OBAMASCARE! AS REPUBLICANS FAIL AGAIN TO FINISH OFF OBAMA CARE IN SENATE
Republicans fail again to kill off Obamacare in Senate
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - U.S. Republicans on Tuesday fell short yet again in their
seven-year drive to repeal Obamacare, in a bitter defeat that raises
more questions about their ability to enact President Donald Trump’s
agenda.
The party was unable to win enough
support from its own senators for a bill to repeal the 2010 Affordable
Care Act and decided not to put it to a vote, several Republicans said.
The bill’s sponsors vowed to try again, but face steeper odds after
Sunday, when special rules expire that allow them to pass healthcare
legislation without Democratic support.
“We
basically ran out of time,” said Senator Ron Johnson, a co-sponsor of
the measure with Senators Bill Cassidy, Lindsey Graham and Dean Heller.
Republicans
have now repeatedly failed to deliver on their longtime promise to roll
back former Democratic President Barack Obama’s signature domestic
accomplishment.
They have yet to achieve
any major domestic policy successes in Congress this year, which could
hurt their efforts to retain control of the Senate and House of
Representatives in the November 2018 congressional elections.
Republicans
widely view Obamacare, which provides coverage to 20 million Americans,
as a costly government overreach. Trump vowed frequently during the
2016 election campaign to scrap it. Democrats have fiercely defended it,
saying it has extended health insurance to millions.
After
falling short in July, Senate Republicans tried again this month with a
bill that would have given states greater control over the hundreds of
billions of dollars that the federal government spends annually on
health care.
As
before, they ran into objections from members on the right and the
center who opposed repeal for essentially opposite reasons.
Senator
Susan Collins, a moderate, complained it undermined the Medicaid
program for the poor and weakened consumer protections. Senator Rand
Paul, a conservative, said it left too many of Obamacare’s regulations
and spending programs in place.
Democrats said
it was time for Republicans to work with them to fix Obamacare’s
shortcomings, and Republican Senator Lamar Alexander said he would
resume talks with Democratic Senator Patty Murray to shore up the law’s
insurance subsidies.
Shares of healthcare
providers ended broadly higher. Hospital company HCA Healthcare Inc rose
1.8 percent, while insurer Centene Corp, which focuses on Medicaid,
rose 2.2 percent.
The
insurance industry, hospitals, medical advocacy groups such as the
American Medical Association, American Heart Association and American
Cancer Society, the AARP advocacy group for the elderly and consumer
activists opposed the latest bill.
TRUMP DISAPPOINTED
Trump
said on Tuesday his administration was disappointed in “certain
so-called Republicans” who did not support the bill. The Republican
president said later he still had not given up hope that the law would
eventually be repealed. “It’ll happen,” he told reporters while
traveling to New York for a fundraiser.
Republicans hold a slim 52-48 majority in the Senate and
at least three senators - Collins, Paul and John McCain of Arizona - had publicly rejected the bill.
Republicans
crafted special rules earlier this year that allowed them to pass a
bill with a simple majority in the 100-seat chamber. After those rules
expire at the start of the new fiscal year on Sunday, they will need at
least 60 votes to advance most legislation.
John
Thune, a member of the Republican leadership in the Senate, said the
party would likely not try to undo Obamacare again until it was clear
there were enough votes for it. He said the party would now focus on
overhauling the U.S. tax code - another complex undertaking that could
meet with stiff resistance from a wide range of interest groups.
A
CBS poll on Monday showed 52 percent of Americans disapproved of the
Graham-Cassidy healthcare bill, while 20 percent approved.
“I
will readily admit that the Republican Party has done a bad job of
explaining what we’re for in terms of replace on Obamacare,” Republican
Senator Ben Sasse said on the Senate floor.
Six
protesters staged a “die-in” on the floor of a Senate office building,
lying on the ground and covering their heads and bodies with a white
shroud to represent what they said would be lives lost if the bill
passed.
The non-partisan Congressional Budget
Office said the number of people with health insurance covering
high-cost medical events would be slashed by millions if the latest
Republican bill had it become law.
The CBO also found that
federal spending on Medicaid would be cut by about $1 trillion from 2017
to 2026 and that millions of people would lose their coverage in the
program, mainly from a repeal of federal funding for Obamacare’s
Medicaid expansion.
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