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Bipartisan deal on Obamacare

The plan extends federal payments to insurers.

- By Noam N. Levey and Lisa Mascaro noam.levey@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — The Senate moved closer Tuesday to a rare bipartisan deal to fix parts of the Affordable Care Act as a pair of leading senators announced an agreement designed to stabilize health insurance markets.

The deal — which was blessed by President Donald Trump — still faces significan­t hurdles in Congress, particular­ly opposition from some conservati­ve Republican­s who want nothing less than a complete repeal of the 2010 law, commonly called Obamacare.

But the announceme­nt of the compromise worked out by Senate health committee chairman Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., and Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., the committee’s senior Democrat, nonetheles­s marks an important breakthrou­gh in the nation’s more than seven-year battle over the health care law.

The deal would reinstate federal payments to insurers that Trump cut off last week, offering millions of Americans some relief from rising premiums and shaky insurance markets. In a nod to Republican­s, it would give states limited new flexibilit­y to offer cheaper, less generous health plans.

“For the next two years, we want to make sure people can buy insurance at affordable prices,” Alexander said Tuesday. “There is an emerging, encouragin­g consensus, and we’ll see how far it goes.”

The compromise follows repeated failures by the GOP-led Congress in recent months to agree on legislatio­n to dismantle the law and replace it with something else.

Alexander told senators the deal represents a modest fix, as the president wanted, and helps protect up to 16 million Americans who don’t get health coverage through an employer or through a government program such as Medicare or Medicaid.

Trump endorsed the deal, even though he has called the insurer payouts a “bailout” and continues to promise he will restart efforts next year to roll back the law.

“That’s a very good solution,” Trump said. “We think it’s going to not only save money, but give people much better health care with a very, very much smaller premium spike.”

The deal drew praise from Democrats as well, though prospects for passing it remain clouded by conservati­ve criticism.

“Obamacare is in a ‘death spiral.’ Anything propping it up is only saving what Republican­s promised to dismantle,” Rep. Mark Walker, R-N.C., chairman of the Republican Study Committee, said in a Twitter post.

The Koch-backed Freedom Partners, which has close ties with the White House, said any deal should start with eliminatin­g the mandates that individual­s have insurance and larger employers provide it.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., was noncommitt­al about the Alexander-Murray deal Thursday and House Speaker Paul Ryan’s office did not immediatel­y comment.

“We haven’t had a chance to think about a way forward yet,” McConnell said.

Most immediatel­y, the compromise would provide critical federal payments to health insurers to help them provide reduced-price health plans to low-income Americans.

The White House announced last week that the federal government would cease these so-called costsharin­g reduction payments, which have been the subject of a yearslong legal dispute over whether Congress or the administra­tion has authority to fund them.

Trump’s move to stop the payments shook the health care system, with insurers, state regulators and others warning of widespread disruption­s and skyrocketi­ng premiums as insurers moved to make up for the federal payments by hiking premiums for consumers.

The money at issue is roughly $7 billion in annual payments that the federal government makes to insurers to reimburse them for reducing deductible­s and co-payments for low-income consumers, something the law requires health plans to do regardless of whether they receive government reimbursem­ent.

The Alexander-Murray agreement would provide federal funding for the payments through 2019, a critical two-year extension that both Republican and Democratic state insurance regulators say is vital to keeping insurance rates in check.

It would authorize funding to help states create reinsuranc­e programs to backstop insurers that are hit with unusually high claims, a mechanism commonly used in insurance markets to control rates.

The deal also would restore federal funding for advertisin­g and outreach efforts to get Americans to sign up for coverage on marketplac­es created through the 2010 law.

Over the summer, the Trump administra­tion announced huge cuts in outreach efforts, stoking fears that the White House was intent on sabotaging the markets.

The 2018 sign-up period is scheduled to start Nov. 1.

In addition to the market stabilizat­ion steps, the Alexander-Murray deal would make it easier for states to get out from some of the federal insurance rules set up by the 2010 law.

States could expand eligibilit­y for catastroph­ic health plans that have very high deductible­s and lower premiums. Currently, such plans are limited to people under 30.

 ?? WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY ?? Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., chairman of the Senate health committee, told senators the deal represents a modest fix, as the president wanted.
WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., chairman of the Senate health committee, told senators the deal represents a modest fix, as the president wanted.
 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/AP ?? Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., worked with Sen. Alexander on the deal, which would reinstate federal payments to health insurers through 2019.
ANDREW HARNIK/AP Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., worked with Sen. Alexander on the deal, which would reinstate federal payments to health insurers through 2019.

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