Facing revolt on healthcare bill, US Senate Republicans delay vote
WASHINGTON-Reuters
The delay put the future of a longtime top Republican priority in doubt amid concerns about the Senate bill from both moderate and conservative Republicans. With Democrats united in their opposition, Republicans need almost every vote among their own ranks in the Senate.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell had been pushing for a vote ahead of the July 4 recess that starts at the end of the week on the legislation, which would repeal major elements of Obamacare and shrink the Medicaid government healthcare program for the poor.
“We’re going to press on,” McConnell said after announcing the delay, saying leaders would keep working to make senators feel “comfortable” with the bill.
“We’re optimistic we’re going to get to a result that is better than the status quo.”
At the White House meeting with most of the 52 Republican senators, Trump said it was vital to reach agreement on the Senate healthcare measure because Obamacare was “melting down.”
“So we’re going to talk and we’re going to see what we can do. We’re getting very close,” Trump told the senators. But he added, “If we don’t get it done, it’s just going to be something that we’re not going to like, and that’s okay.”
22 mln Americans ‘to lose coverage’
McConnell, whose party has a razor-thin majority in the 100-member Senate, told reporters that Republican leaders would work through the week to win over the 50 senators needed to pass the bill, with a vote planned in the weeks following the recess. Vice President Mike Pence could provide the crucial vote needed to break a tie.
The House of Representatives has passed its own version of the measure, but the Senate bill has been criticized from the left and the right. Moderate Republicans worried that millions of people would lose their insurance. Conservatives said the bill does not do enough to erase Obamacare.
The bill’s prospects were not helped by a Congressional Budget Office analysis on June 26 saying the measure would cause 22 million Americans to lose insurance over the next decade, although it would reduce the federal deficit by $321 billion over that period.