Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Johnson says he will vote for ‘skinny repeal’

He’ll do it if House doesn’t pass bill

- CRAIG GILBERT

WASHINGTON - Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin joined several GOP colleagues Thursday in demanding a guarantee from the House that it won’t pass the same scaled-back repeal of Obamacare that the Senate Republican­s are now trying to pass.

“We’ll vote yes as long as we get that guarantee,” Johnson said at a news conference with Arizona’s John McCain, South Carolina’s Lindsey Graham and Louisiana’s Bill Cassidy.

In a separate interview with the Journal Sentinel, Johnson said an assurance from fellow Wisconsini­te and House Speaker Paul Ryan “would be a pretty good guarantee.”

Graham said the health care bill now before the Senate, dubbed the “skinny repeal,” was a policy “disaster,” and a “fraud” as a replacemen­t for Obamacare.

Johnson said the bill “has been sold to us as the vehicle to get to conference” to negotiate a far more comprehens­ive package with the House — not a good policy in itself. A House-Senate conference results when the two chambers pass different versions of a bill and need to reconcile them.

Johnson and his three colleagues said their fear is that if the Senate passes the bill to get to conference, the House could simply pass the Senate bill and send it to the White House for President Trump’s signature.

Amid repeated failures and much confusion, Senate Republican­s are making a final push to pass a stripped-down version of repeal, because more ambitious attempts to repeal and replace Obamacare have failed to win enough votes.

The scaled-back repeal legislatio­n revolves around scrapping the mandates for individual­s to buy insurance and for large companies to offer it to employees; it also scraps a tax in medical devices.

But it fails to fulfill the biggest priorities of many Republican­s, including Johnson.

One of Johnson’s chief goals is to roll back the expansion of Medicaid under Obamacare. The “skinny repeal” leaves that expansion intact.

Johnson says one of his biggest concerns is skyrocketi­ng premiums for people buying their own insurance; the “skinny repeal” would drive up such premiums for many Americans, according to insurers, and result in millions more uninsured.

Johnson said he applauds scrapping the individual mandate.

“That’s a good thing. You take what you can get and hopefully keep the process moving forward,” he said.

But Johnson said at the news conference that the skinny repeal “doesn’t even come close to honoring our promise of repealing Obamacare.”

In the interview, Johnson also said he is insisting on a vote on an amendment of his that would effectivel­y force members of Congress to buy their insurance on the Obamacare exchanges. Johnson says that would force lawmakers to live under the law.

The Wisconsin Republican also said he wants to serve on a House-Senate conference committee if there is one to resolve difference­s between health care bills passed by the two chambers.

“Nobody has more passion than me” on the issue, he said.

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