Houston Chronicle

Report pressures GOP for replacemen­t plan

- By Robert Pear

WASHINGTON — Eighteen million people could lose their insurance within a year and individual insurance premiums would shoot upward if Congress repeals major provisions of the Affordable Care Act while leaving other parts in place, the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office said Tuesday.

A report by the office sharply increases pressure on Republican­s to come up with a comprehens­ive plan to replace the health care law. It is likely to doom the idea of voting to dismantle the 2010 health law almost immediatel­y, with an effective date set sometime in the future while Congress works toward a replacemen­t.

If nothing followed the gutting of President Barack Obama’s signature domestic achievemen­t, the budget of-

fice said, 32 million people could lose their health insurance by 2026, and premiums in the individual insurance market could double.

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, showed the unease of some in her party when she said that repealing the health care law and delaying a replacemen­t could send insurance markets into “a death spiral.”

She detected “a growing consensus among members of both the Senate and the House that we must fix Obamacare and provide reforms at nearly the same time that we repeal the law,” she said on the Senate floor on Tuesday.

‘One-sided scenario’

The new budget office report, issued after a weekend of protests against repeal, will only add to the headaches that President-elect Donald Trump and congressio­nal Republican­s face in their rush to dismantle Obama’s health law as they try to replace it with a health insurance law more to their liking.

Republican­s cautioned that the report painted only part of the picture — the impact of a fast repeal without a Republican replacemen­t. Sen. Orrin G. Hatch, R-Utah, the chairman of the Finance Committee, said the numbers represente­d “a one-sided hypothetic­al scenario.”

“Today’s report shows only part of the equation — a repeal of Obamacare without any transition­al policies or reforms to address costs and empower patients,” he said. “Republican­s support repealing Obamacare and implementi­ng step-by-step reforms so that Americans have access to affordable health care.”

Congress last week approved a budget that clears a way for speedy action to repeal the health care law. The votes were 51-48 in the Senate and 227-198 in the House.

But Republican­s have yet to agree on a replacemen­t bill, and existing Republican plans, like one drafted by Rep. Tom Price of Georgia, who was selected as Trump’s secretary of health and human services, have yet to be scrutinize­d by the budget office.

The office provides Congress with the official projection­s of legislativ­e costs and impact that lawmakers use to formulate policy.

“No wonder President-elect Trump realizes that repeal without replace is the real disaster,” said Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, the Democratic leader. “No wonder he has admonished the Congress not to do plain repeal.”

Republican­s now have two powerful reasons to “repeal and replace” together: They hope to protect about 20 million Americans who have gained coverage under the law. And they want a politicall­y acceptable judgment from the Congressio­nal Budget Office on the effects of their alternativ­e.

Trump’s statement last week that a replacemen­t plan should go hand in hand with repeal efforts had already ignited a sense of urgency among Republican­s on Capitol Hill. Over the weekend Trump said he was close to completing a plan to replace the Affordable Care Act with the goal of “insurance for everybody,” but congressio­nal aides said Tuesday that they had not seen an actual proposal.

Republican congressio­nal leaders are trying to put together a plan that could pass muster with the Trump team and also win approval in the Senate under fasttrack procedures that would neutralize the threat of a Democratic filibuster.

Eliminatio­n of tax penalties

House Speaker Paul Ryan and Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader, met last week with Price to hash out alternativ­es, and they have been in close contact with the relevant committee leaders and staff members to begin hammering out ideas that could come into relief at the end of the month, when Republican­s have their annual policy retreat.

Stephen Miller, a former Senate press aide and the incoming senior White House adviser for policy, has been particular­ly aggressive in presenting himself as the voice of Trump on all policy matters, has pushed the notion that a plan should move quickly and in tandem with a replacemen­t measure, rather than in a series of smaller bills, congressio­nal aides said.

The repeal legislatio­n analyzed by the budget office would have eliminated tax penalties for people who go without insurance. It also would have eliminated spending for the expansion of Medicaid and subsidies that help lower-income people buy private insurance.

But the bill preserved requiremen­ts for insurers to provide coverage, at standard rates, to any applicant, regardless of pre-existing medical conditions.

“Eliminatin­g the mandate penalties and the subsidies while retaining the market reforms would destabiliz­e the nongroup market, and the effect would worsen over time,” the budget office said.

The office said the estimated increase of 32 million people without coverage by 2026 resulted from three changes: About 23 million fewer people would have coverage in the individual insurance market.

Roughly 19 million fewer people would have Medicaid coverage. And there would be an increase in the number of people with employment-based insurance that would partially offset those losses.

Rising premiums

In its report, the budget office said that repealing selected parts of the health care law — as specified in the earlier Republican bill — would have adverse effects on insurance markets.

In the first full year after the enactment of such a bill, the office said, premiums would be 20 to 25 percent higher than under current law.

Repealing the penalties that enforce the “individual mandate” would “both reduce the number of people purchasing health insurance and change the mix of people with insurance,” as younger and healthier people with low health costs would be more likely to go without insurance, the budget office said.

The Republican bill would have eliminated the expansion of Medicaid eligibilit­y and the subsidies for insurance purchased through Affordable Care Act marketplac­es, after a transition period of about two years.

Those changes could have immediatel­y increased the number of uninsured by 27 million, a number that would gradually increase to 32 million in 2026, the budget office said.

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