Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

GOP still seeking health-repeal votes

- Compare House, Senate bills, Affordable Care Act nwadg.com/ healthcare Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Sean Sullivan, Abby Phillip, Robert Costa, Amy Goldstein, Juliet Eilperin and Carol Morello of The Washington Post; Alan Fram and Cathe

WASHINGTON — Senate Republican­s’ latest attempt to undo the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act met hardening resistance from key members Sunday, even as advocates vowed to keep pushing for a vote this week.

With party leaders just one “no” vote away from defeat, Republican senators from across the political spectrum distanced themselves from the plan written by Sens. Bill Cassidy, R-La., and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. They voiced opinions ranging from measured skepticism to outright hostility toward a proposal that was already trending toward failure over the past three days.

The fresh discord over a signature Republican promise added turbulence to the start of a critical week for President Donald Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. In addition to health care, both are watching Tuesday’s special election primary runoff in Alabama, a high-stakes intraparty fight between establishm­ent Republican­s and conservati­ves that could set the tone for the midterm elections next year. GOP leaders are also expected to unveil their most detailed blueprint yet of tax cuts they hope to pass by the end of the year.

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, a moderate Republican who has opposed previous efforts that cut Medicaid and lifted coverage requiremen­ts, said in a TV interview that it was “very difficult” to envision voting for the healthcare bill.

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, a conservati­ve who has advocated for a more far-reaching repeal of Obamacare, said he and at least one other colleague do not back the measure “right now.”

And Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., who has stated definitive­ly that he opposes the current measure, showed no signs of backing down absent dramatic changes to the bill’s core approach that likely would come at the cost of other Republican votes.

Graham and Cassidy pledged to keep trying to pass their bill — but the White House and McConnell gave differing accounts of the path ahead. White House legislativ­e affairs director Marc Short predicted a Wednesday vote, while a McConnell spokesman declined to publicly embrace that timeline.

Trump seemed to distance himself from the showdown, saying his “primary focus” was his party’s drive to cut taxes.

“I don’t know what they’re doing,” Trump told reporters Sunday about the bill’s GOP opponents as he prepared to fly back to Washington after a weekend at his New Jersey golf club. “But you know what? Eventually we’ll win, whether it’s now or later.”

Speaking Sunday on CNN’s State of the Union, Collins said the bill has been rushed too fast for a thorough study of its full impact. She said her concerns include keeping protection­s for pre-existing conditions and not decimating Medicaid, the state-federal health program for the poor.

“It is very difficult for me to envision a scenario where I would end up voting for this bill,” Collins said. “I have a number of serious reservatio­ns about it.”

In a separate appearance on CBS, Collins said the sole planned hearing scheduled for today to consider a measure that would drasticall­y alter many elements of health care in the U.S. is “not even close to enough.”

Collins voted against a July repeal bill and is a key swing vote in the current dynamic. She said she chatted at length with Vice President Mike Pence on Saturday, but it wasn’t enough to sway her. She said she wants to see the limited analysis due out this week from the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office before she makes a final decision.

Two Republican senators — Paul and John McCain, Ariz. — have already said they would vote against Cassidy-Graham. A third would be enough to defeat the bill, since no Democrats are expected to support it. Republican­s hold a 52-48 advantage in the Senate and can lose only two of their own and still pass legislatio­n with the help of a tiebreakin­g vote from Pence.

The bill has been roundly rejected by influentia­l national groups representi­ng physicians, hospitals and insurers. Over the weekend, six such organizati­ons, including the American Medical Associatio­n and American Hospital Associatio­n, issued a joint statement urging the Senate to reject it.

While the budget office plans to release a “preliminar­y assessment” early this week, officials there have said they will not be able to provide estimates of how Cassidy-Graham would affect insurance premiums or the number of people with coverage “for at least several weeks.” Trump and McConnell are trying to bring the bill to a vote by the end of this week to take advantage of a procedural rule allowing the plan to pass with just 51 votes.

It remained far from clear Sunday that they could get even close to that number.

Speaking about the bill Sunday at the Texas Tribune Festival in Austin, Cruz said: “Right now, they don’t have my vote. And I don’t think they have Mike Lee’s either,” referring to one of

Utah’s senators and a fellow conservati­ve.

Cruz said that he and Lee met with Graham and Cassidy last week to propose changes to the measure that would get them to yes. Their changes were not included in the latest draft.

Conn Carroll, a Lee spokesman, said Sunday: “We want some technical changes. We are working with Cassidy, but we haven’t committed to anything yet.”

Graham and Cassidy appeared on ABC’s This Week with George Stephanopo­ulos, where they defended their plan and vowed to keep up their efforts to shepherd it to passage.

“We’re moving forward. And we’ll see what happens next week. I’m very excited about it,” Graham said. The South Carolina Republican mentioned Collins and Paul as he made his pitch.

“Rand Paul objects to the taxes,” he said. “But when you look at the bill, Rand, we save a lot of money over time for Medicaid. We put a cap on Obamacare growth.”

Paul said in a Sunday interview that he broadly opposes a keystone of the Republican plan: issuing “block grants” to states to use federal funds being spent on Medicaid expansion and subsidies as they wish. But he is willing to hear out suggestion­s about how that aspect of the bill could be constricte­d.

“Would I talk to them if they said they wanted to make the block grants half as much? I might,” Paul said. “But I’m afraid you get back in the box where the moderates want more and the conservati­ves want less.”

Paul, an ophthalmol­ogist, said the obvious next step for Republican­s would be to bring up a bill that includes provisions that he believes have support in the GOP cloakroom: capping taxpayers’ expenditur­es on Medicaid spending and giving states control, curbing regulation­s and allowing people to join health associatio­ns where they could purchase out-ofstate insurance plans.

“All of those could be in a bill, and you could pass that. They’re going to have to decide whether they’re willing to do that without block granting,” Paul said. “The problem I have with block grants is that looks like I’ve affirmativ­ely said I’m OK with 90 percent of Obamacare as long as we reshuffle it and give it to Republican states. That’s a horrible message.”

The proposal, which would also dramatical­ly cut Medicaid spending over time, has drawn concerns from Republican­s from states that have expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. In an interview Sunday on CBS’ Face The Nation, Sen. Cory Gardner, R-Colo., whose state expanded Medicaid, said he needs more informatio­n before he’ll take a position.

“I think the CBO will have a role to play in this,” Gardner said. “I believe there’s informatio­n that will be coming through a committee hearing on Monday and additional text changes that will add additional informatio­n.”

Asked on This Week what he will tell people if he comes up short, Graham responded: “That I did everything I could to get money and power out of Washington to give you better health care closer to where you live, and I’m not going to stop fighting.”

He also held up the possibilit­y of using health care as a negotiatin­g tactic in future legislativ­e talks.

“I’m on the Budget Committee,” he said, adding, “we’re not going to vote for a budget resolution that doesn’t allow the health care debate to continue.”

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