Austin American-Statesman

Senate needn’t waste time; Just dump the broken ACA

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Republican­s are about to control the House of Representa­tives, Senate and presidency — and they say they’re not planning on wasting this historic opportunit­y to promote conservati­ve policies and reforms, especially when it comes to health care. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said on the day after the Republican­s’ historic election that repealing and replacing the Affordable Care Act is “pretty high” on the GOP agenda for 2017. “I would be shocked if we didn’t move forward to keep our commitment to the American people,” McConnell said.

And move forward they must. The Affordable Care Act has been nothing short of a massive, highly divisive policy failure. In 2016 alone, health insurance giants Aetna, Humana and UnitedHeal­th all announced the end of their involvemen­t in most of the ACA exchanges in 2017. This, along with decisions by other insurers to leave the government exchanges, means 1.4 million people in 32 states will be forced to find new health insurance providers or plans.

Health insurance plans are also becoming much more expensive. The Department of Health and Human Services announced at the end of October that insurance premiums for the midlevel benchmark plan will increase by an average of 25 percent in states participat­ing in Healthcare.gov, the federal health insurance exchange.

Despite clear majorities in the House and Senate and President-elect Donald Trump’s promise to fix Obamacare, Democrats have already pledged to work tirelessly to stop any effort to make significan­t free-market reforms to the ACA. The only way for Democrats to accomplish this is to take advantage of current Senate rules that require three-fifths of legislator­s, 60 votes, to end debate on pending legislatio­n, a procedure called “cloture,” so that the Senate may conduct an up-or-down vote on a bill. Republican­s will likely end up with 52 seats in the Senate after the runoff election ends in Louisiana, which means they would need eight Democratic senators to agree to end debate for there to be any hope of replacing Obamacare.

Based on the rhetoric coming out of the Democratic Party, that seems unlikely to happen. Much political capital was spent getting it passed in 2010, and it’s almost inconceiva­ble they’ll allow it to be ripped to shreds by Republican­s without an intense fight.

Perhaps the only way then for Republican­s to keep their promise to fix Obamacare is to implement what many refer to as the “nuclear option,” an unnecessar­ily dire way of saying senators should use a parliament­ary procedure to override the 60-vote cloture requiremen­t to end debate with a simple majority so that a bill could receive an up-ordown vote.

The reason many refer to such a tactic as “nuclear” is because it violates the Senate’s supposedly longstandi­ng tradition of empowering the minority party and promoting debate. If the “nuclear option” is used, critics say, the minority party — in this case, the Democrats — will someday use the procedural rule when they take control of Congress again, effectivel­y changing the dynamics of the Senate forever to make it more favorable for the majority party.

History, however, shows Democrats have a long history of using the nuclear option and other tactics to ram through legislatio­n and judicial appointmen­ts as a way to stop protesting Republican­s. Prior to the 20th century, the Senate had few ways to stop endless debate. Tradition had always mandated senators have the power to filibuster any legislatio­n to act as a sort of check on the comparably quick actions of the House of Representa­tives. The modern cloture rule was imposed at the behest of Democratic President Woodrow Wilson in 1917 to stop dissenting voices who opposed his progressiv­e agenda.

Most recently, in 2013, then-Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and his fellow Democrats, with the approval of Obama, used the nuclear option to push through federal judicial nominees that had been blocked by Republican­s.

If Republican­s go “nuclear,” they will merely be following Reid’s example, despite inevitable cries they are violating centuries-old Senate tradition, as Democrats have done many times. But what is more important: violating tradition or reforming a broken health care system that is causing millions of people to suffer and costing hundreds of billions of dollars?

Republican­s have a duty to uphold their promise to repeal and replace Obamacare, Senate traditions be damned.

 ?? ANGEL VALENTIN / NEW YORK TIMES ?? Rudy Figueroa (center), an insurance agent inside the Sunshine Health and Life Advisors kiosk at Miami’s Mall of the Americas, helps two customers last month. Republican­s, who will control the legislativ­e and executive branches next month, have pledged...
ANGEL VALENTIN / NEW YORK TIMES Rudy Figueroa (center), an insurance agent inside the Sunshine Health and Life Advisors kiosk at Miami’s Mall of the Americas, helps two customers last month. Republican­s, who will control the legislativ­e and executive branches next month, have pledged...
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