Twenty-two
million Americans would lose insurance over the next decade under the U.S.
Senate Republican healthcare bill, a nonpartisan congressional office said on
Monday, complicating the path forward for the already-fraught legislation.
After the
Congressional Budget Office (CBO) score, Senator Susan Collins, a moderate
Republican, said she could not support moving forward on the bill as written.
Collins'
opposition highlights the delicate balance that Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell must strike as he tries to deliver a legislative win to President
Donald Trump by reconciling the Republican Party's moderate and conservative
wings.
Moderate
senators are concerned about millions of people losing insurance. Key
conservative senators have said the Senate bill does not do enough to repeal
Obamacare.
The CBO
assessment that an additional 15 million people would be uninsured in 2018
under the bill and its prediction that insurance premiums would skyrocket over
the first two years prompted concern from both sides.
McConnell's
goal was to have a vote on the bill before the July 4 recess that starts at the
end of this week. But several Republicans, including Collins, have said they
would not approve a procedural motion that would clear the way for a vote.
McConnell
can afford to lose just two Republican senators from their 52-seat majority in
the 100-seat Senate, which would allow passage of the bill with Vice President
Mike Pence casting the tie-breaking vote.
"If you
are on the fence ... this CBO score didn't help you, so I think it's going to
be harder to get to 50, not easier,” Republican Senator Lindsey Graham said of
the bill's prospects.
The CBO
score is also likely to amplify criticism from industry groups such as the
American Medical Association, which said earlier on Monday that the Senate's
bill violated the doctors' precept of "first, do no harm."
The CBO is
only able to assess the impact of legislation within a 10-year window, but it
said that insurance losses are expected to grow beyond 22 million due to deep
cuts to the Medicaid insurance program for the poor and disabled that are not
scheduled to go into effect until 2025.
Trump and
Republicans in Congress made repealing and replacing Obamacare, former
Democratic President Barack Obama's signature domestic legislation, a central
campaign promise. The pressure is on for them to deliver now that they control
the White House, House of Representatives and Senate.
Republicans
view Obamacare as costly government intrusion and say that individual insurance
markets are collapsing. Obamacare expanded health coverage to some 20 million
Americans by expanding Medicaid and mandating that individuals obtain health
insurance.
The CBO
score was released just hours after Republicans revised the bill, adding a
measure that would penalize people who let their insurance coverage lapse for
an extended period. The move followed criticism that the original bill would
result in a sicker - and more expensive - insurance pool.
WHITE HOUSE
ROLE
At least
four conservative Republicans - Senators Ted Cruz, Rand Paul, Ron Johnson and
Mike Lee - have expressed opposition to the Senate legislation.
Moderate
Republicans have warned against replacing Obamacare with legislation that is
too similar to the version passed by the House, saying it would cause too many
people, especially those with low incomes, to lose health coverage.
The CBO
estimated that the House bill would cause 23 million people to lose insurance.
Trump had called the House bill "mean" and asked Senate Republicans
to come up with "more generous" legislation.
Democrats
uniformly oppose both the House and Senate versions of the bill.
"CBO's
report today makes clear that this bill is every bit as 'mean as the House
bill," Senator Chuck Schumer, the Democratic leader, told reporters.
The White
House in a statement on Monday criticized the CBO for issuing a "flawed
report" and said its assessments should not be "trusted
blindly."
Trump and
McConnell have been working to shore up support.
The
president called key conservative senators over the weekend, White House
spokesman Sean Spicer said.
Both Cruz
and Johnson said they were concerned about CBO estimates that insurance
premiums would initially rise as much as 30 percent over the first two years
before declining.
"Doesn't
help the people whose premiums skyrocket next year," Cruz told reporters.
"Kind
of a problem, isn't it?" Johnson said of the short-term premium increase.
Johnson and
Paul have said they will oppose the procedural motion that would allow the
Senate to move forward to a vote. Cruz is drafting suggested fixes. Paul
remains opposed to the bill.
The first
moderate Republican to oppose the bill, Senator Dean Heller, is already facing
political fallout. America First Policies, a political group run by former
Trump campaign staffers, said it would air healthcare-related attack ads
against Heller, who faces a competitive re-election race in Nevada next year.
Senator Rob
Portman, of Ohio, who has not said whether he supports the bill, was
"dressed down" by McConnell during a Monday leadership meeting, a
senior Republican aide told Reuters.
Ohio
participates in Obamacare's Medicaid expansion, and Republican Governor John
Kasich has criticized the Senate bill. Portman's office did not respond to a
request to comment.
Senator
Marco Rubio of Florida said his governor, fellow Republican Rick Scott, would
be on Capitol Hill this week to discuss the bill's impact on the state.
Constituent
and industry groups have been critical of the Senate bill's proposal to reduce
the Medicaid healthcare program for the poor and point to the CBO analysis that
it would disproportionately affect older adults.
LEGISLATIVE
TWEAK
Under Senate
rules, the bill must replicate savings projected in the House version that
passed last month. It cleared that critical hurdle, with the CBO estimating it
would decrease the budget deficit by $321 billion over 2017-2026.
A revision
to the bill that imposes a penalty for prolonged lapses in insurance coverage
addresses the original bill's provision to drop the Obamacare penalty on those
who do not have insurance. Experts had warned that canceling the fine could
lead to a sicker insurance pool because young and healthy people would not face
consequences for failing to purchase insurance.
The bill
would impose a six-month waiting period for anyone who lets their health
insurance lapse for over 63 days and then wants to re-enroll in a plan in the
individual market.
The 15
million people the CBO estimates would be uninsured in 2018 is largely due to
the repeal of the penalty associated with being uninsured. The CBO did not
evaluate the revised version that included the new waiting period.
Insurer Blue
Cross and Blue Shield said it was encouraged by the inclusion of incentives for
continuous coverage. Molina Healthcare said it preferred the Obamacare mandate,
said that and the Senate bill, even after revised, would simply delay care.
If the
Senate passes a bill, it will either have to be approved by the House, the two
chambers would have to reconcile their differences in a conference committee,
or the House could pass a new version and bounce it back to the Senate.
Reuters*
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