The Commercial Appeal

Trump’s health care move jolts Washington

President criticized for passing the problem to Congress to solve

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USA TODAY WASHINGTON President Donald Trump’s decision to abruptly cut off federal payments to insurers reverberat­ed through the political world Saturday, putting pressure on Congress to take action to address the high premiums that American consumers could face and jolting the insurance industry.

Trump’s move late Thursday to end federal subsidies that help insurance companies reduce out-of-pocket costs for low- and middle-income consumers also could deepen the divide among Republican­s over how to tackle the 2010 Affordable Care Act as the market opens in a little more than two weeks for people to sign up for health care.

Republican leaders have pledged to dismantle the law, but some in the GOP have balked, unwilling to risk the political fallout in states where large numbers of their constituen­ts are insured through “Obamacare.”

In a tweet Saturday, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., called Trump’s decision an example of his “failure to lead.” The president, he said, “throws destructiv­e bones to his base, then tells Congress to fix it.”

Trump’s move to cut the payments came on the heels of his executive order Thursday allowing consumers to buy insurance through associatio­n health plans across states lines. The move could help millions of consumers find access to cheaper insurance plans, but it could drive them into alternativ­e plans that skirt the law’s consumer protection­s and minimum coverage requiremen­ts.

In a pair of tweets early Saturday, Trump celebrated his strikes against President Barack Obama’s signature health care law and reveled in the damage it had done to insurance stock prices, which fell sharply Friday on news he was ending the subsidies.

“Health Insurance stocks, which have gone through the roof during the ObamaCare years, plunged yesterday after I ended their Dems windfall!” he wrote in one tweet.

The Trump administra­tion, and a group of House Republican­s who went to court to challenge the subsidies, say the payments violate the Constituti­on because they were never specifical­ly authorized by Congress, which controls the federal government’s purse strings.

The federal subsidies, which total about $7 billion this year, benefit more than 6 million people, many of whom live in states that backed Trump in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

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