Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Ryan Downplays Expectations For Health Care Vote As Lawmakers Come Back From Recess
House GOP leaders during a members-only conference call Saturday vowed to avoid a government shutdown and said they're closer to a deal to repeal and replace Obamacare, according to members who participated on the call. But Speaker Paul Ryan also downplayed the possibility of a vote next week, the same sources said. The Wisconsin Republican said the chamber will vote on a conference-wide deal when GOP whips are confident they have the votes for passage 鈥 but not until then. (Bade and Haberkorn, 4/22)
Donald Trump鈥檚 administration continues to push for a vote this week in the House to replace Obamacare, which the president said on Sunday is 鈥渋n serious trouble.鈥澛燤ick Mulvaney, director of the Office of Management and Budget, said on 鈥淔ox News Sunday鈥 that the Senate Budget Committee sent language on the health bill to the House on Saturday night, as negotiations between Congress and the White House continue. (House and Edney, 4/22)
Lawmakers returning to Washington this coming week will find a familiar quagmire on health care legislation and a budget deadline dramatized by the prospect of a protracted battle between President Donald Trump and Democrats over his border wall. (Taylor and Fram, 4/22)
President Donald Trump, striving to make good on a top campaign promise, is pushing his fellow Republicans who control Congress to pass revamped healthcare legislation but the same intraparty squabbling that torpedoed it last month could do it again. Trump is looking for his first major legislative victory since taking office in January. House of Representatives Republicans are exploring compromises aimed at satisfying the party's most conservative members without antagonizing its moderates, but it remained unclear on Friday whether a viable bill would emerge. (Cornwell, 4/21)
In a series of Sunday morning Twitter messages, President Donald Trump warned the Affordable Care Act would falter without new funding, and pressured Democrats to support spending for his proposed border wall between the U.S. and Mexico to keep the health program going. Democrats are pushing to include funding for a set of Affordable Care Act subsidies in a must-pass spending bill that will need Democratic support to clear the Senate and likely the House. Mr. Trump鈥檚 administration has signaled an openness to including the funding, known as cost-sharing payments鈥攊n exchange for funding to build a border wall. (Hackman, 4/23)
A White House effort to win House approval next week for an ObamaCare repeal bill is running head-on into a divided GOP conference struggling to reconcile its differences.While centrist Rep. Tom MacArthur (R-N.J.) and conservative Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.) say they are close to a deal, other Republicans say they are not a part of the agreement and that MacArthur is not bringing other centrists along with him. (Sullivan and Hellmann, 4/21)
Medicare, the old-age health program, emerged largely unscathed from the proposed legislation 鈥 even the $700 billion in Medicare 鈥渃uts鈥 that Republicans used to highlight in attack ads. Those spending reductions have been retained, for now.But there are two provisions in the bill affecting the financing of Medicare that have received relatively little attention. (Kessler, 4/21)
Congressional leaders and White House officials have steered the nation to the brink of a government shutdown that virtually all parties agree would be a terrible idea. ...聽Here are the dynamics at play as members return from a two-week recess. ... Seeking to squeeze Democrats, Mr. Mulvaney has offered a trade of sorts: $1 of subsidy payments under the Affordable Care Act 鈥 paid to insurers to lower deductibles and other costs for low-income consumers who buy plans through the law鈥檚 marketplaces 鈥 in exchange for every $1 to pay for the border wall that the president wants to build. (Flegenheimer and Kaplan, 4/24)
Amid the collapse of the Republican plan to repeal and replace the 2010 health care law, President Donald Trump threatened the members of the House Freedom Caucus, the ultra-conservative faction that played a leading role in sinking the legislation championed by Speaker Paul D. Ryan and Trump. Trump pledged in a tweet to 鈥渇ight them鈥 in 2018, implying that he would back primary challengers. But there鈥檚 a problem: Of 21 caucus members who said they planned to vote no on the GOP bill, only one had anything like a close race last November. (Zeller, 4/24)