Emboldened Dems want vote on ACA
Showdown looms in House over pre-existing conditions
WASHINGTON - House Democrats plan to hold a vote early next year on protecting health coverage for people with pre-existing conditions — testing GOP commitments to such protections that many Republicans adopted during difficult reelection campaigns.
Rep. Richard Neal, D-Mass., who will be chairman of the Ways and Means Committee next year, said such a vote should happen immediately upon Democrats assuming control of the House in January.
The vote would be the natural sequel to Democrats’ successful midterm strategy of focusing on health care and attacking Republicans relentlessly over their attempts to repeal the Affordable Care Act, which included landmark pre-existing condition protections.
During the campaign many Republicans insisted they actually wanted pre-existing conditions protected, a shift Democrats called disingenuous. A vote on the issue would give Republicans a chance to follow through.
“We need a vote on pre-existing conditions right away,” Neal said in a post-election interview in his hometown of Springfield, Massachusetts, on Wednesday. “We said that was one of the cornerstones of the ACA. After they saw how badly their position was polling on it, they said they were for it.”
Neal said he envisioned legislation that would affirm guaranteed coverage for pre-existing conditions as settled law - and that would strike back at the lawsuit 20 Republican-led states are pursuing in federal court in Texas, with the support of the Trump administration, to declare the Affordable Care Act unconstitutional.
“We can’t go back and forth on these things every election cycle. Let’s establish the principle, embrace it, and move on,” Neal said of requiring insurers to cover patients with pre-existing conditions. “I think we’d have to come up with something that promoted the idea that it wasn’t going away. And the attorneys general of the United States, the 20 attorneys general, should not be seeking relief in a Texas federal court.”
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., who is the leading candidate to become House speaker next year, supports the strategy, a spokesman said.
“Voters across the country have delivered a resounding verdict against Republicans’ war on health care,” said Pelosi spokesman Henry Connelly. “The new Democratic House majority will move swiftly to defend the vital protections for people with people with pre-existing conditions still under legal assault by the GOP.”
Legislation on pre-existing conditions might not make it through the Senate, which will remain under Republican control next year. But it would be a key element of Democrats’ messaging as they assume control of the House and work to take action on their campaign promises.
If Republicans and President Donald Trump did go along with Democratic legislation on pre-existing conditions, that would move Democrats toward their long-held goal of protecting as much of Obamacare as they can.