The Oklahoman

Future remains uncertain for health bill

- BY ALAN FRAM

WASHINGTON — The latest GOP effort to repeal and replace “Obamacare” was fatally wounded in the Senate on Monday night when two more Republican senators announced their opposition to legislatio­n strongly backed by President Donald Trump.

The announceme­nts from Sens. Mike Lee of Utah and Jerry Moran of Kansas left the Republican Party’s longpromis­ed efforts to get rid of President Barack Obama’s health care legislatio­n reeling. Next steps, if any, were not immediatel­y clear.

Lee and Moran both said they could not support Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s legislatio­n in its current form. They joined GOP Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Rand Paul of Kentucky, both of whom announced their opposition right after McConnell released the bill last Thursday.

McConnell is now at least two votes short in the closely divided Senate and may have to go back to the drawing board or even begin to negotiate with Democrats, a prospect he’s threatened but resisted so far.

McConnell’s bill “fails to repeal the Affordable Care Act or address health care’s rising costs. For the same reasons I could not support the previous version of this bill, I cannot support this one,” said Moran.

It was the second straight failure for McConnell, who had to cancel a vote on an earlier version of the bill last month when defeat became inevitable.

The Senate bill eliminated mandates and taxes under Obamacare, and unraveled a Medicaid expansion. But for conservati­ves like Lee and Paul it didn’t go far enough in delivering on Republican Party promises to undo Obama’s law, while moderates like Collins viewed the bill as too extreme in yanking insurance coverage from millions.

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