The Oklahoman

Dispute over health payments defused

- BY ANDREW TAYLOR The Associated Press

The White House and congressio­nal Democrats on Wednesday defused a tense standoff over payments for the working poor under the health care law, keeping a massive government spending bill on track just days ahead of a shutdown deadline.

President Donald Trump on Wednesday backed away from a threat to immediatel­y withhold payments to help people with modest incomes with out-of-pocket medical expenses under Democrat Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act.

The dispute with Democrats, especially House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, threatened to hold up the $1 trillion-plus spending bill. A temporary funding bill expires Friday at midnight, and GOP leaders readied plans to pass another short-term spending bill to prevent a government shutdown this weekend — Trump’s 100th day in office.

The weeks-long back and forth over the health care issue had snagged the talks, which have progressed steadily for weeks and gained momentum earlier this week after Trump dropped demands for immediate money for building his long-promised wall.

“Our major concerns in these negotiatio­ns have been about funding for the wall and uncertaint­y about the ... payments crucial to the stability of the marketplac­es under the Affordable Care Act,” Pelosi said in a statement. “We’ve now made progress on both of these fronts.”

Partisan disagreeme­nts over the environmen­t,

border abortion and GOP efforts to reverse Obama-era financial regulation­s continue to dog the negotiatio­ns, but both the administra­tion and many congressio­nal Democrats were hopeful of sealing an agreement relatively soon.

The massive spending measure, which would wrap together 11 unfinished spending bills into a single omnibus bill, represents the first real bipartisan legislatio­n of Trump’s presidency.

Democratic votes are needed to pass the measure over tea party opposition in the House and to provide enough support to clear a filibuster hurdle in the Senate, which has led negotiator­s to strip away controvers­ial policy riders and ignore an $18 billion roster of unpopular spending cuts submitted by White House budget director Mick Mulvaney.

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