Valley News (West Lebanon, NH)
Tribune Washington Bureau
Washington — Get ready for
drama-filled days of mock hand-wringing, political jockeying and backroom
brinkmanship as the Senate GOP health care plan heads toward a hoped-for vote
next week.
No sooner did Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell unveil the long-awaited Obamacare overhaul on Thursday than
Republican senators started openly negotiating what it would take to win their
votes.
Within just a few hours, four key
conservative senators — Ted Cruz, of Texas; Mike Lee, of Utah; Ron Johnson, of
Wisconsin; and Rand Paul, of Kentucky — jointly announced they could not
possibly vote for the bill as is, unless it more fully guts the Affordable Care
Act.
Likewise, centrists withheld their
support unless they can push the bill the other way, as they mull the fallout
from leaving millions more Americans uninsured.
Even President Donald Trump — who
called the House overhaul bill “mean” — initially withheld his endorsement,
suggesting “a little negotiation” would make the Senate version “very good.”
Later in the day he tweeted he was “supportive” but looked “forward to making
it very special!”
Almost certainly McConnell opened the
door to the haranguing by presenting the legislation as a “discussion draft”
and inviting input to make it better.
After being widely panned by
Democrats and Republicans alike for crafting the bill with unprecedented
secrecy keeping details even from GOP senators — McConnell may now be eager to
convey a sense of open debate and negotiation.
But if the process that played out in
the House last month is any guide, expect the deal-making to only go so far
before Republicans quickly unify — preferring to hold hands and jump off the
political cliff together rather than risk losing their best opportunity to
fulfill the Republican promise to stop Obamacare.
“Everybody is offering input right
now and it’s going to be a busy weekend,” said Sen. John Kennedy, of Louisiana,
who was still mulling the legislation. “I don’t know whether it will change or
not, but I know a lot of people are in good faith and in earnest about offering
additional suggestions, and we’ll probably go right up to the deadline.”
With Republicans holding a slim
52-seat majority, leaders can only afford to lose support from two GOP senators
and still pass the bill in the face of unanimous Democratic opposition.
In many ways, the negotiations will
give senators something they have not had during the crafting of the bill
behind closed doors: a chance to publicly muscle and maneuver their concerns to
the forefront of the debate.
Even if senators are not successful
in changing the bill, they will be able to show their constituents that at
least they tried.
“This current draft does not have the
votes to pass the Senate,” Cruz told reporters. He is pushing for steeper cuts
to Medicaid and fewer requirements related to the essential benefits that
insurers must cover.
But Cruz added, “We can get there.”
Voting is expected by the end of next
week, a self-imposed deadline as Republicans worry that endless debates over
repealing Obamacare would dominate the congressional agenda and leave them —
and Trump — with few other legislative accomplishments.
A delay would also give opponents
more time to build up public momentum against the bill, as Democrats and many
health care groups are already scrambling to do.
Protesters have rallied outside the
Capitol and, on Thursday, more than 40 people, including many in wheelchairs,
were arrested outside McConnell’s office. They warned that the proposed
Medicaid cuts threaten to cut off federal money that allows disabled people to
live independently.
A week can be a political lifetime in
Washington, D.C., and few senators are willing to compromise so soon on an
issue that has loomed so large over the party.
The risks are clear. If Republicans
fail to repeal Obamacare after years of promising to do so, they face the wrath
of conservative voters and outside groups. But if their overhaul leaves
millions of Americans without coverage or raises costs, the backlash could be
intense.
Polls show that Obamacare’s
popularity has soared since repeal efforts began, and Americans largely oppose
the House bill.
But even among voters, the politics
that have always surrounded Obamacare play a role. According to a June 13
YouGov poll, 56 percent of Republicans said they supported the House bill. But
when compared to keeping Obamacare, 68 percent said they preferred the House
bill.
By banding together as a unified
front of opposition, Cruz, Paul and other conservatives are borrowing from a
strategy that proved effective for the House Freedom Caucus, which withheld a
block of votes to demand changes to the House version
Just as the Freedom Caucus opened a
direct line of negotiation with the White House, Paul said he had spoken
personally to Trump this week about changes the senators wanted to make to the
bill.
“We’ll see what kind of olive branch
or reaction we get to our comments, and if they’re open to negotiation,” Paul
said. “I think we have a chance of negotiating as a team and it’s much greater
than negotiating individually.”
But as the days drag on, McConnell
will soon bump into the same problem that confronted Speaker Paul D. Ryan as
the House made changes to win conservative votes but ended up chasing away more
centrist Republicans.
Senators from Ohio, West Virginia and
other states that expanded Medicaid under Obamacare are concerned about cutting
constituents off health care, particularly as their regions reel from the
opiate addiction crisis.
“I have serious concerns about the
bill’s impact on the Nevadans who depend on Medicaid,” said Sen. Dean Heller,
who is perhaps the most endangered Republican up for re-election in the
swing-state. “If the bill is good for Nevada, I’ll vote for it and if it’s not
— I won’t.”
https://insurancenewsnet.com/oarticle/let-political-jockeying-begin-gop-senators-deal-repeal
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