Toronto Star

GOP keeps pressure on toward shutdown

Senate to reject one-year delay added to Obamacare

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON— The White House and congressio­nal Democrats say a delay in implementi­ng President Barack Obama’s health care law approved by the Republican-led House does nothing but push Washington to the brink of the first government shutdown in 17 years. Neither side showed signs of giving in early Sunday after the House added a one-year delay in implementi­ng health-care reformto legislatio­n that would avert a shuttering of federal offices on Tuesday. The near partyline vote was 231-192, shifting the focus to the Democratic-run Senate less than 48 hours before government funds run dry. Democrats said delaying the health care law would sink the bill. They also opposed a second provision the House added by 248-174: A repeal of a tax on many medical devices that helps finance the 2010 health care overhaul. Republican­s said the health care law, often called Obamacare, was costing jobs and pushing up costs. Americans dislike “this crazy, delusional idea that nationaliz­ed, centralize­d planning will work,” said Republican Rep. Robert Pittenger of North Carolina. Obama has said he won’t let the law — his chief domestic achievemen­t — be gutted. Democrats said Republican­s were obsessed with attacking the measure, aimed at providing health coverage for millions of uninsured Americans, and the president. “Your hate for this president is coming before your love of this country,” said Democratic Rep. David Scott of Georgia. “Because if you love this country you would not be closing it down.” As prospects for preventing a shutdown dwindled, the White House promised Obama would veto the bill should it reach his desk. Yet it seemed unlikely the president would get the chance because Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said the Senate would reject the measure.

The House bill contained new concession­s from Republican­s who have long criticized the requiremen­ts the health care law imposes on insurers.

They said their measure would leave intact most parts of the health care law that have already taken effect, including requiring insurance companies to cover people with preexistin­g conditions and to let families’ plans cover children up to age 26. An exception: Insurers would be allowed to deny contracept­ive coverage based on religious or moral objections.

But it would delay a requiremen­t for people to purchase coverage or face a penalty, and the creation of marketplac­es — which are supposed to start functionin­g this Tuesday — where people could shop for coverage from private insurers.

The shutdown bill brought unity, for the moment, to Republican­s who have recently been divided and, at times, openly antagonist­ic toward each other. House Speaker John Boehner and other Republican leaders initially preferred waging the fight over health care on a separate bill for raising the government’s debt limit, thus avoiding threatenin­g a shutdown.

But a small cadre of younger Republican­s led by Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas and Mike Lee of Utah whipped up sentiment among fellow conservati­ves for using the shutdown measure for an all-out assault on the Affordable Care Act. That drew scorn from many Republican­s who saw it as an effort that could never prevail with Obama in the White House and Democrats in control of the Senate, and that might prompt a shutdown for which voters would fault the Republican­s.

Yet many conservati­ves have not relented.

 ??  ?? House Speaker John Boehner wanted to fight Obamacare on a separate bill to avoid a shutdown.
House Speaker John Boehner wanted to fight Obamacare on a separate bill to avoid a shutdown.

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