In a Statement of Administration Policy, the White House made it clear that the wingnut bill is DOA:
The Administration strongly opposes Senate passage of the Senate amendment to H.R. 3762. By repealing numerous, key elements of current law, this legislation would take away critical benefits and health care coverage from hard-working middle‑class families. The bill also would remove policies that are expected to help slow the growth in health care costs and that have improved the quality of care patients receive. The Senate amendment to H.R. 3762 detracts from the work the Congress could be doing to foster job creation and economic growth.
The Affordable Care Act is working and is fully integrated into an improved American health care system. Discrimination based on pre-existing conditions is a thing of the past. And under the law, health care prices have grown at the slowest rate in 50 years, benefiting all Americans.
Repealing key elements of the Affordable Care Act would result in millions of individuals remaining uninsured or losing the insurance they have today. An estimated 17.6 million Americans gained coverage as several of the Affordable Care Act’s coverage provisions have taken effect – 15.3 million since the beginning of the first open enrollment in October 2013. The Senate amendment to H.R. 3762 would roll back coverage gains and would cost millions of hard-working middle-class families the security of affordable health coverage they deserve.
This legislation is being considered by the Senate just days ahead of the December 15 deadline for Marketplace coverage that starts on January 1, 2016. Rather than refighting old political battles by once again voting to repeal basic protections that provide security for the middle class, Members of Congress should be working together to grow the economy, strengthen middle‑class families, and create new jobs.
If the President were presented with H.R. 3762, as amended by the Senate amendment, he would veto the bill.
The reconciliation bill that repeals Obamacare and defunds Planned Parenthood is the epitome of McConnell’s failed time as Majority Leader. McConnell is obsessed with political show votes and empty gestures that are destined to go nowhere.
McConnell isn’t interested in dealing with the kitchen table issue that impact the majority of Americans. McConnell is spending his time on show votes that he hopes will allow him to make the argument that his ineptitude is all President Obama’s fault.
The reality is that McConnell has chosen to waste precious time with several deadlines looming and only a few working days left in the year on a bill that was dead from the moment it was brought up.
McConnell may get his Obamacare repeal bill through the Senate with less than 60 votes, but the President will veto it, Democrats in Congress will sustain his veto, and voters will be given another reason to hand the Senate majority back to Democrats in 2016.
No comments:
Post a Comment