With a push from Trump, House Republicans pass Obamacare overhaul
By Lisa Mascaro and Noam N. Levey
May 4, 2017, 3:30 PM - LA Times
House Republicans
narrowly passed legislation Thursday to roll back the Affordable
Care Act, the first step toward delivering on a years-long campaign promise
despite mounting concerns from healthcare groups that the legislation would
strip protections enjoyed by millions of Americans.
The tight vote, 217-213, with all Democrats opposed, underscored the limited
appeal of the American Health Care Act, which passed thanks to last-minute
deal-making and the personal intervention of President Trump. Even so, 20
Republicans defected to vote against the measure.
After House GOP leaders had shelved previous attempts to advance the bill because of
a lack of support from their own party, Thursdayfs vote provided a major
legislative victory to Trump, which may give momentum to his other priorities
and bolster his efforts to be seen as a leader who can govern with the
Republican majority in Congress.
gMake no mistake, this is a repeal and replace of Obamacare,h a buoyant Trump
said at a Rose Garden reception for Republicans at the White House immediately
after the vote. gItfs essentially dead.
gItfs going to be an unbelievable victory when we get it through the Senate,h
he added.
But the future of the bill remains highly uncertain as Senate Republicans
expressed deep reservations about the potential that Americans will lose their
healthcare coverage under the measure.
Several Senate leaders, including health committee Chairman Lamar Alexander
(R-Tenn.), indicated Thursday afternoon they wanted to take a very different
approach, proceeding slowly with a new bill that would not jeopardize coverage
for as many people as the House measure.
That means that any Senate progress on health legislation will probably take
weeks, if not months, and could pose a serious challenge if it must be
reconciled with the House version, which was crafted to win over the most
conservative wing of the party.
Longer term, the narrow passage of the House bill — which was uncertain until the final votes were cast — and the prospect
that the debate will drag into the summer or beyond virtually ensures that
healthcare once again will be a dominant issue in the midterm election.
Needing every vote they could get, Republican leaders pressed many of their
members from swing districts — including all California Republicans who
represent areas Trump lost last year — to support the bill. Democrats are likely
to use those votes against Republicans when they run for reelection, just as
Republicans did in ousting Democrats after Obamacare was passed in 2010.
Democrats sang, gHey, hey, hey, goodbye,h on the House floor as the bill was
being approved, predicting voters would boot Republicans from office as a
result.
Protesters chanted, gShame on you!h outside the Capitol as Republicans
boarded buses to whisk them to the White House.
House Minority Leader Nancy
Pelosi (D-San Francisco) orchestrated a full-scale floor opposition Thursday
against what she called the gmoral monstrosity of Trumpcare,h but in the end,
Democrats were unable to block the measure.
House Speaker Paul
D. Ryan (R-Wis.), whose political reputation was riding on the outcome, told
lawmakers this was their moment to make good on their promise to voters.
gAre we going to be men and women of our word? Are we going to keep the
promises we made? Or are we going to falter?h Ryan said in an unusually fiery
speech ahead of the vote. gLet us pass this bill to take the next step to put
Obamacare behind us.h
Despite the risk of a voter backlash against the bill, many Republican
strategists believe their candidates would face even bigger peril by failing to
fulfill the partyfs repeated promises to repeal Obamacare.
The full cost and impact of the bill remain unclear because GOP leaders
called the vote without first waiting for a new analysis from the nonpartisan
Congressional Budget Office. A previous assessment, before amendments were made
to appease both conservative and centrist factions of the party, estimated the GOP plan would leave 24 million more Americans
without healthcare coverage by 2026.
The legislation cuts more than a $1 trillion in federal healthcare assistance
to low- and moderate-income Americans, primarily through a landmark retrenchment
in Medicaid, the half-century-old government health plan for the poor.
It stands to reverse an expansion of healthcare under Obamacare that has brought the nationfs uninsured rate to the lowest level
recorded — an additional 20 million Americans have gained coverage.
And even though Republicans said their bill would lower premiums and protect
vulnerable Americans, the vote was swiftly condemned by a wide range of patient
advocates, physicians and other healthcare groups.
gAmerican lives are at stake,h warned Dr. Georges C. Benjamin, executive
director of the American Public Health Assn., who urged Senate leaders not to be
as greckless, shortsighted and heartlessh as the House.
Potentially faring best in the House bill would be wealthy Americans and the
insurance industry. Both would benefit from the elimination of as much as $600
billion in taxes enacted under Obamacare to help pay for the coverage
expansion.
Several studies have shown that Trumpfs own supporters, living in conservative, rural areas,
would fare the worst, paying higher premiums or losing benefits.
A key change from the original bill that was sought by the conservative House
Freedom Caucus allows states to apply for waivers from some of Obamacarefs
most popular requirements, including the ban on insurers charging more for
patients with preexisting medical conditions.
Advocates for patients with cancer, diabetes and other serious
illnesses fear that would allow insurers to once again bill people with
these diseases thousands of dollars more for insurance, making coverage
unaffordable in many cases.
Late Wednesday, another amendment was added to win back centrists worried
about the effect of those state waivers. That change poured an additional $8
billion into high-risk insurance pools to cover patients with preexisting
conditions who canft obtain traditional coverage.
The additional money did little to convince healthcare professionals, who
have cautioned that these pools, common before Obamacare, have proved woefully
inadequate to cover the medical needs of sick patients shut out of
commercial health insurance.
Dr. Andrew W. Gurman, president of the American Medical Assn., said the
changes only gtinker at the edges without remedying the fundamental failing of
the bill — that millions of Americans will lose their health insurance as a
direct result of this proposal.h
Neither did the amendments allay the concerns of many Senate Republicans, who
have openly criticized the legislation and the rushed process that House leaders
used to advance it.
Sen. Rob
Portman (R-Ohio), whose state has expanded Medicaid coverage through
Obamacare, cautioned that any changes to the current law gmust be made in a way
that does not leave people behind.h
gI continue to have concerns that this bill does not do enough to protect
Ohiofs Medicaid expansion population, especially those who are receiving
treatment for heroin and prescription drug abuse,h Portman said.
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), a fierce critic of Obamacare, said on Twitter
that the House replacement plan gshould be viewed with caution,h noting that it
had been passed without an analysis from the Congressional Budget Office and
with only three hours of debate.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) called House passage an
gimportant steph and promised that Congress would continue work on the
issue.
The vote turned out to be far more difficult than initially thought, particularly
since the GOP-led House had voted more than 50 times over the years to repeal
Obamacare. But those votes were largely symbolic because lawmakers knew
then-President Obama would veto any such bill that reached his desk.
With the prospects that their legislation might actually become law and as
public opinion polls showed Obamacarefs popularity rising, lawmakers weighed the
decision much more carefully.
Many Republican lawmakers appeared to be resigned to punting the bill to the
Senate, where they acknowledge it will be changed or stall.
gItfs not that Ifm happy with this bill. I am not,h said Rep. Mario
Diaz-Balart (R-Fla.), who represents a more centrist district and voted for the
bill. gBut therefs a long way to go.h
Ahead of the vote, Republicans huddled in the Capitol basement, playing the
gRockyh movie theme song and gTaking Care of Businessh as an inspirational
soundtrack.
Rep. Mark
Meadows (R-N.C.), the chairman of the House Freedom Caucus, who was
instrumental in brokering changes to bring conservatives on board, said he
called Trump earlier Thursday to touch base before the vote.
Trump asked him two questions, he said: Have we made the bill better? Does it
cover preexisting conditions? Meadows said yes to both.
gGreat, letfs get it done,h he said Trump told him, gand make it better in
the Senate.h