John McCain (R-Ariz.) and other Republican senators are
saying what everybody seems to already know about the Republican
repeal/reform-and-replace effort. After eight years of campaigning to repeal
Obamacare, it increasingly seems that the Republican effort is about to die
within sight of its goal.
“I think my view is it's probably going to be dead,” McCain
said on “Face
The Nation,” adding, “but I am- I've been wrong.”
McCain said that if the current bill fails, Republicans
should try again with a bill that aims to win some Democrat votes. “Introduce a
bill,” McCain said. “Say to the Democrats, ‘Here's a bill.’ It doesn't mean
they control it. It means they can have amendments considered. And even when
they lose, then they're part of the process. That's what democracy is supposed
to be all about.”
The close margins in the Senate, 52 Republicans to 48
Democrats, mean that, unless some Democrats cross the aisle to vote for the
Republican bill, the GOP can only lose two votes and still be able to pass the
bill. The GOP health plan has come
under fire from moderates like Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and Susan Collins
(R-Maine) as well as from conservatives like Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Mike Lee
(R-Utah).
Senator Bill Cassidy (R-La.) agreed with McCain’s assessment
on “Fox
News Sunday.” “Clearly, the draft plan is dead,” Cassidy said, “but we
don't know what's in the serious rewrite” of the bill.
Even Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) admitted
the bleak future of the bill. McConnell
said that, while he isn’t giving up on repeal, Republicans may need to work
with Democrats on a short-term fix for Obamacare.
President Trump and other Republicans from Ben Sasse
(R-Neb.) to Rand Paul (R-Ky.) have called upon congressional Republicans to simply
repeal Obamacare if they cannot agree on a replacement. A repeal bill would
face the additional hurdle of a cloture vote that would require
60 votes for passage.
Sasse suggests a new version of the 2015 Obamacare reconciliation
bill. Unless Collins, Murkowski and other GOP holdouts on the Medicaid
expansion reverse themselves, this bill would also fall short of even a simple
majority.
Without a change of heart from either the Republican
moderate or conservative wing, the effort to repeal or reform Obamacare seems
to be reaching a dead end. While the future of health insurance in America is
uncertain, it is certain that the Republican base would view a failure to
repeal Obamacare as the betrayal of a core promise.
The failure to reform Obamacare while they have the
opportunity, the single most visible goal of the Republican Party for most of
the past decade, could rip the party apart.
Originally published
on The Resurgent
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