Drew Altman, Kaiser
Family Foundation November 8, 2018
With a
Democratic House, a Republican Senate, and President Trump in the White House,
get ready for two years of maneuvering but little progress on health care —
unless you look beyond Washington.
What to
watch: No new health legislation of any significance will pass in this
Congress. Democrats in the House will try to come together on a health agenda
for the party while their presidential candidates pursue their own platforms.
Democratic oversight of the administration’s actions in the House will be unremitting
and in the news. And most of the real action affecting people will be in the
states.
Details: Democratic
control of the House stops any Republican efforts to revive their efforts to
repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, block grant Medicaid or impose a
per capita cap on federal Medicaid spending. Democrats in the House will never
go for it.
- The same applies to any big changes
Republicans might want to make to Medicare. With Paul Ryan gone — the
leading champion of those plans — Republicans will steer clear of premium
support or other major Medicare changes. Only smaller Medicare budget
savers will stand any chance.
A broad
Democratic oversight agenda in the House will include a heavy dose of health
care investigations and hearings, focusing on federal regulations and waivers
that Democrats view as undermining the ACA and Medicaid, such as work
requirements or short-term insurance plans.
- Just how much even the most
aggressive oversight can slow the administration and red states down remains
to be seen. Meanwhile, blue states will continue to go their own way,
trying to strengthen regulations to control costs and protect consumers
and improve their Medicaid programs.
It was a good
day for Medicaid, but like the election overall, it wasn't a wave. Medicaid
expansion ballot initiatives passed in three states — Idaho, Nebraska and Utah
— and governors elected in Kansas and Maine will now push forward Medicaid
expansion.
- Overall, the results will give Medicaid
expansion more momentum and red states a larger stake in Medicaid. That
will make it even tougher for a future Congress to enact Medicaid cuts.
- But a measure in Montana funding
its expansion appears to have been defeated. And Andrew Gillum’s loss in
the Florida governor's race — and Stacey Abrams' apparent defeat in the
Georgia governor's race — mean a loss of further momentum towards Medicaid
expansion in big southern states.
Finally, expect
a broad range of legislative proposals from House Democrats aimed at
bringing the party together around a health care agenda even though no
Democratic proposal can become law.
- The Democratic presidential candidates, however, will
resist a common agenda as they try to appeal to different slices of the
Democratic constituency. Some will campaign for Medicare for All — either
for everyone or just as an option — and others will propose building on
the ACA or other more incremental policies.
The bottom
line: Whether you study health care policy, report on it, or work in
the industry, the proposals made in Congress and the campaign are important
because they can shape the agenda after 2020. But for now, the states are
where the real action is.
https://www.axios.com/new-health-care-agenda-democrats-house-9428d2b7-316f-4e41-9ae8-bfc38e3b5ee9.html
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