Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Eliminatin­g Obamacare would be a disaster

The Republican­s don’t have a victory plan in place

- Ramesh Ponnuru Ramesh Ponnuru is a columnist for Bloomberg Opinion.

There’s an important bit of contingenc­y planning that Republican­s have neglected to do. Neither in the White House nor on Capitol Hill are they prepared for the possibilit­y that their lawsuit against Obamacare will succeed.

Most observers don’t expect the courts to strike down the law, and last Tuesday’s oral arguments in a New Orleans federal courtroom didn’t change many minds. If the suit is successful, however, it will create an acute problem for a lot of people. Insurers will again be able to discrimina­te against people with chronic conditions. Many states’ budgets will be thrown into turmoil as Washington stops covering most of the tab for the expansion of Medicaid coverage to households just above the poverty line. People who get their insurance through Obamacare’s exchanges will stop receiving the tax credits that make it affordable.

The changes would be much more radical than what the Republican­s’ failed Obamacare- repeal legislatio­n from 2017 would have brought. That proposal would have replaced some of Obamacare’s subsidies and regulation­s, and would have been phased in over several years. If the Affordable Care Act were to lose in court, and Congress and the president failed to agree on legislatio­n afterward, Americans would go through the largest disruption in health care arrangemen­ts that Washington has ever

imposed.

In turn, that would create a political problem for Republican­s. They have long said they wish to repeal Obamacare while making sure that its beneficiar­ies, especially those with pre- existing conditions, have access to affordable coverage. If a lawsuit they launched succeeds in delivering the first half of that agenda, voters will expect them to deliver the second. The Democratic majority in the House would presumably be able rapidly to pass a law that simply re- enacts Obamacare and prevents any disruption to it.

Republican­s would then have three choices: pass their own dream health care bill; accede to the Democrats’ Obamacare- affirming bill; or find a bipartisan compromise.

Option one wouldn’t work. Congressio­nal Republican­s don’t agree themselves on what the ideal health care law should look like. Some don’t truly want to replace Obamacare: They would celebrate that the law had been nullified and call it a day. In the unlikely event that the Republican Senate managed to pass legislatio­n, notwithsta­nding the party’s divisions and the Democrats’ ability to filibuster, it still wouldn’t become law without passing the Democratic House. So either the Republican­s would have to compromise with the Democrats in the end, or they would accept inaction and blame it on the Democrats for not going along with their conservati­ve ideas. The Democrats’ case — “We are ready to pass a simple extension of the law and protect everyone” — would likely go over better with voters. Republican senators up for re- election in swing states might find the pressure to side with the Democrats irresistib­le.

Option two would be deeply unattracti­ve for Republican­s. It would mean that years of opposition to Obamacare, and the lawsuit itself, were pointless. It would demoralize conservati­ves and open Republican­s to ridicule. They are going to want to avoid this scenario at nearly any cost.

That leaves option three: a compromise. There’s one that might make sense. Republican­s could agree to renewing Obamacare’s subsidies and regulation­s; in return, the Trump administra­tion’s regulatory changes to the program would be put into law. Short- term insurance plans, associatio­n health plans, and expanded health reimbursem­ent accounts would then become part of binding law that no future Democratic administra­tion could abolish on its own. Both parties would get some bragging rights, and voters would get more stability instead of chaos.

A lot of conservati­ves would hate that deal, even if Republican­s added that they were accepting this modified version of Obamacare only temporaril­y, and would legislate against it again the next time they have both houses of Congress. It’s a deal that assumes that the politics of health care after the lawsuit would favor the Democrats. It would have to pass with some Republican and some Democratic votes. Rounding up the Republican­s would almost certainly require President Donald Trump to go all- in for it, selling it as a big victory for his administra­tion’s health care policies and demanding his congressio­nal allies support it.

There’s no sign the White House is ready to do any of this. Which is why the best political outcome for Republican­s is probably for the lawsuit to fail, at which point they can complain about the judges who had just delivered them from a nightmare.

 ?? Alan Diaz/ Associated Press ??
Alan Diaz/ Associated Press

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