Tuesday, October 17, 2017

repealing and replacing Obamacare

[10/19/17] Shutdown of insurance subsidies could mean more free insurance coverage
[10/17/17] Alexander and Murray reach bipartisan deal to restore subsidies
[10/13/17] Eighteen U.S. states vowed to sue President Donald Trump’s administration on Friday to stop him from scrapping a key component of Obamacare, subsidies to insurers that help millions of low-income people pay medical expenses
[10/13/17] Trump to stop subsidy payments to insurers
[10/2/17] There is nothing sacred about single-payer
[9/26/17] Trump to work with Democrats
[9/26/17] GOP healthcare bill fails again
[9/22/17] McCain opposes this bill too
[9/21/17] Senator Cassidy health care fact check
[9/21/17] Santorum on Paul on health care bill
[9/21/17] Rand Paul: new plan keeps Obamacare funding giving more to Republican states
[9/20/17] Huelskoetter: Graham-Cassidy is the most harmful version yet.
[9/20/17] Ned Ryun: Graham-Cassidy is like lukewarm gruel but better than ObamaCare
[9/20/17] Kimmel blasts Brian Kilmeade too
[9/20/17] It would depend on where Billy Kimmel lives
[9/20/17] Jimmy Kimmel blasts Graham-Cassidy bill

[8/10/17] - Trump tells McConnell to get back to work

[7/31/17] - Should Trump let Obamacare fail? (Yes / No)

[7/28/17] McCain votes no on Obamacare repeal, wants input from both sides of the aisle

[5/7/17] Charlie Munger on healthcare

[5/4/17] Relieved Republicans muscled their health care bill through the House today, taking their biggest step toward dismantling the Obama health care overhaul since Donald Trump took office. They won passage only after overcoming their own divisions that nearly sank the measure six weeks ago.

The measure skirted through the House by a thin 217-213 vote, as all voting Democrats and a group of mostly moderate Republican holdouts voted no. A defeat would have been politically devastating for President Trump and Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis.

Passage was a product of heavy lobbying by the White House and Republicans leaders, plus late revisions that nailed down the final supporters needed. The bill now faces an uncertain fate in the Senate, where even GOP lawmakers say major changes are likely.

[3/14/17] health care bill fact check

[3/13/17] President Donald Trump's administration on Monday rejected a report by the U.S. Congressional Budget Office that concluded millions of Americans would lose health insurance under a Republican plan to dismantle Obamacare.

U.S. health secretary Tom Price told reporters at the White House that the administration strenuously disagreed with the report, which he said did not look at the full Republican plan and did not take into account regulatory reforms and other efforts to reform healthcare.

[3/13/17] Fourteen million Americans would lose medical insurance by next year under a Republican plan to dismantle Obamacare, the nonpartisan U.S. Congressional Budget Office said on Monday in a report that dealt a potential setback to President Donald Trump's first major legislative initiative.

The eagerly awaited CBO report also forecast that 24 million more people would be uninsured in 2026 if the plan being considered in the House of Representatives were adopted. Obamacare enabled about 20 million previously uninsured Americans to obtain medical insurance.

The CBO projected that 52 million people would be uninsured by 2026 if the bill became law, compared to 28 million who would not have coverage that year if former President Barack Obama's signature healthcare law remained unchanged.

[3/6/17] House Republicans unveiled on Monday their long-awaited plan to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, scrapping the mandate for most Americans to have health insurance in favor of a new system of tax credits to induce people to buy insurance on the open market.

The bill sets the stage for a bitter debate over the possible dismantling of the most significant health care law in a half-century. In its place would be a health law that would be far more oriented to the free market and would make far-reaching changes to a vast part of the American economy.

The House Republican bill would roll back the expansion of Medicaid that has provided coverage to more than 10 million people in 31 states, reducing federal payments for many new beneficiaries. It also would effectively scrap the unpopular requirement that people have insurance and eliminate tax penalties for those who go without. The requirement for larger employers to offer coverage to their full-time employees would also be eliminated.

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