Orlando Sentinel

Gap still wide in health debate

President optimistic but says he wants to see Senate bill with ‘heart’ as pivotal week begins

- By Laura King and Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — Heading into a week of intense jockeying and arm-twisting over the Senate’s polarizing health care plan, the rift appeared to widen Sunday between moderates who consider the measure too punitive and conservati­ves who want to see the bill toughened up before agreeing to back it.

President Donald Trump, who made the repeal of his predecesso­r’s signature Affordable Care Act a campaign centerpiec­e, expressed optimism about chances for Senate passage but declared again that he wanted to see a plan with “heart” — suggesting he might undercut Republican efforts to bring recalcitra­nt conservati­ves on board.

With Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., seeking to push ahead with a vote this week, the bill’s prospects hung in the balance. Five GOP senators have said publicly they oppose the measure as written; the defection of three Republican­s would sink it.

Democrats, who have said they would be willing to work with the GOP to fix but not scrap Obamacare,

declared that the Senate measure would inflict farreachin­g harm on poor and middle-income Americans, as well as the elderly.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said in on ABC’s “This Week” that he thought chances for Senate approval were “50-50” at best.

Failure to pass the bill would represent a high-profile setback for Trump at a time when his White House is increasing­ly beleaguere­d over the widening probe of Russian meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

On the health care front, conservati­ves voiced concerns about the Senate plan and floated two amendments for revisions this weekend at the influentia­l Koch network’s gathering of wealthy donors in Colorado Springs, Colo.

The Koch network had similarly rejected the original House GOP bill this spring until party leaders tacked on stringent amendments meant to appease the party’s hard-liners.

One key lawmaker attending the weekend summit, Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., the chairman of the House Freedom Caucus and a chief negotiator on the House bill that was passed earlier, outlined key changes to the bill that he said could likely win enough conservati­ve support for passage.

One idea from Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, would allow companies that offer insurance policies on the Obamacare marketplac­e to also offer plans that do not meet the Affordable Care Act’s strict requiremen­ts.

Such a change would in essence allow insurers to offer cheaper, though skimpier, policies that may help achieve the GOP’s goal of lowering premium prices for consumers.

Cruz is one of four Senate conservati­ves who have said they would not support the bill unless changes are made, positionin­g them for upcoming negotiatio­ns.

Another of the conservati­ve holdouts, Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, was among those feted Saturday night at a reception with Charles Koch, the billionair­e industrial­ist who funds the conservati­ve network.

Even as McConnell continued to push for a speedy vote, one key GOP centrist, Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, said she doubted there would be a swift resolution.

“It’s hard for me to see the bill passing this week,” she said on ABC’s “This Week.” Collins, who has expressed particular concern over funding for Planned Parenthood, said she wanted to see the Congressio­nal Budget Office’s “score” of the measure, which would outline its projected effects.

“I’m very concerned about the cost of insurance for older people with serious chronic illnesses, and the impact of the Medicaid cuts on our state government­s, the most vulnerable people in our society and health care providers, such as our rural hospitals and nursing homes, most of whom are very dependent on the Medicaid program,” Collins said.

Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., a physician who had offered his own proposal, also criticized the rush.

“I frankly would like a few more days to consider this,” Cassidy said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”

Similar reservatio­ns were voiced by Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin.

“We don’t have enough informatio­n,” he said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “I don’t have the feedback from constituen­cies who will not have had enough time to view the Senate bill. We should not be voting on this” in the coming week.

Sen John Cornyn, RTexas, said the Senate remains on track to start Wednesday’s procedural votes. “But it’s going to be close,” the Senate’s No. 2 Republican told reporters Sunday at the Koch summit.

Trump said he thought the bill’s prospects were good. “Health care is a very, very tough thing to get, but I think we’re going to get it,” he said in an interview broadcast Sunday on “Fox and Friends.”

But Trump essentiall­y confirmed previous reports that he had called the House bill — which is highly unpopular, according to public opinion polls — “mean.”

“That was my term, ‘mean,’ ” he said in the Fox interview. “I speak from the heart, that’s what I want to see — I want to see a bill with heart.”

Trump’s Health and Human Services secretary, Tom Price, appearing on “Fox News Sunday,” pledged that “nobody will fall through the cracks, nobody will have the rug pulled out from under them.”

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