Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Johnson, three other senators withhold support on health bill.

Johnson, 3 others lament health plan

- CRAIG GILBERT

WASHINGTON - Republican Ron Johnson of Wisconsin joined three other conservati­ves in the U.S. Senate in withholdin­g their support for the Obamacare replacemen­t bill their party unveiled Thursday.

“Currently, for a variety of reasons, we are not ready to vote for this bill, but we are open to negotiatio­n and obtaining more informatio­n before it is brought to the floor,” Johnson, Ted Cruz of Texas, Mike Lee of Utah and Rand Paul of Kentucky said in a joint statement.

“There are provisions in this draft that represent an improvemen­t to our current health care system but it does not appear this draft as written will accomplish the most important promise that we made to Americans: to repeal Obamacare and lower their health care costs,” they said.

Of the four, Johnson’s dissent may be the most surprising, since it has been widely assumed in Washington he would ultimately vote for the bill. And he may still.

But Johnson has for months signaled his reservatio­ns about his party’s approach to repealing Obamacare, a program he has long assailed. He criticized the House bill that the Senate bill is patterned after, sharing some concerns with moderate Republican­s and other concerns with conservati­ve Republican­s. He has repeatedly criticized the legislativ­e approach his party has taken and voiced his difference­s with leadership over the process.

In interviews with the Journal Sentinel and other media outlets, Johnson has complained that a vote next week gives him too little time to evaluate the Senate bill and get input from his constituen­ts. He has argued that Congress should worry first about stabilizin­g the health care markets while taking more time to get a full-blown Obamacare replacemen­t right. He has said Republican­s should have tried harder to work with Democrats.

Johnson has also voiced concern over how states like Wisconsin that didn’t join in the Medicaid expansion under Obamacare are treated compared with states that took the federal funding for expanded Medicaid.

On MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” Thursday, Johnson defended aspects of the GOP bill, including the historic rollback of the Medicaid entitlemen­t.

“We’re trying to do a little bit, just a little bit, of entitlemen­t-controllin­g so we make Medicaid sustainabl­e in the future,”

he said.

But Johnson repeated his objection to a quick vote next week on the bill.

“I will insist we have enough time certainly to satisfy myself — and get the input from my constituen­ts — that in the end … this is a continuous improvemen­t from where we are right now,” a system he called “crazy” and “unsustaina­ble.”

Tammy Baldwin, Wisconsin’s Democratic senator, issued a statement Thursday assailing the GOP Senate bill:

“For Wisconsin families struggling to get

ahead, this repeal plan has no heart and people are scared that it will make things worse. It will make families pay more for less care and increase the number of people who are uninsured. The guaranteed protection­s and care that you have today are weakened and now, politician­s in Madison will decide whether you keep the care you have, or whether it is taken away.”

The announceme­nt by Johnson, Cruz, Paul and Lee that they can’t support the bill in its current form underscore­s how little margin Senate Republican­s have for passing a new health care law.

With a majority of 52 members, they can only afford to lose two Republican­s, since no Democrat

will support their effort to repeal Obamacare.

Even though the four conservati­ves issued a joint statement about their stance, their individual concerns aren’t necessaril­y identical. What’s more, it is not only conservati­ves who have reservatio­ns. A handful of Senate GOP moderates have also expressed deep concern about the bill, including its Medicaid cuts.

In the negotiatio­ns that unfold over the next week, a concession to one side of the GOP caucus could threaten support from the other. At the same time, Republican­s across the board will be under immense political pressure from within their own party to pass a bill.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) makes his way through reporters at the Capitol Thursdsay after Republican­s released their Obamacare replacemen­t bill.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) makes his way through reporters at the Capitol Thursdsay after Republican­s released their Obamacare replacemen­t bill.

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