BY PETER SULLIVAN - 03/01/18
06:00 AM EST 130
Republicans are
weighing whether to use a complicated budget maneuver to help pay for
additional ObamaCare funding, sources say.
The idea being
considered by House Republican leaders is controversial because it would help
fund key ObamaCare payments to insurers, something that many conservatives
decry as a "bailout" of the law.
Under the possible
plan, the House Budget Committee would direct the Congressional Budget Office
(CBO) to take ObamaCare payments to insurers known as cost-sharing reductions
(CSRs) out of its “baseline” for projecting federal spending. Essentially, the
agency would stop assuming that the ObamaCare payments would be made.
That shift by the CBO
would unlock the second step of the Republican plan. If they subsequently
proposed making the CSR payments, the CBO would then score the proposal as
saving the government money. Those savings could then be used to pay for
additional ObamaCare stability funding, known as reinsurance, to bring down
premiums.
(Making the ObamaCare
payments would save the government money because it would cause premiums to
fall. When premiums fall, the government pays less in financial assistance to
ObamaCare recipients.)
While the process
would be complex, the end result would be simple: It would allow Republicans to
fund the ObamaCare payments without having to find a budget offset to pay for
them.
Some conservatives are
opposed to the maneuver, calling it a “budget gimmick,” so it’s far from
certain that the plan can win support from the House GOP conference.
Still, it’s clear that
GOP leaders are giving serious thought to the possibility of making the
controversial ObamaCare payments as part of the government funding bill that
must pass by March 23 to avoid a shutdown.
Sources say
Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.)
is interested in the plan, given that it provides a way to pay for the
reinsurance funding, which he has spoken favorably of in the past. Ryan said at
an event in Wisconsin in January that he thought there is a “bipartisan
opportunity” to provide that funding and bring down premiums.
Ryan’s office did not
respond to a request for comment.
House Budget Committee
Chairman Steve Womack (R-Ark.)
told The Hill on Monday the idea of getting the CBO to change its baseline had
been “floated” but declined to comment further.
Democrats have been
pushing for the CSR payments and the reinsurance funding for months. Republican
Sens. Lamar Alexander (Tenn.)
and Susan Collins (Maine)
have also been pushing for the funding.
The main holdup when
the issue was debated in December was the House, given that conservatives there
are dead-set against anything they consider a “bailout” of health insurance
companies.
The resistance among
top House Republicans to the stability funding appears to be lessening, but
rank-and-file conservatives remain an obstacle.
“I view it as a
bailout of the insurance companies,” Rep. Mark Walker (R-N.C.),
chairman of the conservative Republican Study Committee, told The Hill on
Wednesday when asked about the CSR payments.
Asked if the inclusion
of the ObamaCare payments would make it hard for a government funding bill to
pass the House, Walker said, “I think having that in there makes it more
difficult, I'll put it that way.”
However, it is
possible that conservative votes would not be needed to pass the funding bill
through the House. The bill, known as an omnibus, could attract substantial
Democratic support, given that it will be the byproduct of a bipartisan spending
deal.
Some conservatives are
also pushing back on the idea of forcing the CBO, a nonpartisan budget
scorekeeper, to change its baseline.
“This is a huge
budgetary gimmick,” said Chris Jacobs, a conservative policy analyst who worked
for Vice President Pence when Pence was a member of Congress. “Republicans
should be ashamed of themselves for even considering it.”
However, Doug
Holtz-Eakin, a former director of the CBO who is now president of the
right-leaning American Action Forum, said it makes sense for the CBO to reflect
reality, which is that President Trump has
canceled the CSR payments and they are no longer being paid.
He said the decision
is up to the Budget committees in the House and Senate.
“It’s not really CBO’s
call,” he said, adding that in this case, “Budget committees direct the score.”
Even with the budget
maneuver, there are still major obstacles to the ObamaCare funding. One is a
dispute over abortion. Republicans say restrictions on federal funding for
abortion known as the Hyde Amendment must be applied to the ObamaCare funding,
but Democrats are certain to oppose such a proposal.
Democrats are also
pushing for additional measures like expanding ObamaCare subsidies that help
people afford premiums to make them more generous, but Republicans are
skeptical of that push.
http://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/376145-gop-eyes-budget-maneuver-to-pay-for-obamacare-funds?utm_campaign=KHN%3A%20First%20Edition&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=61037066&_hsenc=p2ANqtz--sDDujBzjPyByL3N3Ie3HAQX10tLNsuS8-0EhQEXwhIun5ra1V8Npjn191uJgGggwa7rjcXvWqU8TkSo6FCP2_qqvgkw&_hsmi=61037066
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