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Lacking votes, GOP ends its latest effort to repeal Obamacare

Facing assured defeat, Republican leaders decided Tuesday not to even hold a vote on the GOP’s latest attempt to repeal the Obama health care law, surrendering on their last-gasp effort to deliver on the party’s banner campaign promise.
Facing assured defeat, Republican leaders decided Tuesday not to even hold a vote on the GOP’s latest attempt to repeal the Obama health care law, surrendering on their last-gasp effort to deliver on the party’s banner campaign promise.

WASHINGTON — Senate Republican leaders on Tuesday officially pulled the plug on the latest plan to repeal the health care law, scrapping a planned vote on the measure and effectively admitting defeat in the last-gasp drive to fulfill a core promise of President Trump and Republican lawmakers.

The decision came less than 24 hours after a pivotal Republican senator, Susan Collins of Maine, declared firm opposition to the repeal proposal, all but ensuring that Republican leaders would be short of the votes they needed.

“We haven’t given up on changing the American health care system,” Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, said. “We are not going to be able to do that this week, but it still lies ahead of us, and we haven’t given up on that.”

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McConnell, Republican from Kentucky, said Republicans would move on to their next big legislative priority: overhauling the tax code, a feat that has not been accomplished since 1986.

Democrats responded by calling for the resumption of bipartisan negotiations to stabilize health insurance markets under the Affordable Care Act. Republican leaders had squelched those talks as the latest repeal plan gained steam, hoping to present senators a single, take-it-or-leave-it decision on the legislation, written by GOP Senators Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina.

“We hope we can move forward and improve health care, not engage in another battle to take it away from people, because they will fail once again if they try,” said Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the Democratic leader.

Senate Republicans already tried once this year to approve repeal legislation, an exercise that ended in defeat when Senator John McCain, Republican from Arizona, gave a thumbs-down in July to kill that proposal. This time, McConnell and his fellow Republicans were trying to make one more attempt at passing a bill, and a deadline was fast approaching: They have only until the end of this week to pass a repeal bill using special budget rules that shield it from a Democratic filibuster.

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McConnell could afford to lose only two of his members. But when he conceded defeat Tuesday, three members of his conference had already publicly declared their opposition: Collins, McCain, and Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky.

None of the three senators seemed likely to drop their opposition: McCain detested the partisan process used to push the bill, Collins had broad concerns about the legislation’s effects on health care, and Paul objected to the fundamental architecture of the legislation.

And other senators might have opposed it without doing so publicly. Senator Lisa Murkowski, Republican from Alaska, released a statement after the bill was pulled, decrying “a lousy process.”

“The US Senate cannot get the text of a bill on a Sunday night, then proceed to a vote just days later, with only one hearing — and especially not on an issue that is intensely personal to all of us,” she wrote, without saying which way she would have voted.

Cassidy was blunt: “We don’t have the votes,” adding, “Am I disappointed? Absolutely.”

But Graham predicted their repeal proposal would still pass — just at a later date, after Republicans tackle the issue of taxes, and when Republicans have more time to consider the repeal plan. “There are 50 votes for the substance,” Graham said. “There are not 50 votes for the process.”

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But that could be months away, if not years. The tax effort will likely occupy Congress through the remainder of this year, and likely into next. Lawmakers may not be able to revisit a partisan effort to repeal the health law until they tackle a budget plan for fiscal 2019, which begins just before the midterm elections.

Earlier Tuesday, with little hope of success in the Senate, Trump expressed his displeasure. “At some point there will be a repeal and replace, but we’ll see whether or not that point is now or will it be shortly thereafter,” he said at the White House. “But we are disappointed in certain so-called Republicans.”

The failure in the Senate was also a disappointment to Republicans in the House, who managed to pass a repeal bill in May after their own struggles.

“We’re a little frustrated that the Senate has not acted on a seminal promise,” Speaker Paul Ryan, a Wisconsin Republican, said.