The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Senate mulls pushing ACA repeal to 2020

- By Laura Litvan

Senate Republican­s are weighing a two-step process to replace the Affordable Care Act that would postpone a repeal until 2020, as they seek to draft a more modest version than a House plan that nonpartisa­n analysts this week said would undermine some insurance markets.

Republican­s — in the early stages of private talks on the Senate plan — say they may first take action to stabilize premium costs in the law’s insurance-purchasing exchanges in 2018 and 2019. Major insurers have said they will leave the individual market in vast regions of states including North Dakota, Iowa and Missouri.

A Senate plan is likely to continue subsidies that help low-income Americans with co-pays and deductible­s, said third-ranking Republican John Thune of South Dakota. White House budget director Mick Mulvaney said Thursday the administra­tion hasn’t committed to paying subsidies due in June — which would create additional uncertaint­y for insurers as they set rates for next year.

“There clearly has to be a short-term solution that works with the transition until some of our long-term policy changes can take effect,” Thune said. “There’s got to be certainty in the marketplac­e.”

The private Senate GOP negotiatio­ns include a 13-member leadership-controlled working group as well as almost daily closed-door discussion­s among all Senate Republican­s. In addition, Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine has convened bipartisan talks with about a dozen senators.

Republican­s in the Senate are stepping up their efforts to build consensus after the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office said Wednesday that the House plan narrowly passed May 4 would result in 23 million more people without insurance and, in some states, plans too costly for older or sicker people.

Democrats in both chambers are united against efforts to replace the 2010 law and said the CBO assessment provides added ammunition for the Senate fight. Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said the report should be the “final nail in the coffin” in the Republican drive to end so-called “Obamacare.”

“The report makes clear: Trumpcare would be a cancer on the American healthcare system, causing costs to skyrocket, making coverage unaffordab­le for those with pre-existing conditions and many seniors, and kicking millions off their health insurance,” said Schumer, using a Democratic euphemism for the House-passed plan.

Senate Republican leaders say they expect to try to pass a bill with only GOP votes. The party controls the Senate 52-48, and the parliament­arian will determine which parts of a bill could advance under streamline­d procedures that can pass with 50 votes plus Vice President Mike Pence’s tie-breaker.

Whether the GOP can attract 50 votes remains to be seen. Senators have indicated the talks have spent little time on perhaps the toughest issue: How to pay for a plan that would cover more people and offer lower premiums than the House bill. That would require retaining some of about $800 billion in ACA taxes the House measure repeals, or finding other cost savings in the federal budget.

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