Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Health care in the balance

- By Lisa Mascaro and Noam N. Levey Washington Bureau lisa.mascaro@latimes.com

Time is running out for Senate Republican­s in their long campaign to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act.

WASHINGTON — Senate Republican­s, having hit an apparent impasse in their long campaign to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, return to Washington this week in search of a way forward, with support dwindling, time running out and deep divisions within their ranks.

Options are limited as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., assesses the legislativ­e landscape for his Obamacare replacemen­t, which has virtually no hope of passing unless it is substantia­lly amended.

The Better Care Reconcilia­tion Act, which threatens to toss 22 million more Americans into the ranks of the uninsured, has been almost universall­y panned by patient advocacy groups, doctors and other health care providers. It is backed by less than 20 percent of the public, polls show.

And for the last week, Republican lawmakers have faced rowdy crowds back home opposing the repeal bill.

At the same time, GOP senators return to work aware that federal interventi­on is needed to stabilize some Obamacare insurance markets. If not, insurance premiums in some parts of the country could skyrocket, and many Americans — especially those in rural areas — could be left with few health care options.

Now, with President Donald Trump sending mixed signals on the path forward, Republican­s confront the possibilit­y that their promises to end Obamacare might need to be shelved in favor of a bipartisan agreement to improve it.

“For seven years, they pretended like theywere all committed to repeal and there were just tactical difference­s,” said Michael A. Needham, CEO of Heritage Action, a leading conservati­ve advocacy group.

“What we learned this year is there are not tactical difference­s. There are large numbers of Republican­s in the House and the Senate who don’t want to repeal Obamacare.”

That’s not the outcome Republican­s had in mind when they set out seven years ago to undo President Barack Obama’s signature domestic achievemen­t.

But as Congress resumes work this week, McConnell is under mounting pressure to develop a face-saving way out.

“They need to start over,” said Dr. Jack Ende, a University of Pennsylvan­ia primary care doctor and president of the American College of Physicians.

“This is a bill that takes away much needed health insurance and health care fromthe people who need it most. You can’t tweak it a little here and little there. … The right strategy is towork on improving what we have.”

Democrats say they are willing to work with Republican­s to fix Obamacare but only after the GOP drops its repeal campaign.

Conservati­ves warn that doing so would be a political disaster for the GOP, sapping enthusiasm for the 2018 midterm elections.

“If this party switches from repeal of Obamacare to a bailout of Obamacare,” said Needham, “that is catastroph­ic.”

Even senators are unsure of McConnell’s next moves. And the heath care legislatio­n has shown the limits of his ability to cobble together the 50 votes needed from a 52-seat Senate GOP majority. Votes are not expected until mid-July, at the earliest.

“Clearly, the draft plan is dead,” said Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., a physician who has offered his own proposal.

“Is the serious rewrite plan dead?” he asked in an interview on “Fox News Sunday.” “I don’t know. I haven’t seen the serious rewrite.”

McConnell’s efforts have been complicate­d by the deep divisions among Republican senators. The majority leader was forced to put off a vote on the bill last month amid opposition from both conservati­ves and centrists.

Conservati­ves want the most complete repeal of Obamacare possible, and they have opened a direct line of negotiatio­n with the White House, appearing to turn Trump to their side, for now.

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, back a proposal that would dramatical­ly rollback insurance protection­s in the current law, allowing insurers to offer cheaper, skimpier health policies they say would drive down costs, at least for healthy consumers.

An assessment of Cruz’s “consumer choice” plan is expected this week from the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office.

“There’s no doubt this has been a rocky path,” Cruz said Sunday on “Face the Nation.” “But I continue to believe we can get this done.”

But other GOP senators and advocacy groups are warning that Cruz’s plan would further destabiliz­e insurance markets by dividing healthier and sicker consumers.

Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa said last week he worried that the Cruz amendment could be a “subterfuge” to get around Obamacare’s protection­s for those with pre-existing conditions. “Obviously, I would object to that,” he told Iowa Public Radio.

Politicall­y, the Cruz approach does little to help McConnell amass 50 votes for passage. Although it pleases conservati­ves who say the Senate GOP bill does not go far enough in ending Obamacare’s insurance mandates, it is almost certain to drive away more centrist Republican­s.

The centrists have been most concerned about steep cuts to Medicaid. McConnell’s bill would slash nearly $800 billion fromthe government’s health care safety net over the decade and leave millions of poor Americans without access to care. Particular­ly hard hit would be poorer, rural counties, many of which backed Trump last year.

In Nevada, the Medicaid cuts would leave nearly 200,000 uninsured, prompting the state’s Republican senator, Dean Heller, to oppose the bill.

 ?? PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/AP ?? Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell, right, with House Speaker Paul Ryan, put off a vote in June on the health bill.
PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/AP Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell, right, with House Speaker Paul Ryan, put off a vote in June on the health bill.

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