The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

GOP bill in shambles, House commences two-week break

- By Alan Fram and Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

The Republican health care bill remained in shambles Thursday as House leaders threw up their hands and sent lawmakers home for a two-week recess. GOP chiefs announced a modest amendment to curb premium increases, but internal divisions still blocked their promised repeal of former President Barack Obama’s law.

“This brings us closer to the final agreement that we all want to achieve,” House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said of the new amendment, flanked by about two dozen GOP lawmakers at a news briefing meant to project unity.

But in a sentiment echoed by other leaders, Ryan conceded “we have more work to do” over the “days and weeks ahead.” That underscore­d the longer timeline Republican leaders acknowledg­e they’ll need to resolve disputes between conservati­ves and moderates that blew up their legislatio­n last month, dishing a mortifying defeat to Ryan and President Donald Trump.

Ominously, lawmakers from both ends of the party who’ve opposed the GOP legislatio­n said Thursday’s revision wasn’t enough to turn them around. They included Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., who leads the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus, a hotbed of opposition, and moderate GOP Rep. Leonard Lance of New Jersey.

“I favor making sure no one is denied coverage due to a pre-existing condition. So I doubt this would be enough,” said Lance.

Frustratio­n over the bill’s dismal performanc­e in Congress spilled out during a meeting Ryan and other House leaders attended late Wednesday at the White House, according to several Republican­s who’d been told about the session.

White House chief of staff Reince Priebus and others expressed unhappines­s that the legislatio­n remained unfinished, and the fanfare accompanyi­ng the amendment introduced Thursday was a direct result of that meeting, the Republican­s said.

“The president and the speaker had a very good, long conversati­on last night and they remain fully on the same page on the path ahead,” Ryan spokeswoma­n AshLee Strong said. Trump and Ryan spoke after the White House meeting.

The new language was aimed at containing premiums by providing an additional $15 billion over a decade to help insurers cover the costs of seriously ill people, said Rep. David Schweikert, R-Ariz., a sponsor of

the amendment. Such customers’ expensive care can drive up premiums for all consumers.

The money would be on top of a $100 billion fund already in the GOP bill that states could use for various purposes, including highrisk insurance pools where people with medical problems can get coverage.

House Majority Leader

Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., emailed GOP lawmakers that if a breakthrou­gh on the bill occurred during the recess, “We will advise members immediatel­y and give you sufficient time to return to Washington.” The prospects for that seemed remote, at best.

Two weeks ago, Ryan called off a House vote on the measure repealing much of the 2010 health care overhaul. The GOP legislatio­n replacing it would scale back the federal role in health care,

covering 24 million fewer people over time while cutting taxes for upper-income earners.

Deep difference­s among hardliners and moderates have impeded the Republican march. Each side blames the other, and the recess could drain more momentum from the repeal drive.

A proposal discussed between the White House and leaders of the Freedom Caucus would let states seek federal waivers of two insurance requiremen­ts

the law establishe­d.

One forbids insurers from charging higher premiums on account of people’s medical problems or pre-existing conditions. The other spells out categories of benefits, like hospitaliz­ation and substance abuse treatment, that all insurance plans must cover.

Conservati­ves who want the federal government out of health care argue that those provisions have driven up premiums and decreased choice.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rep. Mike Johnson, R-La., left, followed by House Freedom Caucus member Rep. Mark Sanford, R-S.C., arrives at the White House in Washington on March 23.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rep. Mike Johnson, R-La., left, followed by House Freedom Caucus member Rep. Mark Sanford, R-S.C., arrives at the White House in Washington on March 23.

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