Posted on 06/22/2017 8:08:08 AM PDT by Oldeconomybuyer
Senate Republicans, who have promised a repeal of the Affordable Care Act for seven years, took a major step on Thursday toward that goal, unveiling a bill to cut Medicaid deeply and end the health laws mandate that most Americans have health insurance.
The 142-page bill would create a new system of federal tax credits to help people buy health insurance, while offering states the ability to drop many of the benefits required by the Affordable Care Act, like maternity care, emergency services and mental health treatment.
The Senate bill once promised as a top-to-bottom revamp of the health bill passed by the House last month instead maintains its structure, with modest adjustments. The Senate version is, in some respects, more moderate than the House bill, offering more financial assistance to some lower-income people to help them defray the rapidly rising cost of private health insurance.
But the Senate measure, like the House bill, would phase out the extra money that the federal government has provided to states as an incentive to expand eligibility for Medicaid. And like the House measure, it would put the entire Medicaid program on a budget, ending the open-ended entitlement that now exists.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
Spit.
Have you read it already?
Of course not. But it’s clear the GOP tinkered with the turd, they did not repeal the turd.
I haven’t but will this to continue to cover illegal aliens?
And your idea of relief is replacing one train wreck with another?
I believe nothing from the NY SLIMES that sheds a bad light on the Republicans unless verified by an outside reliable source.
And lost a second, Susan Collins, with the Planned Parenthood defunding. No margin of error left.
The article provides a link to the actual bill so you can read it for yourself.
I don’t know what’s in it but I hear it’s crap.
But I love how the Times writes “end the health laws mandate that most Americans HAVE health insurance.”
Instead of “end the health laws mandate that forces ALL Americans to PURCHASE (useless) health insurance (that they can’t use).”
One problem not addressed is that too many people make too much to qualify for Medicaid, yet still can’t afford the cheapest insurance available (even with the government dole), much less an actual doctor visit (which the insurance doesn’t cover). The forcing of people to buy insurance should to be dropped.
Obamacare is not going to be repealed overnight and getting of the forced mandates and open-entitlements is of immediate importance.
Democrats are not going to vote for any reform of Obamacare and of course the politically easy way out would be to wait and let it collapse of its own weight.
But it would also be irresponsible and under the circumstances its not my dream repeal bill but it guts the heart of Obamacare.
Boy, schumer is laying it on thick!
Yup. We’re not trying to make matters worse by forcing a one-sized fits all solution on the American people.
The bill would leave up it to each state to set its own health care policy.
To my mind, that’s a sane fix.
By replacing them with forced mandates and open-ended entitlements of its own.
But it would also be irresponsible and under the circumstances its not my dream repeal bill but it guts the heart of Obamacare.
And transplants another unworkable government program and entitlement in its place. So where is that an improvement?
Drop this mandate on principle, and then drop all of the mandates for coverage that are placed on the insurance industry, and insurance will probably get much less expensive.
There is absolutely no reason, for example, why an insurance carrier should be prohibited from offering a health care plan with a $1 million annual cap, a $10 million lifetime coverage limit, or any other conditions that are acceptable to their customers.
Yet this legislation does not remove caps on coverage and does not remove the requirement that pre-existing conditions are covered. So there is absolutely no reason to believe that this will do anything to reduce or control the costs of premiums.
Here’s another breakdown....also from a lefty site, but goes into a lot of detail, about the bill....
‘We’re Amending Obamacare. We’re Not Killing It’
The health-care bill Senate Republicans plan to unveil on Thursday likely will make substantial changes to Medicaid and cut taxes for wealthy Americans and businesses. It will eliminate mandates and relax regulations on insurance plans, and it will reduce the federal governments role in health care.
What it wont do, however, is actually repeal the Affordable Care Act.
Lost in the roiling debate over health care over the last several weeks is that Republicans have all but given up on their longstanding repeal-and-replace pledge. The slogan lives on in the rhetoric used by many GOP lawmakers and the Trump White House but not in the legislation the party is advancing. That was true when House Republicans passed the American Health Care Act last month, which rolled back key parts of Obamacare but was not a full repeal. And it is even more true of the bill the Senate has drafted in secret, which reportedly will stick closer to the underlying structure of the law.
Were amending Obamacare. Were not killing it, a frustrated Jason Pye of the conservative group FreedomWorks told me earlier this month as the murky outlines of the Senate proposal were beginning to emerge.
Like the House bill, the Senate plan is expected to repeal the ACAs employer and individual insurance mandates and most if not all of the tax increases Democrats levied to pay for new programs and benefits. But the Senate bill likely will only begin a years-long phase-out of the ACAs Medicaid expansion in 2020 rather than end it as the House measure does.
The Senate also is expected to include more generous tax credits than the House bill that more closely resemble the system already in place under Obamacare. But the funding levels would still be lower than the current law. And according to Axios, the bill would allow states to opt out of some ACA insurance regulations, but it would do so by loosening existing waivers within the current law rather than follow the House in creating a new waiver system. And the Senate proposal would require that states adhere to more of Obamacares regulations than the House bill.
Senate Majority Leader McConnell has quietly abandoned the language of repeal-and-replace that his office originated seven years in the immediate aftermath of the ACAs enactment. In more than a dozen speeches on health care that McConnell has delivered on the Senate floor since the House passed its bill in early May, he hasnt uttered the word repeal a single time, according to transcripts provided by the majority leaders office. Nor has he repeated his own pledge to rip out Obamacare root and branch. Were going to make every effort to pass a bill that dramatically changes the current health care law, McConnell told reporters on Tuesday, setting a new standard for the bill Republicans plan to release on Thursday.
When the year started, legislation leaving Obamacare substantially in place would have been dead on arrival with hardliners in the House and Senate, who demanded that party leaders expand on a bill that former President Barack Obama vetoed in 2015. That measure did not fully repeal the ACA either, bowing to Senate budget rules limiting how much of the law Republicans could scrap without a filibuster-proof 60 votes. But it eliminated the tax credits and subsidies undergirding the laws insurance exchanges along with its tax increases and mandates. And with Republicans now in control of both Congress and the White House, conservatives in the House Freedom Caucus this spring began pushing the leadership to go further by repealing Obamacares core consumer protections guaranteeing the coverage of essential health benefits and prohibiting insurers from charging higher rates to people with preexisting conditions.
The deal that ultimately allowed the AHCA to pass the House was an under-appreciated turning point in the health-care debate. The concession that Speaker Paul Ryan and a few key moderates made to the Freedom Caucus was to allow states to opt out of some of Obamacares insurance regulations, most crucially on equal treatment for pre-existing conditions. But the concession that conservative lawmakers and outside groups made in return was just as significant: They agreed to back off their demand for full repeal and endorseor at least not fighta bill that fell far short of that goal.
While this legislation does not fully repeal Obamacare, its an important step in keeping that promise to lower healthcare costs, the Freedom Caucus said in its statement upon passage of the AHCA. It was a message echoed by outside groups like FreedomWorks, Heritage Action, and the Club for Growth, who agreed to drop their opposition to the bill, a move that gave Republicans additional cover to vote for it. Conservatives had embraced an incrementalist approach to Obamacare. The new standard they adopted for health-care legislation was not whether it eliminated the Affordable Care Act but whether it would lower premiums for most consumers.
One key question for McConnell is whether the most outspoken conservatives in his caucusSenators Rand Paul of Kentucky, Ted Cruz of Texas, and Mike Lee of Utahwill judge the Senate bill by that more modest baseline. Republicans can lose no more than two votes to secure passage, and a group of moderate senators is proving just as difficult for party leaders to nail down. To this point, Paul has been the most critical of the GOP approach and the most likely to oppose the proposal from the right. The House bill, he complained, already kept 90 percent of Obamacares subsidies. If this gets any more subsidies in it, it may well be equal to what we have in Obamacare. So it really wouldnt be repeal, Paul said on Tuesday, according to Bloomberg. Even so, the Kentucky conservative wouldnt rule out supporting the bill until he read the text.
Cruz and Lee have participated in the Senate process as members of the 13-man working group, and aides have said both have bought into McConnells incremental approach. But the two have each complained about the emerging draft in recent days, either on the substance or the top-down, secretive process used to write the bill. Were not there yet, Cruz said Tuesday on Fox News. The current draft doesnt do nearly enough to lower premiums.
The Congressional Budget Office projected that in states that opted out of Obamacares insurance requirements under the waivers allowed in the House bill, average premiums would drop significantly. But the tradeoff is that people with preexisting conditions would face sharply higher costs or be priced out of insurance entirely. Conservatives have argued that the high cost of adhering to the ACAs minimum coverage requirements has forced insurers to raise premiums in order to make a profit.
Conservative activists briefly held out hope that the health-care bill would move further to the right in the Senate, buoyed by efforts by Cruz and Lee to have Republicans override parliamentary rulings limiting how much of Obamacare they could repeal through the budget reconciliation process. But party leaders never seriously considered that option, which moderate Republicans were likely to oppose.
In recent weeks, conservatives have instead focused on demanding that the Senate preserveor deepenthe reforms to Medicaid in the House bill while still repealing all of Obamacares tax hikes. It is clear that significant portions of the Republican Party have no intention of actually repealing Obamacare despite campaigning on that objective for years, Mike Needham, CEO of Heritage Action, said in a statement on Wednesday.
Conservatives will evaluate legislative language when it becomes available, looking particularly at whether the legislation empowers states to get out of the onerous insurance mandates imposed by Obamacare, maintains and improves the Houses Medicaid reforms, and repeals Obamacares stifling taxes.
Make no mistake, Republicans arent merely tinkering around the edges of the health-care system, or Obamacare. The Senate proposal that will come out on Thursday will significantly alter the federal funding of Medicaid and, in all likelihood, would result in millions fewer Americans having health insurance over the next decade, as projected by the CBO. And while they wont be excited by the bill, conservative senators and activists might well come around to support it. Theyd vote for the plan as a step in the right direction, a weakening of Obamacare. But like McConnell, they wont be calling it something that its not: repeal.
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/06/senate-republican-bill-obamacare-repeal/531108/
Or why people shouldn’t be allowed to shop across state boundaries for the right kind of health insurance.
The only thing that matters right now is that the GOP must pass a Federal bill that gives immediate relief to Americans in the form of lower premiums and/or lower out-of-pocket health care costs.
If this can be accomplished now, then great. If not, then the whole exercise is a waste of time because the GOP is probably going to lose the House in 2018 if we get to the fall of 2017 and people end up seeing the same exorbitant rate increases in their insurance renewals that they've seen for the last 5+ years.
I’m not sure it matters what’s in it, McLame and Leslie and the Maine GOP senator will complain and vote against it with the Dems.
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