Los Angeles Times

Bush details plan to replace Obama healthcare law

- By Noam N. Levey noam.levey@latimes.com Twitter: @noamlevey

WASHINGTON — Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who is laboring to make inroads with potential Republican voters flocking to Donald Trump and Ben Carson, is intensifyi­ng attacks on the Affordable Care Act and making renewed pledges to repeal and replace the 2010 law.

“There’s no way to fix it,” Bush said Tuesday in a speech at Saint Anselm College in Manchester, N.H., promising to “get rid of all of Obamacare.”

“You can’t fix something that is a failure from the start,” he said.

Bush’s 10-page replacemen­t plan is the most detailed alternativ­e offered by any of the top-tier Republican presidenti­al candidates.

It represents a stark contrast with Democratic frontrunne­r Hillary Rodham Clinton, who has been campaignin­g on the law’s historic expansion of healthcare coverage while proposing new regulation­s to protect consumers from rising drug prices and runaway medical bills.

Bush’s strong repeal call also represents something of a change for the struggling presidenti­al hopeful, who in the past has expressed skepticism about congressio­nal Republican­s’ repeated efforts to roll back the law.

Most Americans want to modify and improve the law, polls show. But repealing it remains popular with the Republican base.

Bush’s blueprint, which he is calling “the Conservati­ve Plan for 21st Century Health,” largely hews to mainstream conservati­ve proposals for loosening federal oversight of healthcare.

The former governor promises to lower costs by deregulati­ng the health insurance industry and freeing health plans from mandates that they cover basic benefits — a key requiremen­t of the healthcare law that President Obama signed five years ago.

Bush’s plan would also create a new system for providing tax breaks to help Americans who don’t get coverage at work, replacing the current law’s subsidies for low- and middle-income Americans.

And he would redesign the 50-year-old Medicaid safety net that covers about 70 million poor Americans by giving states block grants and letting them redesign their programs.

But the plan, like many alternativ­es offered by critics of the Affordable Care Act, does not include key details, including how it would be paid for.

Bush’s tax credits and other government assistance would probably cost hundreds of billions of dollars, yet he has proposed scrapping the taxes and other revenue that generate hundreds of billions of dollars in the current law.

The only revenue source in Bush’s plan — a new cap on the tax break for employer-provided coverage — is similar to a tax in the current law that is under attack by Democrats and Republican­s. Also unclear is how the plan would affect tens of millions of Americans who depend on government assistance to get health coverage.

Capping Medicaid expenditur­es and tying assistance to age rather than to income, as Bush would do, would almost certainly leave many low- and middle-income Americans with fewer protection­s.

 ?? Jim Cole Associated Press ?? “YOU CAN’T FIX something that is a failure from the start,” Republican presidenti­al candidate Jeb Bush said of the Affordable Care Act in Manchester, N.H.
Jim Cole Associated Press “YOU CAN’T FIX something that is a failure from the start,” Republican presidenti­al candidate Jeb Bush said of the Affordable Care Act in Manchester, N.H.

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