House leadership Obamacare repeal bill is Republican declaration of class warfare on average Americans
As funding for Obamacare is stripped, Americans will spend thousands more for health care.
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Hours after House Republicans released their Obamacare repeal bill, sharp divisions among GOP lawmakers erupted, suggesting the repeal effort might implode. But by Wednesday, the White House was plowing ahead and lobbying with Speaker Paul Ryan.
Initially, pundits speculated the GOP leadership’s legislation might not get through both chambers. A slew of House right-wingers said it didn’t go far enough to dismantle the funding mechanisms bringing coverage to 20 million recipients. Meanwhile, a few Republican senators opposed its funding cuts to their state’s Medicaid expansion, suggesting it might not have sufficient support to pass that chamber.
On Tuesday, AARP, the lobby for people over age 50 and retirees, came out against it. By Wednesday, the American Medical Association and American Hospital Association weighed in, joining Democrats in opposing the House bill. But other businesses and interests that would see tax cuts benefiting them announced their support.
“This legislation as currently drafted is…likely to result in a substantial reduction in the number of Americans able to buy affordable health insurance or maintain coverage,” a letter to Congress from hospital and health care organizations said. “Currently, 21 million Americans have gained health care through the marketplaces and through expansion of the Medicaid program. We are very concerned that the draft legislative proposal being considered by the House committees could lead to tremendous instability for those seeking affordable coverage.”
What is unfolding in American politics and health care is unambiguously dire. Republicans clamoring for repeal are in an ideological bubble where they are blind to its real-life implications, from individual hardship to wreaking chaos in the health care system. But beyond the bill’s specifics and the growing political fray is the larger reality that the repeal legislation is really the first salvo in a Republican-led class war on ordinary Americans.
“The bill aims to take a wrecking ball to the principle of universal coverage,” wrote John Cassidy for the New Yorker. “If enacted, millions more Americans would end up without any health care. For many people who purchase individual policies, especially older people, it promises fewer services for more money. And it also proposes a big tax cut for the rich, which would be financed by slashing Medicaid, the federal program that provides health care to low-income people.”
From a political perspective, right-wingers have lost touch with reality. They think current House proposals that will cut coverage for millions, raise costs for millions more and impose rationing on Medicaid clients are insufficient. Their demand for more spending, taxation and regulatory rollbacks are likely to be met somewhat to push the legislation ahead. Their rhetoric, that Obamacare repeal is an act of fiscal responsibility, is a big lie affirmed by the bill’s tax breaks for wealthier Americans and health industries. Make no mistake, the House leadership’s bill seeks to redistribute billions in health care spending dollars upward. Obamacare’s taxes and subsidies did the opposite, to preserve private insurers but expand the public’s coverage.
Even with Trump lobbying members of Congress, Ryan still needs to deal with tantrum-throwing right-wingers who have labeled his bill, “Obamacare 2.0” (Rep. Justin Amash, R-MI), “the last thing we need” (Rep. David Brat, R-VA) and a “new entitlement” (Rep. Mark Sanford, R-SC). The worst of the repeal legislation remains to be seen.
Stepping back from the opening salvos, health policy experts who have real-life experience running government safety net programs say dismantling Obamacare is a foil concealing a larger target—gutting public health programs writ large, regardless of its impact on ordinary Americans (such as forcing millions to shift their limited resources toward paying for health care or going without it).
There’s no shortage of analyses confirming these painful consequences, starting with the New York Times’ lead editorial Wednesday, “No wonder they hid the health bill.” Andrew Slavitt, acting administrator for the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services from 2015 to 2017, wrote in the Washington Post that the GOP’s proposal would not only drive up premiums, deductibles and co-pays for millions and undermine current insurance markets, but would also shred public safety nets literally involving matters of life and death.