Story
update:
WASHINGTON
— Budget office: 23 million more uninsured, lower premiums for less coverage
under GOP House-passed health care bill.
This
is a breaking news update. Check back later for more.
EARLIER
STORY:
WASHINGTON
— Keeping former President Barack Obama's health care law is "completely
unacceptable and totally unsustainable," the Senate's top Republican said
Wednesday as the two parties braced for a Congressional Budget Office report on
a House-passed bill overhauling that statute.
The
budget office, lawmakers' nonpartisan fiscal analyst, planned to release an
analysis Wednesday of the impact the GOP-written House bill would have on
coverage, consumers' costs and the federal budget. Its two March reports on
earlier versions of the bill projected it would leave 24 million additional
people uninsured in a decade, a mammoth number that pushed Republicans onto the
defensive.
The
new estimates could give talking points to House Republicans, or to Democrats,
who voted unanimously against that bill. For GOP senators holding private
meetings to sketch out their own legislation, its figures will be a starting
point as they consider changing the House's Medicaid cuts, tax credits and
other policies.
Wednesday's
report will be the first time the budget office has gauged the impact of
eleventh-hour changes House Republicans made to gain enough votes to pass the
bill.
Those
provisions included waivers states could get for insurers to raise premiums on
some people with pre-existing conditions, and to ignore health benefits that
must be covered under Obama's law. States could also gain permission for
insurers to charge older customers far higher premiums.
In
addition, the new report could say whether the bill achieved enough budget
savings to retain special protections the legislation would have to shield it
from a Democratic filibuster in the Senate.
Though
it's considered unlikely, if the bill lacks sufficient savings, the House might
have to revise the bill and vote again, which could be an ordeal for GOP
leaders. The House approved the bill May 4 by a narrow 217-213 with only GOP
votes.
Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., downplayed the report Wednesday as
"a technical procedural step."
He
added, "Whatever CBO says about the House bill today, this much is
absolutely clear: the status quo under Obamacare is completely unacceptable and
totally unsustainable. Prices are skyrocketing, choice is plummeting."
Democrats
have defended Obama's law for expanding coverage and requiring insurers to
provide stronger benefits.
Senate
Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said Wednesday that the GOP bill would
"gut Medicaid" and force higher out-of-pocket costs on older people
and others.
"We
can expect today's CBO analysis will likely show many of the same grave
consequences," he said.
In
March, the budget office said the House legislation would increase premiums by
an average 15 percent to 20 percent over the next two years, but push premiums
10 percent lower than they'd otherwise be by 2026. Many Republicans say their
chief goal is to reduce premiums.
Besides
premiums, other critical components of the value of health insurance are
out-of-pocket costs and benefits.
Obama's
law included subsidies to help people with modest incomes cover their deductibles
and copayments, and spelled out standard benefits like maternity services that
insurers must provide. The House bill would eliminate the subsidies for
deductibles and copayments, and let states greatly loosen Obama's coverage
requirements.
The
House bill would reduce taxes by around $1 trillion over the coming decade, the
budget office said, largely on higher-income people and health care industry
firms. It would replace Obama's tax subsidies for health insurance consumers,
based mostly on income and premiums, with GOP tax credits geared more to
people's ages.
Most
of those losing coverage would be beneficiaries of Medicaid, the health care
program for poor and disabled people, though people buying individual policies
or getting coverage at work would also become uninsured. The last budget office
report said the House bill would cut Medicaid by $839 billion over 10 years.
Erasing
Obama's health care law was a top promise of Donald Trump during his
presidential campaign, and by congressional GOP candidates since its 2010
enactment.
But
writing legislation that can pass with only Republican votes has proven
agonizing. House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., canceled a March vote after
opposition from party conservatives and moderates would have sealed its defeat,
and the two wings of the GOP spent weeks blaming each other for the bill's
demise.
Meanwhile,
the Trump administration released a report that found a doubling of average
premiums for individually purchased coverage from 2013, just before Obama's
statute took effect, to this year.
The
report from Health and Human Services looked at premiums in the 39 states
served by HealthCare.gov, the online exchange for buying coverage. It found the
average monthly premium increased from $224 in 2013 to $476 in 2017.
Before
2013, insurers were allowed to turn away people with health problems, and there
was no federal requirement for a standard benefits package. Those two
"Obamacare" changes made coverage more robust, but also increased the
cost.
http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/budget-office-23-million-more-uninsured-lower-premiums-for-less-coverage-under-gop-house-passed-health-care-bill/ar-BBBtyyW?ocid=iehp
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