Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
'Eye-Popping' CBO Analysis Sends Republicans Into Damage Control Mode
House Republican leaders plunged into damage control mode Monday after a brutal budgetary assessment of their Obamacare replacement threatened to upend Senate GOP support and armed their critics on the left. Speaker Paul Ryan鈥檚 team quickly pinpointed rosier elements of the report by the Congressional Budget Office, from cost savings to lower premiums. (Cheney, Everett and Pradhan, 3/13)
Leading House Republicans are fighting to defend their ObamaCare replacement bill in the face of a Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report that found the measure would result in millions of people becoming uninsured. Democrats are on the attack, hoping the findings 鈥 and the eye-popping estimate that 24 million additional people will be without coverage by 2026 鈥 will stop ObamaCare repeal in its tracks. (Sullivan, 3/14)
Many Georgia Republicans scrambled to re-frame the health care conversation Monday on Capitol Hill after the release of a nonpartisan report that estimated that 24 million fewer people would be on the聽health insurance rolls by 2026 under GOP leaders鈥 Obamacare replacement聽plan compared to聽the current law. Several Republican members of the state鈥檚 congressional delegation emphasized the more flattering聽aspects of聽the聽Congressional Budget Office鈥檚 analysis of the GOP鈥檚 American Health Care Act聽and ignored the uglier ones in a bid to keep the proposal afloat.聽Others sought to return the spotlight to rising premiums under the Affordable Care Act. (Hallerman, 3/13)
The Trump administration on Monday slammed a Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimate that millions of people would become uninsured under the Republicans' plan to repeal and replace ObamaCare...Price said聽the analysis聽released Monday afternoon does not take into account the entirety of the GOP plan to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, which he said would cover more people while lowering costs. The long-awaited report has roiled the debate over the GOP鈥檚 bid to overhaul the healthcare system, which would include repealing many elements of the Affordable Care Act and creating a new tax credit to help people buy insurance. (Fabian, 3/13)
Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price said the projections of uninsured were too high and called them "just not believable." (Kelly, 3/13)
But Sen. Lindsey Graham (R., S.C.) said Republicans shouldn鈥檛 reject the CBO report because they don鈥檛 like every element of it. 鈥淟et鈥檚 say the CBO is half right鈥攖hat should be cause for concern,鈥 Mr. Graham told reporters. 鈥淭he prudent thing for the party to do is to look at the CBO report and see if we can address some of the concerns raised.鈥 (Armour and Peterson, 3/13)
CBO officials are often political punching bags, but vitriolic attacks from top White House officials in recent days have the potential to erode the agency鈥檚 standing at a time when its assessments of health-care policy, changes to the tax code and deficit projections will factor into whether Congress enacts key parts of the Trump administration鈥檚 agenda. (Paletta, 3/13)
Republicans鈥 rollout of Obamacare repeal legislation has provoked one of the most brutal public beatings of the Congressional Budget Office in recent memory.The trigger? The release of a cost estimate of Republicans鈥 budget reconciliation legislation that would partially repeal and replace a major portion of the 2010 health care law ( PL 111-148 , PL 111-152 ).The common defense when grilled on what CBO would show? Slam the nonpartisan scorekeeper. But former CBO employees and directors said that doing so could have devastating consequences down the road. (Mejdrich, 3/14)
In other news, the report wasn't bad news for everyone聽鈥
Bad news for the Republicans鈥 health-care plan looks like good news for the health-care industry. (Grant, 3/13)