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Will Republicans Renege on ObamaCare Repeal?
The New American ^ | 26 February 2017 | Steve Byas

Posted on 02/27/2017 4:19:59 PM PST by Sopater

“They’ll fix Obamacare, and I shouldn’t have called it repeal and replace because that’s not what’s going to happen. They’re basically going to fix the flaws and put a more conservative box around it,” insisted former Republican House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio at a healthcare conference in Orlando.

Boehner’s comments received immediate push-back from some Republicans who are just as insistent that the troubled government health care program is going to be junked. “The last time I checked, Boehner doesn’t have a vote anymore,” reacted Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas). “This is a test. It’s a test for Republicans in the executive and both houses of Congress. Do we honor the promises we made? This election was a referendum on repealing Obamacare. I think failure is not an option.”

Cruz concluded, “We’ve got to keep that promise, and I believe we will.”

The question is, Will the Republicans pass the “test” of keeping their much-repeated promise to repeal ObamaCare?

Boehner contends that Republicans are simply too divided on exactly what to do after the repeal of the hated law to fulfill their pledge to ditch the law. In fact, Boehner ridiculed the very idea that Republicans would do so, saying that he “started laughing” when Republicans claimed that they are going to move at lightning speed to repeal ObamaCare — and then pass an alternative.

“In the 25 years that I served in the United States Congress, Republicans never, ever, one time agreed on what a health care proposal should look like. Not once.”

The dilemma facing the Republicans is instructive. Once a new government program is in place, it becomes extremely difficult politically to ever abolish it, no matter how bad it is. Former President Ronald Reagan lamented that a government program was the closest thing to eternal life found on this planet. While a majority of Republicans can agree that they do not want ObamaCare, they must cobble together enough votes for what to do instead of it — replace it with a new program, repair the program, or simply let it die.

“I told some of the Republican leaders when asked, I said, if you pass repeal without replace you’ll never pass replace, because they will never ever agree on what the bill should be. Perfect always becomes the enemy of the good,” Boehner argued.

Another concern among Republicans is that the Democrats will filibuster a repeal of the law. And, while Republicans could axe much of it through the budget reconciliation process, they cannot use that for all parts of the bill.

But other Republicans are not buying that objection. Speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference this past week, Representative Mike Burgess (R-Texas), told attendees, “Yeah, it’s gonna happen. We will get it done.” The only time frame he could offer, however, was that ObamaCare would be gone before next year’s CPAC meeting in February 2018.

Burgess is the chairman of the Health Subcommittee of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which is working on a replacement to the healthcare law. He said that those parts of the bill which cannot be nixed by the reconciliation process can be gutted via administrative changes. The repeal bill would be just the “opening act to take Obamacare out.”

The most important thing to eliminate, Burgess said, was the individual mandate.

“We must and we can repeal Obamacare now,” said former Senator Jim DeMint (R-South Carolina), who now leads the Heritage Foundation. He asked CPAC attendees to pressure their own senators and House members to just pass the same clean repeal bill to President Trump which was vetoed by former President Obama. “They should send that same bill to President Trump right now.”

DeMint rejected the argument that Republicans must have a replacement package in place before repeal, calling it “absolutely ridiculous.”

He contended that doctors, hospitals and insurance companies would not vanish just because ObamaCare was repealed. This is, however, the message put out by much of the liberal media, and the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has stated that as many as 18 million would lose their health insurance, followed by higher premiums, if the law was repealed.

Ironically, it was the Heritage Foundation that first floated the idea of the individual mandate as a way to make sure the system was not overloaded with freeloaders who could afford health insurance, but just decided not to take it. The concern then was that millions of Americans who neglected to be insured then wound up on some public method of coverage when some had an unexpected accident or catastrophic illness.

DeMint was not the president of Heritage at that time, and the more limited mandate concept that Heritage suggested in the 1980s was dropped years ago.

The House Freedom Caucus has voted to simply pass the same repeal bill that Obama vetoed. Former Caucus Chairman Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) said, “I start from the premise that health care will be better and cost less when Obamacare is gone.”

Among the more popular replacement plans has been offered by Representative Mark Sanford (R-South Carolina), and Senator Rand Paul (R-Kentucky). Paul favors a simultaneous repeal and replacement of ObamaCare. Jordan said he would favor a free-market replacement at the same time, if it were up to him, “But if it doesn’t [happen] of course I’m going to vote to repeal it.”

The Paul-Sanford Plan would terminate the Medicaid expansion of ObamaCare, detach health insurance from employers, offer a tax credit (up to $5,000) to fund Health Savings Accounts (HSAs), eliminate the bulk of the costly regulations of ObamaCare dictating what health plans must cover, and allow insurers to sell policies across state lines. The present ObamaCare regulation, which forces even single men to purchase maternity coverage, would be ended, along with the present mandates for birth control coverage.

“We were tired of waiting” on House leadership to roll out a plan, Jordan said, explaining why the House Freedom Caucus has gotten behind the Paul-Sanford plan. “That’s why we said: Let’s go. Let’s go now.”

Senator Paul argued that HSAs would drive down the cost of healthcare. “What if 30 percent of the public had Health Savings Accounts? What do you do when you use your own money? You call up doctors and ask the price... if you create a real marketplace, you drive prices down.”

The money in the plan for HSAs could not be used fund elective abortions.

The tax credit idea in the Paul-Sanford legislation is at odds with a plan floated by Speaker of the House Paul Ryan, who wants a “refundable tax credit” to help consumers pay for various plans. To some critics, however, this is considered too similar to the subsidies offered to purchase insurance on the “exchanges” created by the Affordable Care Act.

Paul was among those critics of the Ryan proposal. He said he favored a smaller tax credit, one that “not everybody” would receive. “It’s not refundable in the sense that if you didn’t pay taxes you get money. A new refundable tax credit is a subsidy by another name.”

Some Republicans are no doubt wary of 2018 congressional elections, in which 24 Republicans must seek re-election in districts won by Hillary Clinton in the last presidential election. While there is a presumption that the supporters of ObamaCare are mostly lower-income individuals, the reality is that powerful corporate interests, such as hospital chains, favor anything they believe puts more money into their bank accounts. And these are the folks that write campaign checks.

In the end, in order to get a bill through Congress Republicans will likely have to build that will please those who favor outright repeal of ObamaCare, and those who simply want to “repair” it.

Because of the conflicting viewpoints, which divide congressional Republicans, many members of Congress are looking down Pennsylvania Avenue, hoping the White House will take leadership of the issue.

Perhaps the most powerful lesson in all of this is the best way to get rid of a government program is to not enact it in the first place.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: obamacare
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To: Sopater

President Trump should threaten to make Congress and their staff by health insurance through Obamacare. Congress engaged in outright fraud to escape a requirement that everyone on Capitol Hill buy individual health insurance through the Affordable Care Act, and the White House played along, says a government watchdog who calls the congressional Obamacare dodge an under-reported scandal.


21 posted on 02/27/2017 4:46:03 PM PST by WMarshal (President Trump, a president keeping his promises to the American people. It feels like winning.)
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To: cba123

Exactly the opposite.


22 posted on 02/27/2017 4:51:00 PM PST by Ray76 (DRAIN THE SWAMP)
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To: Sopater

Never underestimate Congress’s ability to make a bad situation worse. I expect that will happen in this case as well.


23 posted on 02/27/2017 4:52:20 PM PST by DoodleDawg
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To: Sopater

Can any one name a federal program that provides free or subsidized benefits that has ever been repealed?


24 posted on 02/27/2017 4:53:15 PM PST by buckalfa (I am deplorable.)
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To: Sopater
But I'm only basing my skepticism on history.

Congressional history, then yes.

Trump History? Not a chance there won't be a repeal.

Trump will veto anything he doesn't like.

25 posted on 02/27/2017 4:59:45 PM PST by Balding_Eagle ( The Great Wall of Trump ---- 100% sealing of the border. Coming soon.)
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To: cba123

You are full of nonsense.


26 posted on 02/27/2017 5:04:41 PM PST by TheNext ("PULL THEIR BROADCAST LICENSE!" - Trump Rally Cry. eg ABC)
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To: Sopater

Renege on what? the Republicans never intended to cut off their major source of income in the first place.Obamacare is their bread and butter. It is free money for the pols. I said from the beginning, if Trump is going to be effective in bringing back the Republic he is going to have to rule by fiat and decree because he will never get a Congress that wants any of that, Republican, Democrat or anything else. Trump can trim aggressively and shrink the footprint of government, perhaps a whole lot, but if he does not do the things Congress will NOT do i.e. abolish- not trim or rationalize- the Agencies, all of them over and above the original 4 Departments of the original Cabinet, then as soon as he is gone from the scene they will all come roaring back and their re-advent will be much more catastrophic for Americans than just letting them continue as they are. America in 20 years will a Bureaucratic Totalitarianism, no matter what else Trump does if he does not decree the Agencies out of existence and ban their staff from further government employment.


27 posted on 02/27/2017 5:05:03 PM PST by arthurus
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To: Sopater

Yes, by all means - let those Americans who take care of themselves pay for those who don’t.

It’s only simple justice that I pay your medical bills for you.

Plus my own health insurance bills, of course.


28 posted on 02/27/2017 5:08:03 PM PST by Jack Hammer
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To: Sopater

> Will Republicans Renege on ObamaCare Repeal?

Yes.


29 posted on 02/27/2017 5:08:23 PM PST by ArcadeQuarters ("Immigration Reform" is ballot stuffing)
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To: cba123

Obamacare does NOT need to be replaced. It needs to be repealed and along with it all other government connection to Medicine and Insurance. Anything less will leave a system that evolves inexorably toward socialized medicine. The only Constitutional connection for the Federal Government is Sanctity of Contract and guarantee of weights and measures, and by extension of both- truth in labeling.


30 posted on 02/27/2017 5:08:51 PM PST by arthurus
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To: Lurkinanloomin

Agree. On both counts.


31 posted on 02/27/2017 5:10:46 PM PST by MichaelCorleone (Jesus Christ is not a religion. He's the Truth.)
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To: Organic Panic

REPLACE = Govt shall make no law concerning medical care.

REPLACE = Patient + Doctor

6 REPEAL bills were sent to Obama. Send it to Trump.


32 posted on 02/27/2017 5:11:22 PM PST by TheNext ("PULL THEIR BROADCAST LICENSE!" - Trump Rally Cry. eg ABC)
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To: Sopater
Repeal! Repeal and then replace. If the Dems complain (which they do no matter what), tell them they'll have to see what needs to be done after repealing it, before we come up with a replacement.

After all, Nancy wouldn't let us see it until after ObamaCare was passed (and passed without Republican support). Repeal the sucker, don't compromise!

33 posted on 02/27/2017 5:12:01 PM PST by roadcat
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To: Sopater

I think Obamacare will be repealed and replaced shortly. Trump was elected to implement his agenda. If Ryan wants to implement his agenda, he can run in 2020.


34 posted on 02/27/2017 5:13:17 PM PST by odawg
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To: Lurkinanloomin
I’m betting they don’t want to repeal Obamacare.
I’m also betting it will cost them dearly if they fail to do so.


I expect that you're right on the first part and hoping that you're right on the second.
35 posted on 02/27/2017 5:14:43 PM PST by Sopater (Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own? - Matthew 20:15a)
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To: cba123

You are one of those here who see reality.

I believe Trump will propose single payer with a private option within a few months.


36 posted on 02/27/2017 5:15:11 PM PST by Jim Noble (Die Gedanken sind Frei)
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To: Sopater
I agree with Ted Cruz.

Do they honor the promises they made?

I too think failure is not an option they can afford to rely on any more. No more failures Republicans, or you will soon find yourself in the same pickle as the Democrats, and you will not have the press backing you for possibly pulling off a Phoenix like rise from the ashes.

37 posted on 02/27/2017 5:21:56 PM PST by Robert DeLong
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To: Sopater

Hannity interviewed Ryan who kept insisting that it would be repealed and replaced. But, he also interviewed 3 other top Republicans in the House who had no clue what Ryan was going to do.


38 posted on 02/27/2017 5:23:01 PM PST by Parmy (II don't know how to past the images.)
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To: Sopater

Actually, with President Trump at the helm, things happen that he promises, despite their improbability and novelty, way too often for us to be cynical yet.

I think he did something critical to the repeal process just in the last few days: meeting with the governors to get their input. The biggest suggestion they had was that they liked the Medicaid expansion. And while that was made as part of Obamacare, it really isn’t Obamacare, it is Medicaid.

Next, just as important as President Trump in this is what Republican congressmen and senators are doing. As well as what they are *not* doing.

That is, they are all working and motivated to do *something*. Typically there is a large group content with the status quo, the ‘inertia bloc’. But not this time. The argument is solely about degrees of change and methods. And once that is agreed on by the caucus, it turns to tactics, how to actually make it happen.

Even “the usual suspects” are not stamping their feet and refusing to play ball. The political momentum is there to do *something*.

And the clock is running, and they know it.

Oddly enough, one of the most important messages President Trump needs to get out has to be directed at all those doctors and health professionals who were driven out of the business by Obamacare.

“Restart your practices, reopen your offices, let your old patients know that you are back in business. Because the government is no longer going to pile back breaking demands on you.”


39 posted on 02/27/2017 5:27:56 PM PST by yefragetuwrabrumuy (Leftists aren't fascists. They are "democratic fascists", a completely different thing.)
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To: arthurus; All
Obamacare does NOT need to be replaced. It needs to be repealed and along with it all other government connection to Medicine and Insurance. Anything less will leave a system that evolves inexorably toward socialized medicine. The only Constitutional connection for the Federal Government is Sanctity of Contract and guarantee of weights and measures, and by extension of both- truth in labeling.

THIS

The BIG LIE that continues to be perpetuated is that congress must do something to replace a monstrosity that should have NEVER been passed to begin with. Stop building monsters by government and leave us the hell alone!

40 posted on 02/27/2017 5:35:23 PM PST by TADSLOS (Reset Underway!)
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