Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
For Some Republican Leaders, Repealing Without Replacing Is Cause For Caution
GOP Sen. Tom Cotton (Ark.) on Thursday warned his party not to repeal ObamaCare without a replacement ready to go. "I think it would not be the right path for us to repeal ObamaCare without laying out a path forward," Cotton said on MSNBC Thursday evening.聽"I think when we repeal ObamaCare, we need to have the solution in place moving forward. ... I do not think we can just repeal ObamaCare and say we'll give the answer two years from now."聽Republican leaders have vowed to vote on repealing ObamaCare immediately and delay the repeal until a replacement plan is ready. (Hellmann, 1/5)
Republican plans to repeal Obamacare without detailing a replacement are hitting resistance from at least three GOP senators, which would be enough to scuttle the strategy party leaders devised to deliver quickly on a central promise from President-elect Donald Trump. Only one of the senators -- Rand Paul of Kentucky -- has so far said he plans to vote against the procedural gambit that sets up Obamacare repeal, citing unrelated budget concerns. Paul and two others are concerned that Republicans haven鈥檛 said yet how they would replace the health insurance scheme after repeal, with one of them also opposing the plan to defund Planned Parenthood as part of the repeal. (Dennis and Kapur, 1/5)
Republican Ohio Gov. John Kasich warned his party's lawmakers against repealing ObamaCare without a replacement on Wednesday, noting that Ohioans have gained coverage from the Medicaid expansion in his state. Kasich, who ran for president last year, has long been a supporter of ObamaCare鈥檚 Medicaid expansion, but his warning to Republicans about repeal on Wednesday was particularly forceful. (Sullivan, 1/5)