Modern Healthcare

GOP anxiety rises as conservati­ves and moderates split on ACA repeal

- By Harris Meyer

Divisions sharpened last week between hard-right and more pragmatic Republican­s over both policy and strategy for repealing and replacing the Affordable Care Act.

Those difference­s— along with the apparently slow progress in drafting actual legislatio­n that could be scored by the Congressio­nal Budget Office on cost and coverage impact— underscore the tough struggle Republican­s face in dismantlin­g Obamacare and establishi­ng an alternativ­e system.

One of their biggest disagreeme­nts is over the future of the ACA’s expansion of Medicaid coverage to more than 10 million low-income adults. Conservati­ves want to eliminate it while a number of GOP senators and governors want to keep that coverage.

Congressio­nal Republican­s are feeling growing pressure to show progress on healthcare. Many are going back to their districts this week and holding town hall events, where they may face constituen­ts who are upset about the

Ryan has promised the House will repeal most of the ACA via an expedited budget reconcilia­tion bill passed on a party-line vote by early April.

potential loss of their ACA coverage. In addition, insurers are signaling they may pull out of the individual market in 2018, as Humana announced it would do last week.

House Speaker Paul Ryan promised Thursday to introduce repeal-and-replace legislatio­n when the House returns from recess on Feb. 27, though he’s presented no legislativ­e language so far. He said he’s waiting for the CBO and the Joint Committee on Taxation to score his proposed bill on costs and coverage levels before it’s unveiled.

Ryan has promised the House will repeal most of the ACA via an expedited budget reconcilia­tion bill passed on a party-line vote by early April. He’s indicated it will include some replacemen­t features, such as expanded health savings accounts and age-based premium tax credits.

GOP leaders want to erase most of the ACA taxes that fund the law’s coverage expansions and replace them with a cap on the tax exclusion employees receive for employer-provided health benefits.

Two people familiar with Ryan’s proposal told the Associated Press that employees would pay taxes on the value of coverage above $12,000 for individual­s and $30,000 for families. Republican­s would not confirm those amounts. But House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Kevin Brady told reporters that the “vast majority of Americans” would be unaffected. That suggests it wouldn’t raise much revenue.

That proposal is likely to trigger strong opposition from business and labor groups and from many conservati­ve con-

Many experts question whether Republican­s will be able to craft a politicall­y acceptable Medicaid restructur­ing model as part of an ACA repeal bill that could pass by April.

gressional Republican­s, who may see it as a new tax.

“You have to legislate with a sense of political reality,” said Republican Rep. Tom Cole of Oklahoma. Backing a tax proposal would hurt lawmakers in the 2018 elections because it “would set up an ad against you from multiple directions.”

The day before Ryan’s announceme­nt, leaders of the very conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus, joined by Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, demanded that Republican­s quickly repass their 2016 budget reconcilia­tion bill to repeal most of the ACA, without worrying about replacemen­t provisions.

They touted Paul’s Obamacare Replacemen­t Act, a bill that almost certainly would leave millions of people currently covered under the ACA uninsured, as their alternativ­e. Rep. Mark Sanford of South Carolina has introduced a companion bill in the House.

The 2016 repeal bill would erase federal funding for the Medicaid expansion after two years. Asked whether the nearly 40 House Freedom Caucus members would work with Senate Republican­s on maintainin­g some form of Medicaid coverage for those who have received it, Rep. Mark Meadows, the caucus chairman, ruled that out. He said his members want to repeal the expansion entirely and offer health savings accounts to help that low-income population.

Meanwhile, Senate Republican­s lunched with newly confirmed HHS Secretary Tom Price, hoping to learn that the Trump administra­tion has a concrete plan that would abolish the ACA while maintainin­g affordable coverage for the 20 million people who have gotten it under the current law. But senators who attended said they heard no specifics from Price.

Sen. Mike Rounds of South Dakota said the secretary promised that the administra­tion would work with Congress on legislatio­n, and that it was making ACA repeal and replacemen­t a top priority. Rounds predicted that crafting legislatio­n would likely take another two months, and the transition to a new system would last two to three years.

Rounds sounded a very different note on Medicaid expansion than that expressed by Paul and the Freedom Caucus. Rounds said there was discussion during the lunch with Price of equalizing federal Medicaid contributi­ons between the 31 states that have expanded Medicaid and the 19 that have not, including his own state. But the governors of the expansion states would resist taking away the expansion money that has provided coverage to so many of their residents, and that could derail the replacemen­t plan, he explained.

Sixteen states that have expanded Medicaid have Republican governors, including Arizona, Arkansas, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Nevada and Ohio. About 20 Republican senators represent expansion states.

“I’m from a state that has an expanded Medicaid population that I am very concerned about,” Republican Sen. Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia said in December. “I don’t want to throw them off into the cold.”

According to documents obtained by the Associated Press, the GOP leadership plan presented Thursday would sweeten the Medicaid changes for states and healthcare providers by temporaril­y providing additional Medicaid funding to the states. But it’s expected that over time, the amount of federal funding would decline significan­tly.

Hospital groups are nervous about the GOP’s proposed Medicaid restructur­ing and are lobbying to soften the impact. “I wish we could maintain the funding,” said Sabra Rosener, vice president for government relations at UnityPoint Health. “But the political reality is there will be fewer dollars for healthcare. When you see something inevitable, you have to work within the parameters.”

Still, many experts question whether Republican­s will be able to craft a politicall­y acceptable Medicaid restructur­ing model as part of an ACA repeal bill that could pass by April, given the strong concerns of state elected officials, healthcare industry groups, and patient advocates.

The formula for reducing federal funding over time will be particular­ly contentiou­s. “I think they’ll have a hard time capping the federal contributi­on,” said Michael Leavitt, Utah’s former Republican governor and HHS Secretary under George W. Bush.

Sen. Lamar Alexander, chairman of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, told Bloomberg News last week that his panel is not planning to repass the 2016 repeal bill.

The replacemen­t bill offered by Paul and Sanford likely will not satisfy Alexander or even House Speaker Ryan. It proposes a non-refundable $5,000 tax credit to help people afford coverage. But lower- and middle-income people who owe less than $5,000 in income tax would not receive the full amount, and those who owe no tax would receive no financial assistance.

In contrast, Ryan’s House leadership proposal would provide a refundable, age-based tax credit. It would offer the same premium subsidy to everyone regardless of income.

Last week, Paul argued that it’s unacceptab­le to offer a refundable tax credit similar to the ACA’s. Instead, he said, his approach would create a “real marketplac­e” that would drive down prices for medical services and that help lower-income people better afford healthcare.

Meadows rejected more moderate Republican reform approaches such as a bill introduced by Sens. Bill Cassidy and Susan Collins to let states decide whether to keep the ACA insurance structure or switch to a more conservati­ve model. That bill would retain the ACA’s taxes to finance the replacemen­t coverage. Meadows warned that the Cassidy-Collins bill would “institutio­nalize Obamacare.”

He urged rapid action on repealing the ACA to clear the way for the Republican­s’ next priority, a tax package to sharply reduce rates for wealthier Americans and businesses. “We have to get it done because we can’t start tax reform until we deal with this,” he said.

Rounds expressed optimism about the healthcare reform discussion­s among congressio­nal Republican­s, saying legislatio­n “is starting to jell.” But that was not obvious from listening to the very different messages last week from Republican­s on the opposite ends of the Capitol.

“There’s no question we’ll see a repeal- and- replace bill,” Leavitt said. “But how do you define repeal and replace?”

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