Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Defunding Planned Parenthood Will Be Part Of Obamacare Repeal Bill, Ryan Says
That bill will use a budget maneuver known as reconciliation, which allows the Senate to pass legislation with a simple majority rather than the 60 votes typically needed. A similar clause stripping hundreds of millions of dollars away from Planned Parenthood appeared in a similar 2015 reconciliation bill, which passed both chambers of congress but which President Barack Obama vetoed. (Hackman, 1/5)
House Speaker Paul Ryan said Thursday Republicans would strip federal dollars for Planned Parenthood as part of the GOP effort to repeal the health care law, prompting an outcry from the century-old organization and Democrats promising to fight the move. Ryan spoke a day after a special House panel issued a report criticizing the organization, which provides birth control, abortions and various women's health services, for its practices regarding providing tissue from aborted fetuses to researchers. (Taylor, 1/5)
A push by Republican congressional leaders to defund Planned Parenthood could threaten passage of their top-priority legislation to repeal Obamacare because of opposition to the anti-abortion provision by two key GOP senators. House Speaker Paul Ryan announced Thursday that Republicans will move to strip all federal funding for Planned Parenthood as part of the process they are using early this year to dismantle Obamacare. (Walsh, Barrett and Raju, 1/5)
U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan said Thursday that Republicans would cut federal money for Planned Parenthood as part of their repeal of Obamacare 鈥 a move that could affect 50,000 Wisconsin patients of the group. Planned Parenthood has 21 clinics in Wisconsin providing services such as contraceptives, screening for cervical cancer and treatment of sexually transmitted diseases, with the majority of its patients covered through state and federal Medicaid programs. (Stein, 1/5)
House Speaker Paul D. Ryan on Thursday said Republicans would act to defund Planned Parenthood in upcoming legislation to repeal President Barack Obama鈥檚 signature health law. 鈥淭he Planned Parenthood legislation would be in our reconciliation bill,鈥 the Wisconsin Republican said at his weekly news conference in response to a question regarding how the GOP would seek to defund the women鈥檚 health care organization. A provision to defund Planned Parenthood for one year was included in the bill that Congress cleared last year to repeal the 2010 health care overhaul (PL 111-148, PL 111-152) that Obama vetoed. (Williams, 1/5)
Planned Parenthood, Democrats, and at least one Republican, voice objections to聽the move聽鈥
Abortion rights groups and Democrats are girding for another battle over Planned Parenthood after House Speaker Paul Ryan said the House GOP conference plans to include provisions to defund the women鈥檚 health service provider in its legislation to repeal the Affordable Care Act. ... While the GOP may be able to pass their plan in the House without support from Democrats, it could prove a roadblock to Obamacare repeal in the Senate. Sen. Susan Collins, a Republican from Maine, told reporters Thursday she was 鈥渘ot happy鈥 about Ryan鈥檚 plan to defund Planned Parenthood. (Yokley, 1/5)
Moderate Republican Sen. Susan Collins (Maine) is signaling she doesn't want congressional efforts to repeal ObamaCare tied to ending federal funding for Planned Parenthood. 聽"Obviously I'm not happy to hear that the Speaker wants to include defunding of Planned Parenthood, an extremely controversial issue, in the package," Collins told reporters on Thursday.聽聽But she stopped short of saying the provision, if included, would force her to vote against the measure, pledging that she would "wait and see what happens." (Carney, 1/5)
Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) is calling on President-elect Donald Trump to weigh in on a looming fight over Planned Parenthood.聽聽"I would ask the president elect to Twitter very loudly tomorrow morning ... that he stands behind women and that he wants to see the House back down," the No. 3 Senate Democrat told reporters.聽聽House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) said earlier Thursday that the House's ObamaCare repeal bill will defund the organization, though federal dollars are already prohibited from being used to cover abortions. (Carney, 1/5)
Planned Parenthood on Thursday launched a national effort aimed at pressuring the incoming Donald Trump administration and GOP to abandon efforts to "defund" the organization. Planned Parenthood, which has long been opposed by conservatives because it provides abortions in addition to other women's healthcare services, has planned nearly 300 events in 47 states that will include marches, rallies, letter-writing campaigns and other activities over the next few months. (Hellmann, 1/5)
In another funding issue, advocates are starting to express concerns about National Institutes of Health funding 鈥
For advocates of the National Institutes of Health, this is their worst fear: Come April, when Congress needs to fund the federal government again, they鈥檒l be so busy with other issues that they鈥檒l simply pass a stopgap spending bill that lasts until October. And that would likely mean another year of flat funding for the NIH. For the scientists and companies invested in medical research, nothing could be worse. It鈥檚 early yet, but lobbyists around town who want to see more dollars for NIH cite several聽reasons to be concerned. (Scott, 1/4)