Orlando Sentinel

Republican process to repeal Obamacare expires Sept. 30

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WASHINGTON — The Senate parliament­arian has dealt a new blow to Republican­s’ Obamacare repeal campaign, ruling that the GOP can use a special procedure to advance repeal legislatio­n with 50 votes only until the end of September.

Republican­s have been relying on a process known as budget reconcilia­tion to try to roll back the 2010 health care law.

This process, which prevents legislatio­n in the Senate from being filibuster­ed, was critical to passing a repeal bill because Republican­s have only 52 votes in the Senate, short of the 60 normally required to override a filibuster.

But the process is limited by a budget resolution, which Congress passed earlier this year laying out how repeal legislatio­n can be advanced.

The parliament­arian ruled that resolution expires Sept. 30, according to Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, the senior non-Republican on the Senate Budget Committee.

“Today’s determinat­ion by the Senate parliament­arian is a major victory for the American people and everyone who fought against President Trump’s attempt to take away health care from up to 32 million people,” Sanders said.

If Republican­s want to renew their repeal push after Sept. 30, they would have to pass a new budget resolution.

But that threatens to complicate their efforts to push other legislatio­n overhaulin­g the tax code, which Trump and other senior Republican­s have signaled is their top priority. They already plan to use the same budget procedure for the tax legislatio­n.

Senate Republican­s, who control the chamber 52-48, failed to win enough support for their Obamacare replacemen­t in July as three GOP lawmakers joined Democrats to oppose the measure.

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