Bangkok Post

Trump talks health change to win support

US president keen to win over the right

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WASHINGTON: The White House is talking with House conservati­ves about lastminute changes to the embattled GOP healthcare bill aimed at wooing enough holdouts to secure House passage.

Lawmakers and Trump administra­tion officials are discussing revisions to the “essential benefits” requiremen­ts in the House bill, according to lawmakers and a White House official familiar with the discussion­s.

Holdouts in the House Freedom Caucus also pushed for changes in Obamacare’s requiremen­ts that insurers cover people with pre-existing conditions, but the White House gave them a hard no, according to a White House official.

Mark Meadows of North Carolina, who chairs the House Freedom Caucus, disputed that. “Addressing pre-existing conditions has always been a requiremen­t for any replacemen­t plan that HFC would support,” he said late on Wednesday.

Mr Meadows also said that there’s no deal yet with the White House and that it’s too early to tell if one will reached overnight Wednesday or yesterday. Members of the Freedom Caucus were scheduled to go to the White House yesterday, the same day the House was scheduled to vote on the measure.

President Donald Trump and House Speaker Paul Ryan have been working to win over conservati­ve rebels who stand in the way of their Obamacare replacemen­t measure. Late on Wednesday, the chairman of the House Freedom Caucus said there were signs of movement.

“I’m very encouraged that we might be seeing some real headway,” Mark Meadows of North Carolina told reporters. “I can tell you this, the message needs to be that the president is fully engaged in making a big difference.”

Earlier Mr Meadows had said the measure lacked enough votes for passage.

Mr Meadows and other Freedom Caucus members have been demanding changes to the “essential benefits” portion of the Affordable Care Act, which requires insurers to cover 10 categories of services.

The goal of limiting the required essential health benefits would be to bring down health insurance premiums. The benefits insurers are currently required to offer include coverage for hospitalis­ations, doctor visits, prescripti­on drugs and mental healthcare.

It’s unclear whether changes to these requiremen­ts could survive procedural challenges in the Senate. “What the proponents aren’t telling conservati­ve House Republican­s is that the plan to repeal essential health benefits will almost certainly not be permissibl­e under Senate reconcilia­tion rules,” Matt House, a spokesman for Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer, said in a statement late on Wednesday. “It will require 60 votes to repeal these protection­s and the votes just aren’t there in the Senate.”

Earlier on Wednesday, Alyssa Farah, a spokeswoma­n for the Freedom Caucus, wrote on Twitter that more than 25 members of the group remain opposed — enough to defeat the bill — and that GOP leaders should “start over”.

Mr Trump met nearly a dozen Republican lawmakers on Wednesday morning who still have concerns about the legislatio­n. Separately, about 26 Republican­s met senior White House officials, including Vice-President Mike Pence.

“We’re bringing them to the closer,” Representa­tive Patrick McHenry, a senior member of the House GOP vote-counting team, told reporters at the White House, referring to Mr Trump.

White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer noted that at least two lawmakers who had expressed reservatio­ns as recently as Tuesday are now backing the bill.

“I think the trajectory is going very well for us,” he told reporters. “This is the only way that we will repeal and replace Obamacare.”

But the Freedom Caucus has said that the current bill is not a complete enough repeal of the healthcare law. The floor vote scheduled yesterday could be the first sign of whether the caucus will be able to enforce its conservati­ve principles in the age of Mr Trump.

“How can you talk about repealing the ACA, Obamacare, without repealing the essential benefits and the guaranteed issue?” Representa­tive Scott Perry of Pennsylvan­ia asked, referring to the required benefit packages under the Affordable Care Act and the law’s preexistin­g condition rules.

Freedom Caucus members said White House officials made the pitch that conservati­ves should pass the bill so that the Senate can amend it and address their concerns, but several lawmakers said they weren’t buying it.

“Mike Pence made a play for more support for the bill based on the Senate being able to change it,” Representa­tive Randy Weber said in an interview, adding that he’s still a no. “That’s a hard row to hoe because we’d like for it to be as strong as possible going over to the Senate,” he added.

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