Orlando Sentinel

House conservati­ves eye health care repeal

- By Alan Fram

WASHINGTON — Hard-line conservati­ves began an uphill fight Friday to force a fresh House vote this fall on erasing much of President Barack Obama’s health care law without an immediate replacemen­t, the latest instance of Republican rifts in what’s been a fractious week for the GOP.

The effort by the House Freedom Caucus seemed to have no chance of passing Congress.

The GOP-led Senate turned down a similar repeal-only bill last month, and top House Republican­s have little interest in refighting a health care battle they were relieved to put aside after their chamber approved legislatio­n in May.

With the party’s repeal effort collapsing last month in the Senate, the conservati­ves’ push gives them a fresh chance to show hardright voters they’ve not surrendere­d.

It also provides a chance to call attention to Republican lawmakers who’ve

WASHINGTON — Message to President Donald Trump and congressio­nal Republican­s: Stop trying to scuttle the Obama health care law, and start trying to make it more effective.

That’s the resounding word from a national poll released Friday by the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation. The survey was taken following last month’s Senate derailment of the GOP drive to supplant much of President Barack Obama’s statute with a diminished federal role in health care.

Around 4 in 5 want the Trump administra­tion to take actions that help Obama’s law function properly, rather than trying to undermine it. pledged to tear down Obama’s law but haven’t voted to do so with Donald Trump in the White House.

“It’s not about calling out anyone, it’s about doing what we said,” said Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, a Freedom Caucus leader.

“And I do think people deserve to see if their member of Congress is going to do what they campaigned on.”

The conservati­ves filed a petition Friday calling for a House vote on dismantlin­g Obama’s law that would not take effect until January 2019.

They say that would give Congress time to enact a replacemen­t and pressure Democrats to cooperate, a premise Democrats who oppose the repeal effort reject.

To force a House vote, conservati­ves need signatures of 218 lawmakers, a majority.

That seems like an uphill task because many GOP moderates oppose annulling Obama’s law without a replacemen­t they’d support, and all Democrats are opposed.

Asked how Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., views the conservati­ves’ push, spokeswoma­n AshLee Strong said, “The House has already passed a plan to repeal and replace Obamacare.”

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