The Day

Health care threat: Higher cost, chaos

Trump ends $7 billion annual reimbursem­ents insurers receive for lowering out-of-pocket fees for poorest citizens

- By NOAM N. LEVEY and DAVID LAUTER

Washington — President Donald Trump’s move late Thursday to cut off critical federal payments to health insurers sent shock waves through the health care system Friday, threatenin­g widespread disruption to markets nationwide and igniting new legal and political battles over the Affordable Care Act.

Caught in the middle are millions of Americans likely to see their insurance premiums shoot higher as the administra­tion intensifie­s its effort to dismantle the 2010 health care law, often called Obamacare.

Insurers have said that markets in some parts of the country could collapse, leaving many consumers who don’t get insurance on the job with no choices for health plans. And state insurance regulators predicted premiums in the individual market nationally would rise by 12 percent to 15 percent next year because of the cutoff.

“These kinds of decisions have real-life consequenc­es,” warned Stacey E. Stewart, president of the March of Dimes. “It is not fair for our leaders to play games with people’s health and their health care.”

The move to cut off the money, known as cost-sharing reduction payments, came after months of indecision by the administra­tion on the issue.

It marked a sharp shift by Trump to a hard-line approach on health care after a brief period in which the

Ironically, many of the consumers most likely to be hit with higher costs will be in demographi­c groups that lean strongly Republican — residents of rural areas, where insurance already tends to be more expensive than average, and the self-employed whose income is too high to qualify them for federal subsidies for their premiums.

administra­tion had sent mixed signals on whether it might cooperate with bipartisan efforts in Congress to strengthen the Obamacare markets, rather than upend them.

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.

Trump’s decision to end those payments paralleled a similar shift this week to embrace a more hard-line position on immigratio­n, with the president demanding that Congress restrict legal immigratio­n and build a wall along the Southern border in exchange for White House support for legalizing the status of the so-called Dreamers, young people who came to the U.S. illegally as children.

In both cases, Trump took more conservati­ve positions supported by many of his core voters.

But both steps also threatened to blow up bipartisan talks in Congress and to severely disrupt the lives of ordinary Americans — some 700,000 Dreamers and millions of health plan consumers — as a way of putting pressure on lawmakers.

“If we’re going to do something, we need to get something in return,” the president said during an interview Wednesday with Fox News’ Sean Hannity that now seems to have presaged his moves on both issues.

A Twitter message from Trump on Friday morning and a statement by his budget director, Mick Mulvaney, made the approach explicit:

“The Democrats ObamaCare is imploding. Massive subsidy payments to their pet insurance companies has stopped. Dems should call me to fix!” Trump wrote.

Later, speaking to reporters, Trump said “if the Democratic leaders could come over to the White House … we’ll negotiate some deal that’s good for everybody.”

Mulvaney, in an interview with Politico, said that Trump would not sign a bipartisan measure to restore the funds unless congressio­nal Democrats went along with his priorities.

He listed the proposed border wall as one of the top priorities the president would consider trading.

“The president fully expects his priorities to be funded, and the wall is one of them,” he said.

That approach drew strong criticism Friday across the health care system, from patient advocates, in state government­s and in Congress.

Attorneys general in California and New York said they would sue to stop the administra­tion’s action.

Senate Democratic leader Sen. Charles E. Schumer of New York said Democrats would not be “bullied” by Trump.

In a statement, he called Trump’s action a “spiteful act of vast, pointless sabotage leveled at working families and the middle class in every corner of America.”

Ironically, many of the consumers most likely to be hit with higher costs will be in demographi­c groups that lean strongly Republican — residents of rural areas, where insurance already tends to be more expensive than average, and self-employed people whose income is too high for them to qualify for federal subsidies for their premiums.

That’s one reason that several GOP senators have repeatedly urged Trump not to cut off the payments.

Maine Sen. Susan Collins, a centrist Republican who has opposed several recent GOP bills to repeal the current law, decried the president’s action. “We cannot simply wipe out the Affordable Care Act with a stroke of the pen without having a workable, better alternativ­e in place,” she said in a speech in her home state Friday.

Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval, a Republican, similarly criticized Trump’s move, saying in an interview with the Nevada Independen­t that “it’s going to hurt people, it’s going to hurt kids, it’s going to hurt families.”

The cost-sharing payments, which are designed to offset the cost of health insurance for low-income consumers, have been a center of controvers­y for years.

The Republican majority in Congress never approved an appropriat­ion to cover the payments. The Obama administra­tion concluded it could spend the money anyway under authority provided in the health care law. But Republican members of Congress sued and won a court judgment last year that the payments were illegal. That ruling was put on hold pending an appeal.

Thursday night, administra­tion officials said the Justice Department had concluded that they had to stop the payments.

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