Republicans delay House vote to repeal Affordable Care Act

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/mar/23/healthcare-vote-delay-house-republicans-obamacare-repeal

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The Republicans on Thursday abandoned a vote on their plans to repeal the Affordable Care Act, as Donald Trump and House speaker Paul Ryan faced rebellion across the House Republican caucus.

According to a leadership aide, the scheduled Thursday House vote on the bill was delayed at least for one day as Republicans scramble to find a legislation that can achieve a majority within the chamber.

Only a couple of hours earlier, White House press secretary Sean Spicer had told his regular press briefing: “It’s gonna pass – so that’s it.”

Both members of the hard right Freedom Caucus and the moderate Tuesday Group went to the White House on Thursday as Trump tried to personally persuade them to back the plan introduced by Ryan.

Moderates objected to many of the legislation’s provisions to roll back Medicaid and were even more suspicious of the Freedom Caucus’s push to get rid of the so-called “10 essential benefits” that health insurance providers were supposed to cover under the Affordable Care Act.

By contrast, conservatives objected to any repeal of Obamacare that didn’t get rid of all regulations instituted in the landmark health insurance reform of 2010.

The result leaves a deadlock among Republicans who have long campaigned to “repeal and replace” Obamacare but have never come to any consensus about what that phrase meant.

Although the White House tried to reject the label “Trumpcare” for the legislation, the president, who prides himself on being the ultimate deal-maker, put himself at the heart of the effort to get the bill passed, travelling to Capitol Hill to meet with reluctant lawmakers, hosting talks at the White House, and staging a rally in the Kentucky heartland of Senator Rand Paul, a key Republican opponent on the measure.

Republicans had hoped to pass the bill on the seventh anniversary of Obama signing the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, which introduced the greatest expansion of healthcare coverage in more than a generation. Obama on Thursday urged lawmakers to work together to “make our healthcare system better, not worse for hardworking Americans”, in one of his most significant interventions in US politics since leaving office.

The Republican plan, known as the American Health Care Act, removes ACA taxes, eliminates the requirement that all Americans have insurance and dramatically restructures Medicaid, the healthcare program for low-income Americans. Instead of subsidies, the plan would offer tax credits to help people purchase health insurance.

A new Quinnipiac University poll showed that Americans disapprove of the healthcare overhaul by a margin of 56% to 17% – with support among Republicans hovering at just 41%. The same poll showed 20% felt Obamacare should be repealed in total and 50% in part.

“Do I think it gives the president a loss?” asked Mark Meadows, the chairman of the Freedom Caucus. “Absolutely not. We are going to get to the finish line.”

The North Carolina representative gave credit to Trump for any progress. “We are hopeful as we start to make progress in these negotiations with some of the things the White House shared with us,” said Meadows. “We would not be where we are today in even considering this if it had not been for President Trump’s personal involvement ... He’s moved this a very long way. Not only for House Freedom Caucus but for other members.”

He said that the vote on Thursday night had been an artificial deadline and said more time was needed because “we believe some of the things we are being asked to consider are not in enough of a form to make a good informed decision on” But he insisted that a vote would happen because repealing the Affordable Care Act was something that both he, the Freedom Caucus and the president had all campaigned on.

Other Freedom Caucus members were also optimistic a deal would be reached. Scott Perry of Pennsylvania told reporters: “I think a lot of us are going to get yes, we just gotta keep working through it.” He noted his fellow conservatives “have been been negotiating with administration and leadership the whole time. Obviously sometimes it takes a little bit longer to get there.”

The decision postponed a dramatic showdown on the House floor. The eleventh-hour negotiations broke down after Trump and the Republican leadership failed to secure enough support for the legislation, which tried to placate conservatives and moderates in the party and in the end could not bridge the ideological gap.

For weeks, conservatives had threatened that they had enough votes to sink the bill, which they believe did not do enough to repeal the Affordable Care Act. For more than a week, White House officials furiously lobbied the coalition of hard-right conservatives, even convening a summit at Trump’s Mar-a-lago estate in Florida, in an all-out effort to strike a deal.

On Wednesday, Meadows had warned leadership to postpone the bill and “start over”. But by the day’s end, he emerged from a meeting with the president hopeful that they would reach a deal before Thursday’s planned vote. On Thursday morning, more than 30 members of the Freedom Caucus returned to the White House for what was thought to be the final negotiation before the vote. They left without reaching a deal.

Still scrambling, Trump invited a coalition of moderate Republicans to the White House for a meeting in hopes of securing their votes. Moderates had begun dropping their support for the plan amid speculation that Trump was considering cutting popular elements of the affordable care act to placate conservatives.

By mid-afternoon, leadership announced the vote had been postponed.