Los Angeles Times

Targeting Obamacare, GOP risks getting a Trump plan

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

WASHINGTON — Even as congressio­nal Republican­s celebrated their latest symbolic jab at the Affordable Care Act, the GOP confronts an increasing­ly urgent challenge to develop a meaningful alternativ­e in the face of Donald Trump’s enduring candidacy.

More than five years after the health law was enacted, the party still has no unifying healthcare platform. And if Trump extends his run atop the Republican presidenti­al field, his unorthodox healthcare positions may soon define the GOP.

Trump, who is increasing­ly worrying Republican party leaders, has said little on the campaign trail about healthcare beyond bashing the current law and promising that “everybody’s going to be taken care of ” and “the government’s gonna pay for it,” as he said on “60 Minutes” in September.

In the past, Trump has expressed admiration for government-run systems in other countries such as Britain and Canada. Such systems are anathema to most conservati­ves.

“It might be a wise thing now for Republican­s in Congress to articulate a wellthough­t-out plan as, shall we say, a suggestion,” said Joe Antos, a longtime health policy expert at the conservati­ve American Enterprise Institute in Washington. “That seems like a sensible thing for a political party to do in these uncertain times.”

Although congressio­nal Republican­s — and most of the party’s presidenti­al contenders — have neglected to develop a healthcare platform, Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton has rolled out an increasing­ly detailed agenda that builds on the current law commonly called Obamacare.

Among other things, she wants to expand regulation of insurance companies and drug makers to protect consumers from surprise medical bills and skyrocketi­ng drug prices. More recently, she proposed initiative­s to tackle Alzheimer’s disease and autism.

Campaignin­g in Iowa this week, she ridiculed the latest Republican repeal vote.

“Because they have no plan, the Republican­s just want to undo what Democrats have fought for decades [to do] and what President Obama got accomplish­ed,” she said at a town hall meeting in Davenport on Monday.

The GOP-controlled House sent Obama a repeal bill Wednesday that would rip out major pillars of the health law, including subsidies to help low- and middleinco­me Americans buy coverage and federal aid to states to help them expand their Medicaid programs.

That would save the government money but also leave 22 million people without health coverage and drive up insurance premiums, according to an analysis by the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office.

Obama was expected to quickly veto the bill, which passed the Senate last month.

Republican lawmakers have nonetheles­s billed their latest effort — by one count the 62nd such bill since 2011 — as an important step, noting that it is the first major repeal bill to make it to the president’s desk. Because it was developed through a process known as budget reconcilia­tion, it could not be filibuster­ed by Democrats in the Senate.

The bill, which also would cut federal funding for Planned Parenthood, passed 240 to 181, with one Democrat joining 239 Republican­s to back the measure and three Republican­s joining 178 Democrats opposing it.

“It is a new year, a new day,” House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfiel­d) said Wednesday. “It’s going to be a new agenda to make sure America is confident again.”

House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) is promising that this year he will follow up with a substantiv­e healthcare alternativ­e.

“We owe people the right to decide if they want to stay on this path or not, and the only way you can do that is if you offer another path,” the new speaker told reporters recently at his Capitol office. “And not just some vague platitudes, get some pollster [to] tell you what to say, but an actual path.”

Ryan could draw on an emerging consensus among conservati­ve healthcare experts about how to move away from the Affordable Care Act to a more conservati­ve program for expanding health coverage and controllin­g costs through broad deregulati­on and devolution of power to states.

Last month, a group of these experts issued a 70page blueprint through the American Enterprise Institute that proposes to free health plans from federal mandates that they cover basic benefits — a key requiremen­t of the current law.

The blueprint also proposes a system for providing tax breaks to help Americans who don’t get coverage at work, replacing the current law’s subsidies for lowand middle-income Americans with a system based on consumers’ age.

Most Republican­s also favor redesignin­g the 50year-old Medicaid safety net that covers about 70 million poor Americans. They would give states block grants and let them revamp their programs.

And the House has already backed a plan by Ryan to convert the Medicare program for the elderly and disabled into a voucher system that provides subsidies to patients to enable them to shop for commercial insurance plans.

But never before have congressio­nal Republican­s put all these pieces together into a bill that they could present to the president, in large part because the process is complicate­d and will require large, often politicall­y unpopular trade-offs.

And rarely do Republican­s talk about how they would pay for a system that would preserve the coverage gains made by the Affordable Care Act.

 ?? Joe Raedle Getty Images ?? AN OBAMACARE sign-up site in Miami. Donald Trump has admired government-run health systems.
Joe Raedle Getty Images AN OBAMACARE sign-up site in Miami. Donald Trump has admired government-run health systems.

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