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Senate effort to stabilize Obamacare down to wire

Rate hikes loom for millions if solution isn’t reached soon

- By Noam N. Levey Washington Bureau noam.levey@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — Despite broad support from consumer advocates, state officials and health care leaders across the country, a bipartisan effort in Congress to stabilize health insurance markets and control rising premiums is being threatened by resurgent political fighting over the Affordable Care Act.

With time running out before millions of Americans could be subject to major rate hikes, it is increasing­ly unclear if Congress will be able to come together to offer relief.

On Wednesday, dueling new proposals from the right and left underscore­d partisan difference­s over health policy.

Four GOP senators — led by Sens. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina — introduced a sweeping bill to replace the 2010 health care law, often called Obamacare, and called on Congress to pass it by the end of the month.

And 15 Senate Democrats lined up behind a bill by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., to move toward a “singlepaye­r” model of health care in which nearly all Americans would get government health insurance akin to Medicare.

In contrast to these starkly different proposals, the bipartisan health care push in the Senate health committee — spearheade­d by Chairman Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., and Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., the senior Democrat — had spawned an unusual outbreak of harmony between Republican­s and Democrats over the last several weeks.

And it fueled hopes that after seven years of bitter partisan fighting over the 2010 health care law, the two parties might be able to work together to help Americans burdened with rising health care costs.

The committee has been looking for ways to help consumers who get health insurance on their own, rather than from an employer or a government program such as Medicare and Medicaid.

These consumers, many of whom do not qualify for government assistance, have seen double-digit premium increases in recent years and could see even higher rates next year, driven in part by Trump administra­tion moves that are underminin­g markets.

To stabilize the markets, which serve about 20 million people, Republican­s and Democrats on the health committee have voiced support for continuing monthly payments to insurers that help them offer lower copays and deductible­s to millions of lower-income consumers.

The uncertaint­y over these so-called cost-sharing reduction payments — which the Trump administra­tion has repeatedly threatened to withhold — has prompted numerous insurers around the country to warn that they must raise premiums by double digits next year to account for the possibilit­y that they won’t get the federal assistance.

Governors and state insurance regulators from both parties as well insurance industry officials have called on Congress to end the uncertaint­y.

While debate over the future of consumer protection­s in the current law intensifie­s, partisan health care efforts are again proliferat­ing on Capitol Hill.

Sanders’ single-payer bill, while popular with the liberals, is vehemently opposed on the right.

And the last-ditch GOP effort to resuscitat­e the campaign to roll back the Affordable Care Act has stoked new ire among Democrats and many patient advocates.

The cornerston­e of the Cassidy-Graham bill is a sweeping overhaul in the way the federal government provides hundreds of billions of dollars of health care assistance to low- and moderate-income Americans.

That threatens health coverage for tens of millions of people, advocates warn.

The prospects for both efforts appear dim.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., a leading liberal, dismissed Sanders’ bill this week, saying her immediate goal is to protect the Affordable Care Act from Trump’s efforts to dismantle it.

And although Trump praised Cassidy and Graham for offering their new proposal Wednesday, Senate GOP leaders are not rushing to embrace it.

Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., compared the bill’s chances for passage to “a double bank shot” in pool.

The GOP has less than three weeks before authorizat­ion expires to use a special procedure to advance repeal legislatio­n with only 50 votes. “I think that’s just really, really hard,” Thune said.

Alexander said he hopes he and Murray will be able to develop some compromise by the end of next week.

Insurance rates for 2018 for many state marketplac­es are supposed to be finalized by the end of this month.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/AP ?? Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., speaks Wednesday at a news conference to unveil his “Medicare for all” legislatio­n. The bill has drawn support from several senators.
ANDREW HARNIK/AP Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., speaks Wednesday at a news conference to unveil his “Medicare for all” legislatio­n. The bill has drawn support from several senators.

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