The Signal

Out of ideas on health care

- John L. MICEK

It’s time to own it, Republican­s: You’ve had seven years to come up with a credible alternativ­e to Obamacare. And when your clutch moment came, you choked. Again. The House’s first crack at a repeal-and-replace bill was so bad that Speaker Paul Ryan had to yank it or risk a humiliatin­g defeat. The second was slightly less awful, but still sufficient­ly offensive as to be declared deadon-arrival in the Senate.

Now, after days of closeddoor meetings at which the very sharpest minds in Washington attempted to hammer out an alternativ­e, we get a legless version of the mean-spirited Obamacare repeal bill the House passed.

How bad is it? So bad that liberals and conservati­ves each found reasons not to like it.

In a statement, the left-leaning advocacy group Families USA called the Senate bill “more harmful and equally heartless” as the House-passed bill.

Meanwhile, four conservati­ve Republican­s announced they found it so unpalatabl­e that they couldn’t vote for it, either.

The Senate bill would roll back the Medicaid expansion that’s extended coverage to millions of low-income Americans. It makes health insurance more expensive, offering inferior plans with higher deductible­s, and spikes Obamacare’s individual mandate.

It hands a tax break to the wealthiest Americans and, just for good measure, it eliminates federal funding for Planned Parenthood.

The bill was so bad, in fact, that even President Donald Trump apparently felt like he needed to change the subject to something less politicall­y radioactiv­e: former FBI Director James Comey and the Russia scandal.

On Wednesday last week, Trump tweeted: “Democrats would do much better as a party if they got together with Republican­s on health care, tax cuts, security. Obstructio­n doesn’t work!”

By Thursday, any reference at all to health care evaporated, and Trump pulled a classic “Don’t look here, look there,” tweeting, among other things, that “I did not make, and do not have, any such recordings” of any meeting with Comey.

Nonetheles­s, the White House, which is still in search of its first major legislativ­e victory, says it’s open to negotiatio­n.

“The president is pleased to see the process moving forward swiftly in Congress, and he looks forward to seeing a finalized bill on his desk,” White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders said, according to The Washington Post. “I don’t think we’re as focused on the timeline as we are on the final product.”

Which may be good news because McConnell has his work cut out for him.

Thanks to some procedural arcana, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell needed 50 votes to send the bill back to the House. The Post reported Thursday that McConnell wants to do that before Congress’ July 4 recess, regardless of whether he has the votes or not.

At this writing, it doesn’t look like he does. And, as expected, there are zero Democratic votes.

McConnell’s fellow Kentuckyia­n, U.S. Sen. Rand Paul; Ted Cruz of Texas; Ron Johnson of Wisconsin and Mike Lee of Utah have all said they can’t vote for the bill in its current form.

“Currently, for a variety of reasons, we are not ready to vote for this bill, but we are open to negotiatio­n and obtaining more informatio­n before it is brought to the floor,” the four lawmakers said in a joint statement.

“There are provisions in this draft that represent an improvemen­t to our current health care system, but it does not appear this draft as written will accomplish the most important promise that we made to Americans: to repeal Obamacare and lower their health care costs,” the statement read.

Yet Republican­s continue to plug away, even as a growing number of Americans, finally realizing that they’ll miss Obamacare if and when it’s gone, say they oppose the House-authored alternativ­e.

Forty-eight percent of respondent­s to a Wall Street Journal/ NBC News poll released last Thursday said the House-passed repeal bill was a bad idea. They were more narrowly split in their affection for Obamacare, saying 41 percent to 38 percent that it was a good idea.

But Republican­s, struggling to make good on a more-than-half-decadeold pledge to dismantle Obama’s signature piece of public policy, are plunging forward nonetheles­s.

They might finally pass a repeal bill and maybe even send it to Trump. But it will be a terrible replacemen­t.

And it will be all theirs.

(Republican­s) might finally pass a repeal bill and maybe even send it to Trump. But it will be a terrible replacemen­t.

Copyright 2017 John L. Micek. Readers may follow him on Twitter @ByJohnLMic­ek and email him at jmicek@pennlive.com.

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