Associated Press
NEW YORK (AP) — Republicans are
expressing embarrassment, fear and frustration as party leaders concede that
their years-long promise to erase much of Barack Obama's Affordable Care Act is
all but dead.
Conservative activists blamed
establishment Republicans who control Congress. Establishment
Republicans
blamed a lack of leadership from their president. And the Republican president
blamed "a few Republicans" and all Democrats for blocking his agenda.
The finger-pointing marked a new low
for a Republican Party that swept into power in January and has struggled to
govern ever since.
"If embarrassment were fatal,
we'd all be dead," Republican strategist Rick Tyler said of his party's
performance since taking control of the White House and both chambers of Congress.
"The American people have given us enormous responsibility and enormous
trust and we're blowing it."
President Donald Trump signaled
Tuesday that his party was largely giving up after seven years of promising to
repeal the law. The move came after four Republican senators objected to the
GOP's latest health care plan, which would have caused millions of Americans to
lose their health insurance. Conservatives complained that the measure didn't
go far enough in repealing the law.
"I think we're probably in that
position where we'll just let Obamacare fail," Trump said, downplaying the
political consequences. "We're not going to own it. I'm not going to own
it."
The extraordinary development
intensified Republican divisions from Georgia to Colorado to Texas as
conservatives vowed to punish ineffective Republicans in Congress. At the same
time, GOP operatives warned of dire political consequences for the party in
next year's midterm elections, when control of the House is up for grabs.
"Everyone's ticked off,"
said Owen Hill, a Republican Colorado state senator challenging six-term GOP
Rep. Doug Lamborn. "All we're seeing is failing to make any traction on
fulfilling promises to voters."
With the next election season
looming, Republican leaders are grasping for evidence they deserve to stay in
power.
Many point to the Trump
administration's success in rolling back Obama-era regulations and filling a
Supreme Court vacancy with conservative Neil Gorsuch. But since taking complete
control of Washington, Republicans have failed to enact any major legislative
achievements six months into Trump's presidency.
Asked how they would explain their
lack of accomplishments to voters, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said,
"Well, we have a new Supreme Court justice."
That's not a good enough for
Republican voters, crucial in midterm elections, who repeatedly were promised
health care repeal for seven years, according to Republican pollster Frank
Luntz, who called this week's health care failure "tremendously significant."
"I don't think voters who
expected, and even demanded, Obamacare repeal will forgive the GOP for
failing," Luntz said. "It is about keeping your promises. And if you
can't achieve your signature legislation, what exactly can you achieve?"
Indeed, conservative activists, along
with like-minded groups such as the Senate Conservatives Fund, quickly vowed to
recruit challengers for those "Obamacare Republicans." That was
already happening on the ground in several states, including Texas, where Houston
hospital executive David Balat, a Republican, is running against nine-term GOP
Rep. John Culberson.
"There's hesitation for brave
leadership and decision-making based on conservative ideology," Balat said
in an interview.
It was the same in Georgia, where
former Tea Party Express leader Amy Kremer insisted, "These people have
got to go."
"You're now going to see a
meeting of the minds about who's going to be primaried," said Kremer, who
now leads a pro-Trump political action committee.
Like many conservatives across the
country, she lashed out at McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan for
"trying to derail Donald Trump's agenda" on health care. "It's
not a failure on Trump's part," Kremer said. "Everybody knows these
people didn't want Donald Trump to win."
On the other side of the Republican
spectrum, Chicago-based GOP donor Bill Kunkler blamed Trump for failing to lead
on what he called sensible Republican reforms, such as rewriting the tax code.
"It's all dysfunctional and
self-inflicted," Kunkler said of the White House's political struggles. He
said he sees Ryan as the party's de facto leader.
"I think people feel, like me,
that the Republican establishment is the refuge from this maelstrom we're in
right now," Kunkler said.
Amid intensifying GOP infighting, many
Republicans are warning of a rapidly shrinking window to get anything done.
Trump on Tuesday, like some Republicans in Congress, indicated he was ready to
shift his attention to the nation's tax code or infrastructure. Yet Washington
will only become more bogged down by politics as midterm elections draw closer.
"It's critical they show
movement," North Carolina Republican Party Chairman Robin Hayes said of
his party's leaders in Congress. "They're showing deadlock right now, and
that won't cut it" in 2018.
Looking ahead to the next election,
Trump offered a simple solution to those frustrated with the performance of the
Republican-led government.
"We're going to have to go out
and get more Republicans elected in '18," the president said. "And
I'll be working very hard for that to happen, OK?"
Beaumont reported from Des Moines,
Iowa. Associated Press writer Bill Barrow in Greensboro, North Carolina contributed
to this report.
https://insurancenewsnet.com/oarticle/republicans-express-frustration-after-health-care-failure
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