The Star Malaysia

Trump suffers new blow

Trump suffers new blow after being forced to withdraw healthcare Bill

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Healthcare Bill withdrawn before vote.

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump faced the biggest blow yet to his young presidency as his bid to repeal Obamacare went down in flames at the hands of rebel Republican lawmakers.

Barely two months into his term, Trump was forced to withdraw an embattled Republican healthcare Bill on Friday, moments before a vote, leaving his campaign pledge to dismantle his predecesso­r’s healthcare reforms unfulfille­d.

The stinging defeat showed the limits of Trump’s power to deliver on an ambitious legislativ­e agenda despite Republican control of both houses of Congress.

Already rocked by a string of damaging reversals and controvers­ies, Trump must now consider how to move forward in the face of a fractured, rebellious Congress.

“Trump will have a very hard time dealing with these divides because he does not understand them,” said John Pitney, a professor of American politics at Claremont-McKenna College.

On Trump’s agenda are a major overhaul of the tax system and a Bill to upgrade infrastruc­ture like roads and bridges.

“We were very, very close” to securing enough support for the Bill, Trump said in the Oval Office.

But with no Democratic backing, “we couldn’t quite get there”.

Trump had thrown his full political weight behind the measure, spending days arm-twisting recalcitra­nt Republican­s, and he declared himself “disappoint­ed” and a “little surprised” by the defeat.

The battle was an eye-opening experience for Trump, a billionair­e real estate tycoon who entered the White House with no experience in politics or government, including the delicate navigation­s of Congress.

The Bill’s defeat marked a second major policy setback for the new president, who has seen his attempt to curb travel from Muslim-majority countries twice frozen by the courts.

Instead of projecting humility, Trump went on the offensive branding Democrats as the real “losers” of the failed repeal bid because “now they own Obamacare. They own it, 100%.”

The president met with House Speaker Paul Ryan earlier in the day, then spoke with him by telephone when it was clear the party did not have the votes to get its plan across the finish line.

“I told him that the best thing I think to do is to pull this Bill and he agreed with that decision,” Ryan said. who owned up to the failures.

“I will not sugar coat this. This is a disappoint­ing day for us,” said the top Republican in Congress.

The Trump-backed plan, intended to expand free-market competitio­n in the insurance industry and lower the cost of premiums for most Americans, would also have slashed public assistance to people who have no health coverage through their employer.

Some 14 million people stood to lose their coverage starting next year, according to congressio­nal forecasts.

Basic benefits covered under Obamacare – such as maternity care and emergency room visits -- would no longer have been considered essential and required for insurers to provide.

The Bill now appears dead, with Republican lawmakers urging a return to the drawing board.

“Clearly, the votes weren’t there,” said Congressma­n Charlie Dent, one of several moderate House Republican­s who expressed concerns over the Bill’s impact on poor and elderly Americans.

“So I think it’s important now that we start over, and we do a durable, sustainabl­e healthcare reform and it be done in a bipartisan way,” he added.

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 ??  ?? Dejected: Ryan leaving after answering the media’s questions at the US Capitol in Washington.
Dejected: Ryan leaving after answering the media’s questions at the US Capitol in Washington.

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