Orlando Sentinel

Congress took its

House OKs budget resolution, but next steps will be harder

- By Lisa Mascaro lisa.mascaro@latimes.com

first step toward gutting President Obama’s health care reform law, with the House voting along party lines on a plan that would repeal parts of the ACA.

WASHINGTON — The Republican-led Congress passed a plan Friday to start the process of repealing the Affordable Care Act, but the road ahead remains unclear.

House Republican­s approved the budget blueprint, 227-198, following a similar party-line vote earlier this week in the Senate. The blueprint sets a monthend timetable to draft a repeal bill. But leaders warned the process could take longer.

The week was full of theatrics as Republican­s struggled to fulfill one of their major campaign promises. One by one, Republican­s rose at their desks to criticize Obamacare — Rep. Drew Ferguson, R-Ga., compared the ACA to a goat ransacking the interior of a house.

“I have to get the goat out,” he said.

And after each GOP speech, Democrats reminded lawmakers of how many hundreds of thousands of Americans might lose their health care coverage in that lawmaker’s state if Obamacare is repealed — more than 580,000, for example, in Georgia.

But launching the repeal process was the easy part. Republican­s aren’t any closer to fulfilling their longtime promise to “repeal and replace Obamacare,” even though they will now control the House, Senate and White House.

President-elect Donald Trump said this week that he expects Congress to act swiftly, promising that a plan will be coming as soon as his pick for Health and Human Services secretary, Rep. Tom Price, R-Ga., is confirmed for the Cabinet.

“It’ll be repeal and replace. It will be essentiall­y, simultaneo­usly,” Trump said. “It will be various segments, you understand, but will most likely be on the same day or the same week, but probably, the same day, could be the same hour.”

Republican leaders, though, know that is a promise easier made than kept.

Ever since President Barack Obama signed the health care bill into law in 2010, Republican­s have been unable to coalesce around a viable option.

Friday’s vote showed the trouble ahead as nine Republican­s, a mix of the most conservati­ve and most moderate, declined to back the first step.

“We’re not holding hard deadlines, only because we want to get it right,” said House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis. He has committed to having repeal and replace done “this year.”

But without a clear path forward, rank-and-file GOP lawmakers are becoming increasing­ly nervous that constituen­ts back home will lose their health care coverage if the ACA is repealed before a replacemen­t is enacted.

In closed-door meetings over the past two weeks, Republican­s have expressed much “handwringi­ng,” as one lawmaker put it. One congressma­n quoted Scripture in asking colleagues to ensure they had a sturdy foundation before pressing ahead with the repeal.

“We do have members who feel if we don’t do them together, the replacemen­t plan will never happen,” acknowledg­ed Rep. Chris Collins, R-N.Y., an early Trump supporter. “People will, I hope, fall in line with our new president, make sure we are supportive of him coming right out of the gate.”

As voting was underway this week, Republican aides were increasing­ly suggesting another course of action.

They say the Obamacare replacemen­t will not be a single bill, but a series of actions — some made through regulatory changes by Price at Health and Human Services, others by Trump’s executive actions, and some in legislatio­n — to build a new health care system.

That process could drag throughout 2017, with many of the changes not expected to be phased in for several years to ease the transition.

“We’re not going to swap one 2,700-page monstrosit­y for another,” Ryan said, referring to Obamacare.

Republican­s have promised their plan will lower the consumer costs of health insurance premiums and deductible­s, and give people more choices in choosing coverage.

They have floated ideas for expanding tax-exempt health savings accounts and giving lower-income Americans refundable tax credits toward buying their own coverage. They want to end the mandate that all Americans have insurance.

But without legislatio­n, those ideas remain only works in progress.

Meanwhile, more than 20 million people are now benefiting from Obamacare, either by purchasing private insurance on the ACA exchanges or receiving health coverage through the Medicaid expansion. Many people receive government subsidies to defray the costs.

Repealing Obamacare threatens to wipe out that system without providing a new one.

“Why don’t they have a remedy?” said Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif. “They’re not going to have anything better than the ACA.”

Approval of the budget package Friday sends instructio­ns to various congressio­nal committees to draft legislatio­n to repeal Obamacare by Jan. 27. But aides cautioned that deadline is not binding and may slip.

 ?? JIM LO SCALZO/EPA ?? Speaker Paul Ryan, center, walks to the House floor, where representa­tives were voting on a budget resolution Friday.
JIM LO SCALZO/EPA Speaker Paul Ryan, center, walks to the House floor, where representa­tives were voting on a budget resolution Friday.

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