REUTERS-U.S. House
Republicans on Friday won passage of a measure starting the process of
dismantling Obamacare, despite concerns about not having a ready
replacement
and the potential financial cost of repealing Democratic President Barack
Obama's landmark health insurance law.
The House of
Representatives voted 227-198 to instruct committees to draft legislation by a
target date of Jan. 27 that would repeal the 2010 Affordable Health Care Act,
popularly known as Obamacare. The Senate approved the same measure early
Thursday.
No Democrats
supported the initiative. Nine Republicans voted against the measure.
With this
vote, Republicans began delivering on their promise to end Obamacare, which
also was a campaign promise of Republican President-elect Donald Trump.
The program,
which expanded health coverage to some 20 million people, has been plagued by
increases in insurance premiums and deductibles and by some large insurers
leaving the system.
The
resolution passed by the House and Senate does not need presidential approval,
since it is part of an internal congressional budget process. But once the
Obamacare repeal legislation is drafted, both chambers will need to approve it,
and a presidential signature will be required.
By that
time, Trump will have been sworn in as president. He has urged Congress to act
quickly to repeal and replace the Democratic program.
Obamacare
was enacted nearly seven years ago - over Republican objections - in an effort
to expand coverage and give new protections for people with pre-existing health
conditions and other barriers that left them without insurance.
In the past
few years, the House has voted more than 60 times to repeal or alter Obamacare,
but Republicans had no hope a repeal would become law as long as Obama was
president and could veto their bills.
House
Speaker Paul Ryan, a Republican, said Obamacare was collapsing and action was
urgent. For people who have health insurance through the Obamacare system, he
said, "The deductibles are so high it doesn’t feel like you’ve got
insurance in the first place.
"We
have to step in before things get worse. This is nothing short of a rescue
mission," Ryan said.
Democratic
leader Nancy Pelosi rebutted Republicans' claims that the law was a failure.
“The rate of
growth in healthcare costs in our country has been greatly diminished by the
Affordable Care Act," she said. "In the more than 50 years that they
have been measuring the rate of growth, it has never been slower than
now."
The choice
before lawmakers, she said, is "affordable care versus chaos."
Harvard
University economist David Cutler warned that there could be trouble in U.S.
insurance markets if lawmakers do repeal the law but a replacement is slow in
coming.
"You
could create a lot of havoc," he said, adding that some insurers "may
get out of the market entirely."
Trump
applauded Congress's efforts with a Friday morning tweet saying, "The
'Unaffordable' Care Act will soon be history!"
The
president-elect, who takes office on Jan. 20, pressed lawmakers this week to
repeal and replace it "essentially simultaneously."
Republican
leaders would like to finish the repeal process within weeks, but some
lawmakers think it could take far longer.
Some
Republicans have expressed concern about starting a repeal before agreeing on
how to replace provisions of the complicated and far-reaching law.
The
nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimated repealing
Obama's signature health insurance law entirely would cost roughly $350 billion
over 10 years.
Republicans
say a good replacement would give states more control of a healthcare program
and provide more stability on health insurance premiums.
REUTERS
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