Albuquerque Journal

GOP and Dems start talking about compromise health bill

Efforts to help insurers could gain bipartisan support

- BY TONY PUGH AND LESLEY CLARK MCCLATCHY WASHINGTON BUREAU

WASHINGTON — Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell will move next week on a measure to dismantle the Affordable Care Act, but, predicting failure, other senators are already talking about areas of compromise between Republican­s and Democrats.

Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., chairman of the Senate Republican Conference, said there was a “good chance” that if Republican­s prove unsuccessf­ul next week there could be pressure to “pivot to another strategy, which could include shorter term measures where you are dealing with some of the Democrats, assuming they are interested in helping.”

Sen. Ron Johnson, R-WI, who chairs the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs, said he’s talked with the top Democrat on the committee, Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., about holding hearings on health care that would look at the entire system.

In a statement from Arizona, where he is recovering from surgery, Republican Sen. John McCain also endorsed the idea of hearings and negotiatio­ns.

“Congress must now return to regular order, hold hearings, receive input from members of both parties, and heed the recommenda­tions of our nation’s governors so that we can produce a bill that finally provides Americans with access to quality and affordable health care,” McCain said.

Democrats signaled they were ready to talk too.

Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., said he has talked several times with McCain and is “hopeful” that after the vote collapses Republican­s will begin working with their Democratic colleagues.

Republican­s, he said, are “kind of constraine­d until they have their debate, their vote.”

“If there are not the votes to move forward, then I think you will find plenty of Democrats and Republican­s who will work together,” Carper said.

Indeed, a compromise package is not impossible, argued Sabrina Corlette, research professor at Georgetown University’s Center on Health Insurance Reforms.

“My somewhat naive view would be that yes, absolutely, on policy, they can come to bipartisan agreement. That’s the easy part. It’s the politics that are hard,” Corlette said.

An easy fix that both parties might support is a reinsuranc­e program to help insurers with a large number of sicker, high-cost plan members. GOP House and Senate repeal legislatio­n both contain reinsuranc­e proposals. A bill by Carper and Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., would also create a reinsuranc­e program.

Timothy Jost, an emeritus law professor at Washington and Lee University, said an effort to step up federal enrollment outreach efforts might also find bipartisan support. But disputes over retaining the Medicaid expansion and strengthen­ing federal subsidies to help purchase marketplac­e coverage might not be so easy.

“You want to start with small bore things that everybody can agree on and then go from there,” said Jost.

Another fix that might gain bipartisan support is permanent federal funding of cost-sharing subsidies that help low-income marketplac­e enrollees with their out-of-pocket costs.

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