Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
The Billion-Dollar Question Splitting The GOP: Should Americans Retain Subsidies For Health Care?
As Republicans scramble for a strategy to repeal and replace the healthcare law, they are reckoning with a fundamental question the party has never settled: whether to foot the multi-trillion-dollar bill to ensure millions of Americans retain the聽coverage聽they obtained under Obamacare. GOP lawmakers for years ducked that issue as they unified behind cries to roll back聽the program, but were assured President Obama would block them. Now, the power聽to actually repeal and聽replace the law is exposing deep divisions in the party. (Levey, 1/26)
A GOP聽bill聽introduced by Sens.聽Bill Cassidy聽(R-La.) and聽Susan Collins聽(R-Maine) seeks the middle ground to replace ObamaCare 鈥 but invited harsh opposition from both sides. Despite a plea for bipartisanship, Democrats have blasted the legislation.聽Sen.聽Rand Paul聽(R-Ky.) this week introduced the only other Senate proposal with legislative language 鈥 simply called聽The Obamacare Replacement Act聽(S. 222) 鈥 after calling the Cassidy plan not conservative enough. Cassidy's Patient Freedom Act (S. 191) has been praised by some influential聽senators like Sen.聽Lindsey Graham聽(R-S.C.) as a common sense alternative to ObamaCare, and has been gaining momentum with moderate Senate Republicans. 聽(Weixel, 1/26)
At the heart of the problem is figuring out how to undo the intricate framework of mandates and taxes that form the basis of the Affordable Care Act. If you require insurance companies to cover someone, regardless of preexisting conditions, premiums would skyrocket. To keep premiums at reasonable levels, you have to insist that everyone buy insurance鈥攅ven healthy people who think they don鈥檛 need it. To make sure low-income people can pay the premiums, you have to offer them subsidies. To fund it all without increasing the budget deficit, you need taxes. (Tracer, Edney and Litvan, 1/26)
In other repeal and replace news, congressional hearings will begin ramping up next week, menu labeling seems safe from efforts to dismantle the law,聽exchange leaders talk about their future strategies and more聽鈥
A Senate panel will hold their first hearing this year tied to Obamacare, as Republicans speed up efforts to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act. The Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee will hold a hearing next Wednesday on 鈥渙ptions for stabilizing the individual insurance market to rescue the 11 million Americans currently trapped in a collapsing health care market.鈥 (McIntire, 1/25)
The Republican chairman of a key healthcare committee will introduce a bill next week aimed at protecting people with pre-existing conditions in the event that ObamaCare is repealed...The bill is a sign that some Republicans are trying to protect one of the most popular aspects of ObamaCare, even as they move forward with plans to repeal the law. How to deal with the pre-existing condition protections while repealing ObamaCare is a thorny issue for the GOP. (Sullivan, 1/26)
President Donald Trump made a great sounding promise for future healthcare policy in his first television interview since taking office, but policy experts on all sides of the political spectrum said it's not really possible鈥攐r at least more complicated.聽In interview Wednesday with ABC's David Muir, Trump said the Affordable Care Act has been a disaster and his administration will 鈥渃ome up with a new plan that's going to be better healthcare for more people at a lesser cost.鈥 (Muchmore, 1/26)
A sweeping requirement to post calorie counts on restaurant menus and vending machines looks likely to survive Congress鈥 effort to repeal Obamacare. After more than six years of fighting over the little-known mandate, which was buried in the more than 2,000-page Affordable Care Act, the FDA rule that will require calorie labeling at all restaurants with 20 or more locations is set to finally kick in May 5. A rule that requires calorie counts on vending machines took effect Dec 1. (Bottemiller Evich, 1/27)
As the ACA鈥檚 third open enrollment draws to a close at the end of the month, five exchange leaders 鈥 who all report a brisk business despite the political peril 鈥 discuss their strategies to stay in business beyond 2017. (1/27)
A leading General Assembly Democrat pressured Republican Gov. Larry Hogan Thursday to forcefully defend parts of the federal Affordable Care Act that insure many Marylanders. Del. Kirill Reznik, who chairs the House of Delegates subcommittee on health, urged Hogan to weigh in directly with Republican President Donald J. Trump and emphasize the state's interest in preserving large parts of the law known as Obamacare. (Dresser, 1/26)
The Heritage Foundation, an influential conservative think-tank, is pushing Republicans to repeal the Affordable Care Act as quickly as possible without waiting for a replacement. The GOP鈥檚 self-imposed Jan. 27 deadline for legislation to repeal Obamacare is slipping by and plans for repeal are 鈥渕urkier than ever鈥 and headed in the 鈥渨rong direction鈥 wrote James Wallner, the Heritage Foundation鈥檚 vice president for research, in the Daily Signal. (McIntire, 1/26)