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Ahead of key vote, details of GOP health bill still unknown

From left: Senators Mitch McConnell, John Cornyn, and John Thune left the White House on Wednesday.Andrew Harnik/Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The Senate will move forward with a key vote this week on a Republican health care bill but it’s not yet known whether the legislation will seek to replace the Affordable Care Act or simply repeal it, the third-highest ranking Republican senator said Sunday.

Senator John Thune of South Dakota said the Senate’s majority leader, Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky Republican, will make a decision soon on which bill to bring up for a vote, depending on ongoing discussions with GOP senators.

In an interview on “Fox News Sunday,’’ Thune sought to cast this week’s initial vote as important but mostly procedural, allowing senators to begin debate and propose amendments. But he acknowledged that senators should be able to know beforehand what bill they will be considering.

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‘‘That’s a judgment that Senator McConnell will make at some point this week before the vote,’’ Thune said, expressing his own hope it will be a repeal-and-replace measure. ‘‘But no matter which camp you’re in, you can’t have a debate about either unless we get on the bill. So we need a ‘yes’ vote.’’

He said the procedural vote will be held ‘‘sometime this week.’’

The Republican-controlled House in May passed its version of a bill to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, or ‘‘Obamacare.’’

Senate Republicans are now considering two versions of similar legislation, one that would repeal and replace, and another that would simply repeal Obamacare, with a two-year delay to give the Senate more time to agree on a replacement.

Both versions encountered opposition from enough GOP senators to doom the effort, but McConnell is making a last-gasp attempt this week after President Trump insisted that senators not leave town for the August recess without sending him some kind of health overhaul bill to sign.

In the Senate, Republicans hold a 52-to-48 majority. They can afford to have only one of their senators defect and still prevail on a health bill. That’s because Senator John McCain, an Arizona Republican, is in his home state dealing with brain cancer, while Democrats are standing united in opposition. Vice President Mike Pence would cast a tie-breaking vote.

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Thune said no matter the outcome of the upcoming vote, senators would continue working to pass health legislation no matter how long it took, having promised voters they would do so.

‘‘We are going to vote to repeal and replace Obamacare,’’ he said, arguing that it was better if done sooner rather than later. ‘‘It’s not a question of if; it’s a question of when.’’

Still, at least two Republican senators Sunday appeared to reaffirm their intention to vote against the procedural motion if it involved the latest version of the GOP’s repeal-and-replace bill.

Moderate Susan Collins of Maine said on CBS’s “Face the Nation” that she continued to have concerns about reductions to Medicaid and criticized the Republican process, saying lawmakers were being unfairly kept in the dark.

Under McConnell’s plan, 22 million more people would become uninsured by 2026, many of them Medicaid recipients. She wants to hold public hearings and work with Democrats.

Conservative Rand Paul of Kentucky said he would only support a repeal-only bill. That version would reduce government costs but lead to 32 million additional uninsured people over a decade.