The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Senate’s likely timetable,

GOP must come up with alternativ­e to Obamacare.

- By Bruce Schreiner

LOUISVILLE, KY. — The next Congress will begin work immediatel­y next year toward repealing President Barack Obama’s health care law but delay the changes as Republican­s try to come up with an alternativ­e, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Saturday.

The Kentucky Republican insisted that some 20 million Americans who have health care through the six-year-old law will not lose coverage, though the likely upheaval in the insurance industry suggests many could.

Asked about the Senate’s timetable to scrap the law, McConnell said: “We’re going to move to it after we go back in the first week in January.”

But during a speech in his hometown of Louisville, the senator cautioned patience from the law’s critics as Republican­s create an alternativ­e.

“You can’t just snap your fingers and go from where we are today to where we’re headed,” McConnell told a crowd at the Kentucky Farm Bureau’s annual meeting. “This has to be done carefully. It has to be done in a phased-in way over a period of time.”

Republican­s have been unable to agree on an alternativ­e since the law’s enactment in 2010, but now must produce a replacemen­t if they scrap the law.

President-elect Donald Trump says he would like to keep major elements of the law — allowing children to remain on their parents’ plans until age 26 and ensuring companies don’t deny coverage for pre-existing conditions.

But it’s unclear how a new version of the law could force insurance companies to provide that coverage.

With open enrollment underway, no changes are expected next year for the more than 10 million people currently covered through HealthCare.gov and state markets that offer subsidized private insurance.

An additional estimated 9 million low-income people covered by Medicaid in states that expanded the program are also protected for now.

McConnell said Saturday that Republican­s have an obligation to repeal and replace a law he called a “monstrosit­y.”

He blamed the law for rising co-payments, deductible­s and premiums and said it has caused “chaos” in the private health insurance market.

“We have an obligation to the American people to straighten this out,” he said. But he said replacing the law will be challengin­g “given the fact that it’s been kicking in for six years.”

Meanwhile, McConnell played down prospects for any new trade deals.

Specifical­ly, he said the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p won’t pass Congress because “politicall­y it’s unsustaina­ble.”

Trump’s tough talk on trade has included a threat to pull the United States out of the trade deal.

“As a practical matter, we will not be doing any trade agreements anytime soon,” said McConnell, a trade proponent.

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