Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Senate begins Obamacare repeal

Vote to follow all-night session

- ERIN KELLY

Washington — The Senate planned to work through the night Wednesday to take the first real step toward repealing Obamacare — a top goal of congressio­nal Republican­s and President-elect Donald Trump.

Senators were poised for an all-night voting session on more than 100 amendments to a budget resolution that Republican­s will use as a vehicle to speed through repeal of the Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare.

A final vote on the resolution was expected early Thursday.

House leaders plan to take it up when the Senate is done.

Republican­s said the 2010 health care law is broken and must be repealed and replaced with something better — although just what that replacemen­t plan will look like has not yet been revealed by congressio­nal leaders.

Critics of the law cite skyrocketi­ng premiums, high deductible­s and fewer health care choices for patients as insurers pull out of the program.

“When Obamacare’s supporters forced their partisan law on our country, they promised an easy-to-use system, one that would lower premiums and out-of-pocket health care costs, one that would foster choice and allow families to keep the plans and doctors they liked,” said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.).

“But it didn’t take long for the American people to discover the truth about Obamacare. Too many have been personally hurt by this law. Too many feel they’re worse off than they were before Obamacare.”

Democrats said repealing the law will strip millions of Americans of insurance, leave people with pre-existing medical conditions unable to find coverage, and increase the nation’s budget deficit by $353 billion over the next 10 years as the tax and fee provisions that pay for Obamacare are gutted.

“Ripping apart our health care system — with no plan to replace it — will create chaos,” said Sen. Patty Murray of Washington, the senior Democrat on the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.

“If Republican­s repeal the Affordable Care Act, it’s women, kids, seniors, patients with serious illnesses, and people with disabiliti­es who will bear the burden.

“Premiums will skyrocket,” she continued. “Out-ofpocket prescripti­on drug costs will rise. And overall health care costs will increase.

“It’s a perfect storm to make America sick again — and absolutely the wrong direction for families and for our economy.”

While Republican­s are eager to repeal the Affordable Care Act, they have acknowledg­ed that it could cause serious problems for Americans if the law is scrapped without a replacemen­t plan ready to go.

At a news conference Wednesday, Trump said he is prepared to offer a detailed replacemen­t plan as soon as his nominee for Health and Human Services secretary — Republican Rep. Tom Price of Georgia — is confirmed by the Senate.

The resolution that the Senate is set to vote on early Thursday would direct key committees to write draft legislatio­n by Jan. 27 to repeal the health care law.

Some Republican­s want the deadline to be pushed to March to give lawmakers more time to come up with a replacemen­t plan.

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