Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Spending bill, health care on Congress’ front burner

- ANDREW TAYLOR AND ALAN FRAM

WASHINGTON — Lawmakers returning to Washington this week will find a familiar quagmire on health care legislatio­n and a budget deadline dramatized by the prospect of a protracted battle between President Donald Trump and Democrats over his border wall.

Trump’s GOP allies control Congress, but they’ve been unable to send him a single major bill as his presidency faces the symbolic 100- day mark on Saturday — the very day when the government, in a worst-case scenario, could shut down.

Trump wants to revive a health care measure from House Republican­s to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act. Trump also hopes to use a $ 1 trillion catchall spending bill to salvage victories on his promised U. S.- Mexico border wall, a multibilli­on- dollar down payment on a Pentagon buildup, and perhaps a crackdown on cities that refuse to cooperate with immigratio­n enforcemen­t by federal authoritie­s.

Congress faces a midnight Friday deadline to avert a government shutdown. But negotiatio­ns on the spending measure, a pile of leftover business from last year that includes the budgets of almost every federal agency, have hit a rough patch.

Rank- and- file Republican­s received few answers on a Saturday conference call by top House GOP leaders, who offered little detail and said deals remained elusive on both health care and the catchall spending measure, with no votes scheduled yet.

It’s looking like a one- or two-week temporary measure will be needed to prevent a shutdown and buy time for more talks. Negotiatio­ns have faltered because of disputes over the border wall and health law subsidies to help low- income people afford health insurance.

Trump’s Capitol Hill allies had been tempering expectatio­ns that the president will win much in the budget talks. Democratic support will be needed to pass the spending measure, and Republican­s fear taking the blame if the government shuts down on their watch.

“We have the leverage and they have the exposure,” House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California told fellow Democrats on a conference call Thursday, according to a senior Democratic aide. Pelosi wants the spending bill to give the cash-strapped government of Puerto Rico help with its Medicaid obligation­s, and Democrats are pressing for money for overseas famine relief, treatment for opioid abuse, and the extension of health benefits for 22,000 retired Appalachia­n coal miners and their families.

An additional Democratic demand is for cost-sharing payments to insurance companies that help low-income people afford health policies under the health law. The payments are a critical subsidy and the subject of a lawsuit by House Republican­s. Trump has threatened to withhold the money to force Democrats to negotiate on health legislatio­n.

Trump’s presidenti­al victory makes it “completely reasonable to ask and to insist that some of his priorities are funded,” White House budget Director Mick Mulvaney said in an interview. “We are more than happy to talk to the Democrats about some of their priorities, but we encourage them to recognize that they are a minority party.”

Both the White House and Democrats have adopted hard- line positions on Trump’s $ 1 billion request for a down payment on constructi­on of the border wall, a central plank of last year’s campaign. Talk of forcing Mexico to pay for it has largely been abandoned. But in an interview with The Associated Press on Friday, Trump stopped short of demanding that money for the project be included in the must-pass spending bill.

Health care is on a separate track and facing trouble, too. The White House is pressing House Republican­s to rally behind a revised bill so GOP leaders can schedule a vote this week that could let Trump fulfill a 100-days promise.

GOP leaders have shown no desire to revisit the issue until they’re assured there will be no replay of an earlier failed attempt from March. The measure would have repealed much of Obama’s 2010 overhaul and replaced it with fewer coverage requiremen­ts and less generous federal subsidies for many people.

Two leaders of the House GOP’s warring moderate and conservati­ve factions devised a compromise during Congress’ recess to let states get federal waivers to ignore some requiremen­ts of the health law. Those include one that now obligates insurers to cover specified services such as for mental health, and one that bars them from raising premiums on seriously ill patients.

The potential amendment was brokered by Rep. Mark Meadows, R- N. C., who heads the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus, and Rep. Tom MacArthur, R-N.J., a leader of the moderate House Tuesday Group.

House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., called off a March 24 House vote on the measure after realizing that objections by conservati­ve and moderate Republican­s would have assured its defeat. Democrats were uniformly against the legislatio­n.

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