Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

GOP ability to dismantle health law expires at month’s end

Senate parliament­arian makes determinat­ion on 51-vote process

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WASHINGTON - Senate Republican­s will soon run out of time to rely on their slim majority to dismantle the Obama health law.

The Senate parliament­arian has determined that rules governing the effort will expire when the fiscal year ends Sept. 30, according to independen­t Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, the ranking member of the Senate Budget Committee. The rules allow Republican­s to dismantle President Barack Obama’s health care law with just 51 votes, avoiding a filibuster.

“Today’s determinat­ion by the Senate parliament­arian is a major victory for the American people and everyone who fought against President Trump’s attempt to take away health care from up to 32 million people,” Sanders said in a statement.

Sanders heads up Democrats on the budget panel and took the lead in the arcane arguments before the parliament­arian, who acts as the Senate’s nonpartisa­n referee.

Republican­s control the Senate 52-48 and were using the special filibuster-proof process in the face of unified Democratic opposition. Now, if Republican­s can’t revive the repeal measure in the next four weeks, they will be forced to work with Democrats to change it.

Senate Republican­s pulled the plug on their “Obamacare” repeal effort in July, after falling short in a key vote. It has languished since, despite President Donald Trump’s call for senators to keep trying.

The ruling by parliament­arian Elizabeth MacDonough is likely the final nail in the coffin, as it means Republican­s would have to revive the effort and wrap it up in just a few weeks. Congress returns to Washington next week to face a packed agenda including Harvey aid, a temporary government­wide funding bill, and the need to raise the government’s borrowing authority to prevent a default on U.S. payments and obligation­s.

The bitter battle — and the struggle among Republican­s — over health care consumed the early months of Trump’s presidency. It wasn’t immediatel­y clear whether Friday’s announceme­nt might prompt Republican­s to make one final push on health care.

The focus might instead shift to a bipartisan effort by Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., and Patty Murray, D-Wash., to shore up the insurance market. That effort faces major obstacles, too.

Many in the administra­tion and its allies in Congress are eager to turn the focus to overhaulin­g the tax code.

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