Lodi News-Sentinel

GOP hopes for Senate health care bill fading

- By Alan Fram

WASHINGTON — The Republican drive to tear down President Barack Obama’s health care law was flickering out Monday as a decisive handful of GOP senators remained opposed to the last-gasp bill. Changes aimed at galvanizin­g GOP support produced no apparent additional votes as time was running out for the White House and party leaders.

“We don’t have the support for it,” Sen. Orrin Hatch, RUtah, told reporters as Republican assessment­s of their chances grew increasing­ly gloomy.

Conservati­ve Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., said he’d not abandoned his previously announced opposition to the measure, despite the revisions and energetic lobbying by President Donald Trump and White House officials. He complained that the bill spent too much and said Republican­s were motivated by fear of punishment by conservati­ve voters if they didn’t succeed.

“It’s like a kidney stone. Pass it, pass it, pass it,” Paul told reporters.

Yelling protesters forced the Senate Finance Committee to briefly delay the chamber’s first and only hearing on the charged issue. Police lugged some demonstrat­ors out of the hearing room and trundled out others in wheelchair­s as scores chanted, “No cuts to Medicaid, save our liberty.”

The electricit­y in the room captured the high stakes as the two parties battle over whether to defend or obliterate Obama’s 2010 overhaul. Three July failures by Republican­s to push earlier bills through the Senate led Democrats to rejoice and infuriated conservati­ves, prompting President Donald Trump to repeatedly savage GOP senators who blocked the party’s yearsold goal of repeal.

Republican­s have pinned their last hopes on a measure by GOP Sens. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana and South Carolina’s Lindsey Graham. The measure would end Obama’s Medicaid expansion and subsidies for consumers and ship the money — $1.2 trillion through 2026 — to states to use on health services with few constraint­s.

Overnight, the sponsors added billions of extra dollars for states and language easing Obama’s coverage requiremen­ts in hopes of winning over wavering GOP senators.

But by Monday afternoon, Paul and GOP Sen. John McCain of Arizona remained against the measure. Republican Maine Sen. Susan Collins seemed a certain opponent, Alaska GOP Sen. Lisa Murkowski was undecided and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz was opposed but senior aides said he was looking for changes so he could vote yes.

With their narrow 52-48 majority and solid Democratic opposition, three GOP “no” votes would doom the bill.

The Senate must vote this week for Republican­s to have any chance of prevailing with their narrow margin. Next Sunday, protection­s expire against a Democratic filibuster, bill-killing delays that Republican­s lack the votes to overcome.

On Monday, Trump took on McCain, who’d returned to the Senate after a brain cancer diagnosis in July to cast the key vote that wrecked this summer’s GOP effort. Trump called that “a tremendous slap in the face of the Republican party” in a call to the “Rick & Bubba Show,” an Alabama-based talk radio program.

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