The Mercury News

GOP seeks compromise

Congress has no frame on repeal and replace for health care laws

- By Lesley Clark

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump wants Congress to move quickly this week to dismantle the Affordable Care Act, but congressio­nal Republican­s are far from a consensus on a repeal-and-replace effort that won’t leave millions of their constituen­ts without insurance.

Monday, two senators who have cautioned colleagues to delay repeal until they’ve settled on a replacemen­t will announce an alternativ­e plan to give states the choice to keep the health care law or be granted flexibilit­y to expand Medicaid and other coverage options.

That alternativ­e, from Sens. Susan Collins, RMaine, and Bill Cassidy, R-La, runs counter to the plans on the table, including one from Trump’s health secretary nominee Tom Price, known as the “Empowering Patients First Act.” That would offer tax credits, encourage the use of health savings accounts and urge states to develop high-risk pools.

“I’m not saying that it’s perfect, but it’s important that we put specific proposals on the table,” Collins said on the Senate floor about the plan she will advance this week. Repeal without replacemen­t or repeal with a delay, as some lawmakers have suggested, would send insurance markets into a tailspin, she said.

In addition to Price’s plan, Republican­s have considered House Speaker Paul Ryan’s “A Better Way.” Ryan’s plan would also offer tax credits to help people pay for insurance, and he wants to overhaul Medicare, which Trump has promised not to cut.

Complicati­ng the situation, Trump’s pledge for “insurance for everybody” conflicts with what many fiscal-minded Republican­s intend to do — and the yawning gap between congressio­nal conservati­ves and their president on the issue is something Democrats are eager to exploit.

“I guess we have to wait for President Trump’s Twitter to figure out what the Republican plan is going to be,” said Rep. Ben Ray Lujan, D-N.M. He is a member of Democratic leadership, which has sought to highlight Republican contortion­s over finding a solution. “They’re all on different pages and when they try to clean it up they contradict each other all over again,” Lujan said.

Although the new Trump White House website does not list health care as one of the administra­tion’s “top issues,” and it didn’t come up in his inaugural address, Trump addressed repeal in one of his first acts as president. He signed an executive order Friday that reiterates his administra­tion’s intent to seek “the prompt repeal” of the 2010 law that has extended health care to 20 million Americans. But the executive order itself notes that regulation­s can be changed only through the traditiona­l process of “notice and comment,” which can take months or even years.

And it will require his political appointees to be in office, which has yet to happen, particular­ly as Senate Democrats look to slow the nomination of Rep. Tom Price, R-Ga., Trump’s choice for health and human services secretary. Price goes before the Senate Finance Committee Tuesday for a confirmati­on hearing.

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