Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

GOP offers no plan on Obamacare

Leaders refuse to detail how to repeal, replace health care law

- By Lisa Mascaro and Noam N. Levey Los Angeles Times’ Michael A. Memoli contribute­d. lisa.mascaro@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — After demanding for six years that the Affordable Care Act be gutted, Republican leaders refused Wednesday to outline concrete steps to repeal and replace it, even as members of their party voiced growing reservatio­ns about rolling the law back without a viable alternativ­e.

Neither President-elect Donald Trump nor Vice President-elect Mike Pence, who met with House and Senate Republican­s at the Capitol, offered lawmakers details about their repeal plan — a centerpiec­e of their winning campaign — short of vague promises that Trump would take executive action after he assumes office in just over two weeks.

And GOP congressio­nal leaders would not say how they will proceed or even how long they will take to develop a replacemen­t for the current law, widely known as Obamacare.

“This is going to take a little time,” Texas Sen. John Cornyn, the No. 2 Republican in the Senate, said after the meeting with Pence.

The lack of detail underscore­d the complexiti­es of undoing the biggest expansion of the social safety net in decades without interferin­g with health care for tens of millions of Americans.

Republican­s’ wavering just a day after the start of a new Congress also may give opponents additional time to shore up support for preserving Obamacare in some form.

Cornyn and other Republican leaders repeated assurances Wednesday that consumers would not lose coverage while Republican­s work to develop an alternativ­e to the law.

More than 20 million Americans have gained coverage though the law and many more depend on its key protection­s, including a guarantee that people can get coverage even if they are sick.

“We don’t want to pull the rug out from anybody,” said House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis. “We don’t want people to be caught with nothing.”

After meeting with Senate Republican­s, Pence told reporters at the Capitol that Trump’s executive orders would “ensure that there is an orderly transition during the period after we repeal Obamacare to a marketbase­d health care economy in America.”

The assurances have not convinced patient advocates, leading medical groups or even many conservati­ve health policy experts, who are urging the GOP not to roll back the law without first developing an alternativ­e.

Many are skeptical Republican­s can craft one; they have failed to do so for more than six years.

This week alone, leading physician groups, including the American Medical Associatio­n, joined the push to slow the repeal campaign. Others urging caution include the American Diabetes Associatio­n and the advocacy arm of the American Cancer Society.

A growing number of Republican senators also are voicing reservatio­ns about the lack of a clear plan, jeopardizi­ng GOP leaders’ vision for swift repeal in a chamber where just three Republican defections could torpedo legislatio­n.

“We’re not sure exactly what direction we’re going to go to have a full and careful transition period,” said West Virginia Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, whose state has seen a dramatic drop in its uninsured rate thanks to Obamacare.

Sen. Susan Collins, RMaine, a centrist who is being closely watched, urged party leaders to make more progress on an alternativ­e to the current law before voting to scrap it.

“It would be far better to have a detailed framework of what replacemen­t is going to include as we are moving toward repealing,” Collins said.

On Wednesday, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., who has publicly criticized the repeal push, joined Democrats in voting against a motion to start debating a resolution that would set the stage for repeal.

Outside Washington, state Republican officials are raising concerns about repealing Obamacare as well.

Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder, who was among the first Republican governors to expand Medicaid coverage through the health care law, called his state’s expansion a national model in an interview with the Detroit News.

Under Republican­s’ current repeal plan, the House and Senate over the next couple weeks would pass a budget resolution directing Congress to develop a repeal bill through a process called budget reconcilia­tion.

The House would then craft the repeal legislatio­n, pass it and send it to the Senate. Under budget rules, Republican­s, who have a 52-48 edge in the Senate, would need only a simple majority to pass the bill and send it to Trump.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said Wednesday that the repeal package, which congressio­nal committees are to draw up by Jan. 27, would hew closely to repeal legislatio­n that Republican­s developed in 2015 and sent to President Obama a year ago. Obama vetoed it.

That bill removed the unpopular insurance mandates in the law that require Americans to have health insurance or pay a fine. It also rolled back federal aid for Medicaid; scrapped federal insurance subsidies for low- and moderate-income consumers; and eliminated a Medicare surtax on highincome households and other taxes on medical device makers and health insurance companies that go toward funding the law.

If congressio­nal Republican­s stick to this repeal-and-delay strategy, Trump could take steps through executive action that might help stabilize insurance markets while a replacemen­t is being developed, said Larry Levitt, an insurance market expert at the nonprofit Kaiser Family Foundation.

 ?? JIM LO SCALZO/EPA ?? Vice President-elect Mike Pence, left, and House Speaker Paul Ryan are working on GOP attempts to repeal Obamacare.
JIM LO SCALZO/EPA Vice President-elect Mike Pence, left, and House Speaker Paul Ryan are working on GOP attempts to repeal Obamacare.

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