The top U.S.
Senate Republican struggled on Wednesday to salvage major healthcare legislation
sought by President Donald Trump, meeting privately with a parade of
skeptical
senators as critics within the party urged substantial changes.
Republican
leaders hope to agree on changes to the legislation by Friday so lawmakers can
take it up after next week's Independence Day recess.. Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell on Tuesday abandoned plans to seek passage of it this week
because Republicans did not have 50 votes to pass the bill.
For seven
years, Republicans have led a quest to undo the 2010 law known as Obamacare,
Democratic former President Barack Obama's signature legislative achievement.
Trump made dismantling it a top campaign promise during last year's
presidential campaign but policy differences within the party have raised doubts
Republicans can achieve a repeal.
Democrats
have unified against the bill and Republicans control the Senate by a slim
52-48 margin, which means McConnell can afford to lose only two Republicans. So
far at least 10 - including moderates and hard-line conservatives - have
expressed opposition to the current bill, although some indicated they would
vote for it with certain changes.
McConnell,
with his reputation as a strategist on the line, met with a procession of
Republican senators in his office on Wednesday. John Cornyn, the No. 2 Senate
Republican, said party leaders will talk to every Republican senator who has
concerns about the bill or is undecided.
The House of
Representatives passed its healthcare bill last month, only after striking a
balance between the center of the party and the right wing. Now McConnell must
find a similar sweet spot.
During a
lunch meeting on Wednesday Republicans made presentations on potential fixes.
Senator Rand Paul called for jettisoning more parts of Obamacare to get
conservatives on board.
TAX ISSUE
Senator Mike
Rounds suggested keeping a 3.8 percent Obamacare tax on high earners'
investment income, which the current bill would eliminate. Rounds said the tax
could pay for more Americans to receive the tax credits that help pay for
health insurance.
Senator Bob
Corker, who also supports keeping the tax, said one of the issues he was
focused on was helping lower-income Americans pay for health plans.
"My
sense is there's a good chance that issue and other issues people are trying to
get addressed can be addressed," Corker told reporters.
Trump said
the bill was moving along well and predicted a "great, great
surprise" but did not elaborate.
Maine
Senator Susan Collins, a moderate, said it would be "very difficult"
to reach agreement by Friday. Collins and other centrists were put off by the
nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office's projection on Monday that 22 million
people would lose medical insurance under the existing bill.
Finishing
the legislation's revisions by Friday would be "optimal," Cornyn
said, so the CBO can analyze the new version..
Even then,
Democrats could mount a forceful resistance. They have repeatedly said they
will not discuss a repeal but have expressed openness to negotiating
improvements.
The Senate's
top Democrat, Chuck Schumer, proposed Trump call all 100 senators to Blair
House across the street from the White House to craft a bipartisan bill fixing
Obamacare but Trump said did not think Schumer's offer was serious.
McConnell
said Democrats had refused "to work with us in a serious way to
comprehensively address Obamacare's failures in the seven years since they
passed it."
The
legislation has triggered protests at the Capitol and police said they arrested
40 people, including cancer survivors, on Wednesday for blocking Senate
offices.
Obama's 2010
Affordable Care Act, which passed without Republican support, expanded health
insurance coverage to some 20 million people but Republicans call it a costly
government intrusion.
The Senate
bill rolls back Obamacare's expansion of the Medicaid government insurance for
the poor and cuts planned Medicaid spending starting in 2025. It also repeals
most of Obamacare's taxes, ends a penalty for not obtaining insurance and
overhauls subsidies that help people buy insurance with tax credits.
Reuters
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