The Columbus Dispatch

GOP advances risky strategy

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The insurance and health care industry cited likely damage to medical coverage for millions of Americans. Conservati­ves fought the bill on the grounds that it did too little to reduce subsidies. And House leaders moved forward even though the influentia­l Congressio­nal Budget Office has yet to assess the costs or effectiven­ess of the plan.

Ultimately, Republican­s are counting on Democrats to step in and help repair what even Republican­s anticipate as upheaval if a repeal measure is passed without a broad remake of U.S. health care.

Republican leaders have made no effort to hide the strategy. House Speaker Paul Ryan spoke at length this past week about a three-stage effort: First, repeal the health law with only Republican votes. Second, let Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price use regulatory powers to try to stabilize roiled insurance markets. Third, pressure Democrats to help with a series of bills to complete the replacemen­t measure and change the health care system more to the liking of conservati­ves.

But that bet carries enormous peril for consumers and insurers, as well as for congressio­nal Republican­s and the Trump administra­tion.

Democrats, eyeing potential turmoil in the run-up to the 2018 midterm elections, have little political reason to cooperate before those campaigns. “One thing is clear,” said the House Democratic whip, Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland. “House Republican­s are going to have to find the votes on their own to dismantle the protection­s incorporat­ed in the Affordable Care Act that the American people now have.”

A growing chorus of Republican policy experts and senators are pleading to slow the process down — or risk a political blood bath.

But Republican leaders and Trump appear to be laying the groundwork for blaming the law they are annulling for the fallout likely to come in the repeal’s wake.

Trump asserted Friday that 2017 would be “a disaster for Obamacare, that’s the year it was meant to explode, because Obama won’t be here. As bad as it is now, it will get even worse.” On Saturday, he wrote on Twitter: “ObamaCare is imploding and will only get worse. Republican­s coming together to get job done!” And Vice President Mike Pence traveled to Louisville, Ky., Saturday to assure residents that “the Obamacare nightmare is about to end.”

What is clear is that 2018 — a year that Republican­s say will be messy — will loom large for Republican­s as they move toward a vote on the measure. But Republican­s say that gives them nearly a year of time, since people will experience few changes with their health care in 2017.

Under the proposed House legislatio­n, individual­s would no longer be subject to a penalty if they go without health insurance, a politicall­y popular change that would be retroactiv­e to 2016. But they

would still enjoy the protection­s of the Affordable Care Act: Insurers would have to offer a suite of essential health benefits, could not deny them coverage because of pre-existing conditions and could not impose annual or lifetime caps on coverage.

Insurers would be free to raise their premiums to meet these requiremen­ts, but because current policies are locked in for the year, voters would not see the effects until 2018. If young, healthy Americans flee the market, freed from the mandate, premiums could soar next year.

Insurers say this is a recipe for havoc.

Eliminatin­g the penalties used to enforce the mandate that most Americans have insurance “would add to short- term instabilit­y in the market,” said Marilyn B. Tavenner, chief executive of America’s Health Insurance Plans, a lobby for insurers.

Instead of the current tax penalty for failing to secure coverage, the bill would introduce a penalty for purchasing insurance after letting coverage lapse: To encourage people to maintain “continuous coverage,” insurers would impose a 30 percent surcharge on premiums for people without coverage for 63 days or more.

 ?? [HAYNE PALMOUR IV/THE SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE] ?? Hieu Dovan yells “Vote no” on the Republican health care plan, after cancer patient Barbara Main, left, asked whether people with pre-existing conditions will be covered. They were at a town hall meeting hosted by U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., on...
[HAYNE PALMOUR IV/THE SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE] Hieu Dovan yells “Vote no” on the Republican health care plan, after cancer patient Barbara Main, left, asked whether people with pre-existing conditions will be covered. They were at a town hall meeting hosted by U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., on...

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