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House Republicans on Monday unveiled their long-awaited legislation to repeal and replace ObamaCare.
The two measures dismantle the core aspects of ObamaCare, including its subsidies to help people buy coverage, its expansion of Medicaid, its taxes and its mandates for people to have insurance. (READ THE BILLS HERE AND HERE.)
In its place, Republicans would put in place a new system centered on a tax credit to help people buy insurance.
That tax credit would range from $2,000 to $4,000 a year, increasing with someone’s age. That system would provide less financial assistance for low-income and older people than ObamaCare, but could give more assistance to younger people and those with somewhat higher incomes.
Democrats warn that between the phasing out of ObamaCare’s Medicaid expansion and the smaller tax credit for low income people, coverage would be put at risk for many of the 20 million people who gained it from ObamaCare.
Republicans acknowledge that their plan will cover fewer people, saying unlike ObamaCare, they are not forcing people to buy coverage through a mandate. They say their system is less intrusive and provides people a tax credit without mandates or a range of tax increases.
House committees are expected to vote on the measures this week, with the full House voting on it soon after that.
House Ways and Means Chairman Kevin Brady (R-Texas) said Monday on Fox News he's confident the bill will pass with full Republican support despite recent party infighting over the details.
"We've been listening very carefully to our Republican members for months now to make sure we get it right," he said. "I am confident we are going to pass this." He noted that many of the elements of the bill have passed the House "a number of times" over the years.
The measure faces a rocky path, particularly in the Senate. Four Republican senators earlier Monday objected to an earlier version of the House bill, saying that it failed to protect ObamaCare’s Medicaid expansion.
But under the bill, the repeal of the Medicaid expansion would not take effect until 2020, and Republicans would grandfather in current enrollees so that they can stay on the program. But once 2020 arrives, the federal government will no longer provide the extra federal funds that allow for expansion.
That plan has drawn objections from more centrist Republican senators, who want to protect the expansion and are worried about constituents losing coverage and their states losing federal funds.
Even in the House, there are objections to the plan. Conservatives in the House Freedom Caucus call the bill's tax credit is a “new entitlement.” They have enough votes to kill the bill, but it remains to be seen whether they will actually vote against it.
The bill would maintain ObamaCare’s protections for people with pre-existing conditions, who could still not be denied coverage. Instead of ObamaCare’s mandate, the bill would seek to incentivize healthy people to sign up by allowing insurers to charge people 30 percent higher premiums if they have a gap in coverage.
The measure also repeals ObamaCare’s taxes, such as the medical device tax and health insurance tax, starting in 2018.
The bill scraps a controversial Republican proposal in earlier drafts to start taxing some employer-sponsored health insurance. Instead, the measure would keep ObamaCare’s "Cadillac tax" on generous healthcare plans starting in 2025, in order to prevent that legislation from adding to the deficit in that decade.
The two measures dismantle the core aspects of ObamaCare, including its subsidies to help people buy coverage, its expansion of Medicaid, its taxes and its mandates for people to have insurance. (READ THE BILLS HERE AND HERE.)
In its place, Republicans would put in place a new system centered on a tax credit to help people buy insurance.
That tax credit would range from $2,000 to $4,000 a year, increasing with someone’s age. That system would provide less financial assistance for low-income and older people than ObamaCare, but could give more assistance to younger people and those with somewhat higher incomes.
Democrats warn that between the phasing out of ObamaCare’s Medicaid expansion and the smaller tax credit for low income people, coverage would be put at risk for many of the 20 million people who gained it from ObamaCare.
Republicans acknowledge that their plan will cover fewer people, saying unlike ObamaCare, they are not forcing people to buy coverage through a mandate. They say their system is less intrusive and provides people a tax credit without mandates or a range of tax increases.
House committees are expected to vote on the measures this week, with the full House voting on it soon after that.
House Ways and Means Chairman Kevin Brady (R-Texas) said Monday on Fox News he's confident the bill will pass with full Republican support despite recent party infighting over the details.
"We've been listening very carefully to our Republican members for months now to make sure we get it right," he said. "I am confident we are going to pass this." He noted that many of the elements of the bill have passed the House "a number of times" over the years.
The measure faces a rocky path, particularly in the Senate. Four Republican senators earlier Monday objected to an earlier version of the House bill, saying that it failed to protect ObamaCare’s Medicaid expansion.
But under the bill, the repeal of the Medicaid expansion would not take effect until 2020, and Republicans would grandfather in current enrollees so that they can stay on the program. But once 2020 arrives, the federal government will no longer provide the extra federal funds that allow for expansion.
That plan has drawn objections from more centrist Republican senators, who want to protect the expansion and are worried about constituents losing coverage and their states losing federal funds.
Even in the House, there are objections to the plan. Conservatives in the House Freedom Caucus call the bill's tax credit is a “new entitlement.” They have enough votes to kill the bill, but it remains to be seen whether they will actually vote against it.
The bill would maintain ObamaCare’s protections for people with pre-existing conditions, who could still not be denied coverage. Instead of ObamaCare’s mandate, the bill would seek to incentivize healthy people to sign up by allowing insurers to charge people 30 percent higher premiums if they have a gap in coverage.
The measure also repeals ObamaCare’s taxes, such as the medical device tax and health insurance tax, starting in 2018.
The bill scraps a controversial Republican proposal in earlier drafts to start taxing some employer-sponsored health insurance. Instead, the measure would keep ObamaCare’s "Cadillac tax" on generous healthcare plans starting in 2025, in order to prevent that legislation from adding to the deficit in that decade.