Khaleej Times

GOP health plan in peril as 22m set to lose coverage

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washington — Senate Republican­s watched support for their Obamacare repeal bill slide into perilous territory after Monday’s release of a non-partisan report forecastin­g that the plan would leave 22 million more Americans uninsured by 2026.

The legislatio­n introduced last week by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell was already in jeopardy, despite expressed optimism by President Donald Trump.

With Democrats uniting in opposition to the draft, Republican leaders have struggled to rally enough support from within their ranks to get the bill over the line.

McConnell has said he wants a final vote on the bill Friday, before a brief recess for lawmakers for the July 4 Independen­ce Day holiday, but some in the party have balked at the short timeline.

The report by the Congressio­nal Budget Office (CBO) will no doubt sow deeper concerns about the viability of the legislatio­n, which is aimed at fulfilling Trump’s pledge to repeal the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, the landmark reform of his Democratic predecesso­r Barack Obama.

“The Senate bill would increase the number of people who are uninsured by 22 million in 2026 relative to the number under current law,” the CBO said in its muchantici­pated report.

The estimated increase in the number of uninsured under the bill that passed the House of Representa­tives last month was 23 million.

According to the CBO, the Senate legislatio­n would also slash federal spending by some $321 billion over the 2017-2026 period, a net savings of $202 billion over the House measure.

The CBO said that the bill’s abolition of the provision requiring individual­s to have insurance would lead to 15 million more uninsured people next year alone.

It also warned that some insurance premiums for individual­s would be 20 per cent higher next year than under current law, mainly because eliminatin­g mandated coverage would prompt comparativ­ely fewer healthy people to sign up. The White House quickly dismissed the CBO report. —

 ?? AFP ?? Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer speaks as Senator Patty Murray looks on during a Press conference about the care bill on Capitol Hill in Washington. —
AFP Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer speaks as Senator Patty Murray looks on during a Press conference about the care bill on Capitol Hill in Washington. —

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