Posted on
Jun 24, 2017
By Alan Fram and Regina Garcia
Cano, Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — Nevada
Republican Dean Heller became the fifth GOP senator to declare his opposition
to the party’s banner legislation to scuttle much of Barack Obama’s health care
overhaul on Friday, more than enough to sink the measure and deliver a stinging
rebuke to President Donald Trump unless some of them can be brought aboard.
Echoing the other four, Heller
said he opposes the measure “in this form” but does not rule out backing a
version that is changed to his liking. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell,
R-Ky., has said he’s willing to alter the measure to attract support, and next
week promises plenty of back-room bargaining as he tries pushing a final
package through his chamber.
Nonetheless, Heller’s
announcement underscores the scant margin of error Republican leaders must deal
with. Facing unanimous Democratic opposition, McConnell can afford to lose just
two of the 52 GOP senators and still prevail.
Besides the five who’ve
announced outright opposition, several other GOP senators — conservatives and
moderates — have declined to commit to the new overhaul. The measure resembles
legislation the House approved last month that the nonpartisan Congressional
Budget Office said would mean 23 million additional uninsured people within a
decade and that recent polling shows is viewed favorably by only around 1 in 4
Americans.
Heller, facing a competitive
re-election battle next year, said he was opposing the legislation because of
the cuts it would make in Medicaid. The federal-state program provides health
care to the poor, disabled and many nursing home patients.
The Senate bill would also
erase the tax penalties Obama’s 2010 law imposes on people who don’t purchase
insurance. It would allow insurers to cover fewer benefits and repeal tax
boosts on wealthier people that help finance the statute’s expanded coverage.
The Senate legislation would
phase out extra federal money Nevada and 30 other states receive for expanding
Medicaid to additional low earners. It would also slap annual spending caps on
the overall Medicaid program, which since its inception in 1965 has provided
states with unlimited money to cover eligible costs.
“I cannot support a piece of
legislation that takes insurance away from tens of millions of Americans and
tens of thousands of Nevadans,” Heller said.
Trump has spoken favorably
about both the House-passed bill and the Senate version unveiled this week,
though he declared several times as he ramped up his campaign for the
presidency that he would not cut Medicaid.
Heller said that to win his
vote, GOP leaders would have to “protect Medicaid expansion states” from the
bill’s current cuts.
“It’s going to be very
difficult to get me to a yes,” he said, noting that conservative Republican
senators would likely be reluctant to add spending back to the measure.
Heller spoke at a news
conference in Las Vegas with Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval, a Republican who has
also assailed the House and Senate health care bills for cutting Medicaid. The
state has added 200,000 more people to its program under the Obama overhaul.
Sandoval said the Senate bill
“is something that needs to change.” It would be politically difficult for
Heller to take a different stance on the measure from the popular Sandoval.
Heller got an opponent for
next year when first-year Democratic Rep. Jacky Rosen announced this week she
would seek his Senate seat.
Just hours after McConnell
released the 142-page legislation on Thursday, four conservatives said they
opposed it. They were Sens. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, Mike Lee of Utah, Rand
Paul of Kentucky and Ted Cruz of Texas.
Underscoring the sensitivity
of the bill, Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, who has not suggested she opposes the
measure, declined to comment on its components when asked at a news conference
Friday.
“It was just released
yesterday. So, we have 142 pages to go through,” she said.
Asked about the bill’s impact
on Medicaid insurance coverage for lower-income Iowans, Ernst said, “I wouldn’t
say they are losing it.” Iowa opted to expand, and has added more than 150,000
people to its rolls since 2014.
Under special rules McConnell
is using that will block Democrats from using a filibuster to kill the bill,
the legislation cannot include provisions that make policy changes that don’t
primarily affect the budget. The Senate parliamentarian will make that
decision.
Democrats hope to use those
rules to erase some language from the bill, including a section barring
consumers from using the measure’s health care tax credits to buy insurance
that covers abortions.
Realizing they’re outnumbered,
Democrats and their liberal allies were planning events around the U.S. over
the next few days aimed at building public opposition to the bill.
In one instance, Sen. Bernie
Sanders, I-Vt., and MoveOn.org were planning weekend rallies in Pennsylvania,
Ohio and West Virginia. Each state has expanded Medicaid and has a GOP senator.
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