speed for both repealing and replacing the law. That contradict­s the approach sketched out by GOP leaders who’ve described a transition period of months or years between repealing the law and replacing it with something else.

But even before Trump’s comments Tuesday, the notion of a lengthy transition period was running into problems on Capitol Hill from Republican­s anxious about waiting too long between repealing the bill and replacing it.

Ryan addressed reporters Tuesday morning and described a new goal.

“It is our goal to bring it all together concurrent­ly,” Ryan said. “We’re going to use every tool at our disposal, through legislatio­n, through regulation, to bring replace concurrent along with repeal, so that we can save people from this mess.”

That may be easier said than done. Under arcane budget rules in the Senate, Republican­s will likely be able to use their slim majority to push through repeal legislatio­n without Democratic votes. But they would need Democrats’ help to write a replacemen­t bill. Ryan indicated Tuesday that Republican­s would try to get around that obstacle by passing some elements of the replacemen­t bill using fast-track Senate rules, too.

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