The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Vice president’s pitch: Mike Pence on visit to Kentucky says, “This is going to be a battle in Washington, D.C.”

Vice president: GOP congressio­nal support needed.

- By Ken Thomas

LOUISVILLE, KY. — Vice President Mike Pence appealed for total GOP congressio­nal support for a White Housebacke­d health overhaul during a brief visit Saturday to Kentucky, where the Republican governor and junior senator are among the plan’s skeptics.

“This is going to be a battle in Washington, D.C. And for us to seize this opportunit­y to repeal and replace Obamacare once and for all, we need every Republican in Congress, and we’re counting on Kentucky,” Pence said at an energy company where business leaders had gathered.

He said President Donald Trump would lean on House Republican­s — including two Kentucky lawmakers in the audience, Reps. Andy Barr and Brett Guthrie — to vote to replace former President Barack Obama’s law.

Pence’s trip was part of an effort to reassure conservati­ves who have raised objections to the House plan. In a sign of the high stakes, Pence’s motorcade passed a long line of demonstrat­ors who chanted, “Save our care.”

Almost at the same time Pence landed in Louisville, Trump tweeted: “We are making great progress with health care. ObamaCare is imploding and will only get worse. Republican­s coming together to get job done!”

Pence, a former Indiana governor, has been the chief salesman for Trump’s push to jettison the Affordable Care Act. The House is expected to vote on the bill in less than two weeks, but faces resistance from critics within the GOP, including Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, who has called the initial draft “Obamacare Lite.”

Even before the legislatio­n was released, Paul placed a copy machine outside the room where House Republican­s were drafting the bill and asked for a copy in an effort to draw attention to the secrecy of the plan.

While he was Kentucky’s governor, Democrat Steve Beshear expanded the state’s Medicaid program under Obama’s law. His Republican successor, Matt Bevin, has said the state cannot afford pay to continue to pay for the program, which has cost millions of dollars more than expected and now covers more than 25 percent of the state’s population.

Bevin told reporters Friday that, like Paul, he was not impressed with the initial Republican replacemen­t proposal in the House. But on Saturday he said that while there were different views on how to change the law, “ultimately these difference­s of opinion will be rectified.” He said all could agree that “change has to come — the system is broken.”

After greeting Pence at the airport, Bevin and his children got an impromptu tour of Air Force Two, and Pence later told business leaders: “I was for Matt Bevin before it was cool.”

Democrats have praised Beshear’s use of the health care law to drive down the state’s uninsured rate and his smooth rollout of kynect, the state-run insurance exchange, even while Obama struggled with the national release of healthcare.gov. Bevin has since shut down the exchange.

The event at the Harshaw Trane facility was in the hometown of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, whom Pence praised as “a true friend to me, to our president, and to the people of America.”

McConnell, however, did not attend due to a scheduling conflict.

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