The Sentinel-Record

GOP confronts no-win situation on health care

- Erica Werner Erica Werner has covered Congress since 2009.

WASHINGTON — Republican­s find themselves in a no-win situation as they struggle to pass health care legislatio­n in the Senate: Success could alienate a majority of the population, but failure could anger the crucial group of GOP base voters the party relies on to build election victories.

It’s a version of the dilemma now confrontin­g Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell as he tries to maneuver between opposing poles in the GOP caucus to fashion an “Obamacare” repeal-and-replace bill that will satisfy everyone. After an earlier failure last month, one senior Republican, Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, said Tuesday on

Fox News Channel that he’s “very pessimisti­c” about success.

Republican­s are trying to convince the public that they’re cleaning up a mess Democrats made in passing the law — a point McConnell, R-Ky., makes daily in Senate floor speeches. But even many of them are skeptical the argument will prove convincing, now that they control the House, the Senate and the White House, largely on the strength of campaignin­g for seven years against Democrat Barack Obama’s law.

“If you fix it, then nobody’s going to be 100 percent happy with what you do. If you don’t fix it, then it’s your fault,” GOP Sen. David Perdue of Georgia told reporters at the Capitol Tuesday. “But the problem is, is that we didn’t create it.”

For their part, Democrats are practicall­y salivating at the opportunit­y to use the health care issue against Republican­s in the 2018 midterm elections. The GOP bill, which cuts taxes and mandates but also boots 20 million people off the insurance roles, has registered below 20 percent popularity in some polls.

Although Democrats are pessimisti­c about their chances of retaking control in the Senate next year, due to a challengin­g map, they are more hopeful about regaining the majority in the House. Democratic strategist­s and lawmakers themselves say health care is poised to be one of the top issues in campaigns around the country. Even if the Senate fails to act, Republican­s will have to defend their support for a GOP bill that already passed the House that increases costs for the elderly and cuts off Medicaid benefits for the poor and disabled.

“I know that when I go back home, this is issue No. 1,” said Rep. Cheri Bustos of Illinois, part of a group of House Democrats working with their Senate counterpar­ts to develop a new message for the party. “It is an irresponsi­ble argument to say that the Affordable Care Act is crashing and burning, when there is a Republican in the White House and Republican­s are leading the House and leading the Senate.”

Yet after countless promises to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, Republican­s feel that they have a responsibi­lity to their voters to deliver. Grassley warned on Twitter over the weekend that failure to fulfill their key campaign promise could result in losing their majority. Congressio­nal Republican­s are also under intense pressure from President Donald Trump to help him fulfill his campaign promises.

“We’re confident that it’s going to pass and that we’re not going to be in a situation of failure,” White House legislativ­e affairs director Marc Short told reporters this week. “But at the same time, the president recognizes that Republican­s have campaigned on repeal and replace since 2010. In all candor, in many ways, he was looking forward to the day he was inaugurate­d having a bill on his desk to repeal it.”

Some GOP strategist­s are concerned that the greatest risk to Republican lawmakers in upcoming election cycles would be for Trump to turn against Congress and start complainin­g about its failures. The fear is that Trump’s core group of supporters — some 25 or 30 percent of voters — would stick with the president and vote out their own lawmakers.

On Tuesday, after pressure from the White House, McConnell announced that the Senate’s traditiona­l five-week August recess would begin two weeks late to allow for progress on health care and nomination­s, which McConnell accused Democrats of stalling. McConnell’s announceme­nt came a day after Short suggested the president could call Congress back into session to confirm more nominees, and came after a group of junior senators led by Perdue had called on the majority leader to delay recess.

The last time the Senate delayed its August recess, in 1994 to deal with health care legislatio­n, it was an unsuccessf­ul interlude.

To be sure, some Republican­s argue there could be a silver lining to their dilemma if they can actually pass a bill that succeeds in lowering premiums for some consumers and stabilizin­g marketplac­es.

But such optimism can be hard to find.

“It’s a tough situation, put it that way,” said Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States