The Commercial Appeal

GOP lawmakers unveil plan to lower health premiums

- Michael Collins Nashville Tennessean USA TODAY NETWORK - TENNESSEE

WASHINGTON – Sen. Lamar Alexander and other congressio­nal Republican­s are pressing forward with their plan to stabilize Obamacare insurance markets and help provide coverage for patients with high medical costs.

But while previous versions have had bipartisan support, Democrats are refusing to back the latest bill.

Alexander and three key Republican­s filed legislatio­n Monday that they said could provide coverage for an additional 3.2 million individual­s and lower premiums by as much as 40 percent for people who don’t get health insurance through the government or their employer.

Beginning in 2019, the bill would reinstate for three years the government subsidies paid to insurers that provide health-care coverage to low-income clients. It also would provide $30 billion in funding – $10 billion a year over three years – to help states set up high-risk insurance pools to provide coverage for people with high medical costs.

The proposal also would revise the Obamacare waiver process so that states will have more flexibilit­y to design and regulate insurance plans. In addition, it would require the Department of Health and Human Services to issue regulation­s allowing insurers to sell plans across state lines.

“Our recommenda­tions are based upon Senate and House proposals developed in several bipartisan hearings and roundtable discussion­s,” the proposal’s Republican sponsors said.

The bill is sponsored in the Senate by Alexander, who chairs the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, and Sen. Susan Collins, RMaine. The sponsors in the House are Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., who chairs the House Energy and Commerce Committee, and Rep. Ryan Costello, R-Penn.

The lawmakers are hoping to include the bill in a massive spending package that Congress is expected to take up by the end of the week. President Donald Trump told Alexander and Collins in a conference call over the weekend that he wants money to lower health insurance premiums included in the spending package.

The bill marks the latest attempt by lawmakers to offer short-term fixes that could bring some stability to the volatile health insurance markets created under the Affordable Care Act and help offset the higher insurance premiums expected to result from the repeal of the Obamacare requiremen­t that most Americans buy insurance.

Alexander and the Senate health committee’s top Democrat, Sen. Patty Murray of Washington, struck a deal last fall to the cost-sharing subsidies for two years. Trump has halted the payments, establishe­d under the Affordable Care Act, which are worth around $7 billion each year.

But Murray and other Democrats have not signed onto the latest proposal because it includes language that they believe would expand the restrictio­ns on federal funding of abortions.

“Senator Murray is disappoint­ed that Republican­s are rallying behind a new partisan bill that includes a last-minute, harmful restrictio­n on abortion coverage for private insurance companies instead of working with Democrats to wrap up what have been bipartisan efforts to reduce health care costs,” said Murray’s spokeswoma­n, Helen Hare.

Murray “hopes the unexpected release of this partisan legislatio­n isn’t a signal from Republican­s that they have once again ended ongoing negotiatio­ns aimed at lowering families’ health care costs in favor of partisan politics, and that they come back to the table to finally get this done,” Hare said.

Republican­s, meanwhile, pointed to an analysis by health care experts at the management consulting firm Oliver Wyman that compared the new proposal to what people in the individual market will pay if Congress fails to act.

The analysis showed that the package would reduce premiums by up to 40 percent in the individual market for farmers, small business owners and others who don’t buy their insurance from the government or their employer.

Preliminar­y projection­s from the Congressio­nal Budget Office indicated that the plan could be adopted without adding to the federal debt.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States