Santa Fe New Mexican

President concedes health law overhaul is ‘unbelievab­ly complex’

Democrat, GOP governors say Affordable Care Act replacemen­t must cover all who benefit from program

- By Robert Pear and Kate Kelly

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump, meeting with the nation’s governors, conceded Monday that he had not been aware of the complexiti­es of health care policymaki­ng: “I have to tell you, it’s an unbelievab­ly complex subject. Nobody knew that health care could be so complicate­d.”

The president also suggested that the struggle to replace the Affordable Care Act was creating a legislativ­e logjam that could delay other parts of his political agenda.

Many policymake­rs had anticipate­d the intricacie­s of changing the health care law, and Trump’s demands in the opening days of his administra­tion to simultaneo­usly repeal and replace President Barack Obama’s signature domestic achievemen­t made the political calculatio­ns far more complicate­d.

Governors of both parties added still more confusion Monday when they called for any replacemen­t to cover all the people already benefiting from the landmark law.

“Of course I am concerned,” said Gov. Brian Sandoval, the Republican governor of Nevada, where about 300,000 people have gained Medicaid coverage. “I am someone who elected to expand Medicaid. That’s been very beneficial to my state, and I want to be sure those individual­s can keep their coverage.”

“Governors are all in agreement,” said Gov. Terry McAuliffe of Virginia, a Democrat who is the chairman of the National Governors Associatio­n. “We do not want one single one of our citizens to lose access to quality health care. We are all unified on that. Actually, we want to expand, so everybody has access to quality health care.”

Trump brushed aside opinion polls suggesting that the 2010 health law was becoming somewhat more popular. “People hate it,” the president said, “but now they see that the end is coming and they’re saying, ‘Oh, maybe we love it.’ There’s nothing to love. It’s a disaster, folks.”

Because of the intricate procedures that govern budget legislatio­n and the inherent complexity of health care, Republican­s appear unlikely to undo the health law as quickly as they had hoped.

Trump said Congress must tackle the Affordable Care Act before it can overhaul the tax code, also a high priority for Republican­s. And those delays could slow work on other priorities like a billion-dollar infrastruc­ture push.

“Statutoril­y and for budget purposes, as you know, we have to do health care before we do the tax cut,” Trump told governors.

After his session with the governors, Trump met Monday with executives from health insurance companies. He apparently hopes they will stay in or return to the Affordable Care Act’s insurance marketplac­es, where more than 10 million people obtained coverage last year.

If the governors’ meeting in Washington was supposed to clarify the future of the health law, it fell short. If anything, it exposed deep divisions among state executives, especially Republican leaders.

Gov. Gary Herbert of Utah, a Republican, said: “We did not expand Medicaid. Many states are divided on what the right approach is to take under the Affordable Care Act.” Some Republican governors, he said, are concerned about the “sustainabi­lity” of the Medicaid program, which covers more than 70 million low-income people.

And no governor was ready to say publicly that he or she could accept a replacemen­t health law covering fewer people than the Affordable Care Act, which has extended coverage to 20 million Americans.

A bill drafted by House Republican­s could cover fewer people. It would roll back the heath law’s expansion of Medicaid, eliminate tax penalties for people who do not have health insurance and end taxes imposed by the Affordable Care Act on certain high-income people, insurers, drug companies and manufactur­ers of medical devices.

To help people buy insurance, if they do not have coverage at work or under a government program, the bill would offer tax credits ranging from $2,000 to $4,000 a year, depending on age. But the credits would not fluctuate with a recipient’s income, raising the prospect that insurance might be less affordable for lower-income people.

The House Republican bill would also eliminate minimum federal standards for “essential health benefits,” and it could require some people with particular­ly expensive employersp­onsored coverage to pay taxes on some of its value.

The emergence of that draft has produced cries of opposition among Democrats and nervousnes­s in some Republican quarters. Conservati­ves added their objections on Monday, saying the tax credits could become a permanent entitlemen­t. Rep. Mark Walker of North Carolina, the chairman of the conservati­ve Republican Study Committee, said he could not vote for the bill in its current form because it could create “a new health insurance entitlemen­t with a Republican stamp on it.”

Herbert said he could support the Republican proposal to give each state an allotment of federal money with a set amount for each Medicaid beneficiar­y — what he and other officials described as a per capita cap. Some experts believe that could be “the best thing for us to do in Utah,” Herbert said.

But Democratic governors generally oppose efforts by congressio­nal Republican­s to give each state a fixed allotment for each beneficiar­y or a lump sum, known as a block grant, for its entire Medicaid program.

“Block grants or per capita caps would throw state finances into disarray” and shift costs to the states, Democratic governors said in a letter to congressio­nal leaders.

Two House committees may try to vote next week on legislatio­n to repeal the Affordable Care Act and put in place some elements of a replacemen­t. But the disagreeme­nts among Republican­s, in the Trump administra­tion and on Capitol Hill, suggest a difficult road ahead.

 ?? STEPHEN CROWLEY THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Donald Trump meets Monday with chief executives from health insurance companies in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington.
STEPHEN CROWLEY THE NEW YORK TIMES President Donald Trump meets Monday with chief executives from health insurance companies in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States