Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

GOP says it won’t rush to pass health law

- DAVID ESPO

WASHINGTON — Congressio­nal Republican­s intend to seek quick repeal of any parts of the health-care law that survive a widely anticipate­d Supreme Court ruling, but don’t plan to push replacemen­t measures until after the fall elections or perhaps 2013, lawmakers said.

Instead, GOP lawmakers cite recent announceme­nts that some insurance companies will retain a few of the law’s higher- profile provisions as evidence that quick legislativ­e action is not essential. Those are steps that officials say Republican­s quietly urged in private conversati­ons with the industry.

Once the Supreme Court issues a ruling, “the goal is to repeal anything that is left standing,” said Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., a member of the party’s leadership.

Beyond that, “we ought to go step by step to lower the cost” of health care, he added, a formula repeated by numerous other Republican­s interviewe­d in recent days.

Across the political aisle, neither President Barack Obama nor congressio­nal Democrats have said how they will react to a high-court ruling that could wipe out the legislatio­n they worked so hard to enact.

“We’re not spending a whole bunch of time planning for contingenc­ies,” Obama said this spring at the annual meeting of The Associated Press. He expressed confidence the court would uphold the law, and neither he nor his aides have said what fallback plans are under discussion.

“We will be prepared in any eventualit­y,” White House aide David Plouffe said Sunday on ABC’s This Week, although he declined to elaborate.

Among Republican­s, aides to Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and other key lawmakers have convened a series of meetings in recent weeks to plan a post-ruling strategy.

A Supreme Court ruling is expected within the next two weeks on a challenge to the law, which has drawn fierce opposition among most Republican­s for its requiremen­t that individual­s carry health insurance.

While three big insurance companies announced plans this past week to retain certain protection­s for an estimated 40 percent of all individual­s who receive their coverage through work, there has been no advance word from the drug industry on how prescripti­on costs for older people might be affected by a finding that the law is unconstitu­tional.

Even so, Republican­s said they have no plans for assuring continuity of a provision that reduces out-of-pocket costs for seniors with high drug expenses.

“I don’t think anybody intends to get involved” in the portion of Medicare that provides prescripti­on drug coverage. The program is “working better than we designed it,” said Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., referring to studies that show the program’s cost is lower than was originally estimated.

House Republican­s have voted 30 times to eliminate, defund or scale back parts or all of the health law, most recently approving a measure to wipe out a tax on medical devices.

Senate Democrats have blocked nearly all of the previous attacks. Forcing another vote would allow Republican­s to signal a continued commitment to supporters of repeal, while simultaneo­usly requiring Democrats to take another stand on a measure that has failed to generate significan­t public support and might by then also have been found deficient by the Supreme Court.

“Democrats don’t want to talk about health care between now and the election, especially Obamacare,” said Don Stewart, a spokesman for McConnell, referring to the law signed in 2010.

Many members of the GOP rank and file campaigned on a motto of “repeal and replace” in 2010 when it came to the law. But now, nearly two years later, they express no urgency to replace a law drafted by Democrats, and one they hope the court will kill, with a different one of their own.

“We’re not going to repeat the mistakes made by the Democrats who run Washington when they passed a 2,700-page bill that no one had actually read,” said Michael Steel, a spokesman for Boehner.

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