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Uphill battle looms as Trump seeks revamped healthcare plan

President Donald Trump, striving to make good on a top campaign promise, is pushing his fellow Republicans who control Congress to pass revamped healthcare legislation but the same intraparty squabbling that torpedoed it last month could do it again.

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President Donald Trump, striving to make good on a top campaign promise, is pushing his fellow Republicans who control Congress to pass revamped healthcare legislation but the same intraparty squabbling that torpedoed it last month could do it again.

Trump is looking for his first major legislative victory since taking office in January. House of Representatives Republicans are exploring compromises aimed at satisfying the party's most conservative members without antagonizing its moderates, but it remained unclear on Friday whether a viable bill would emerge.

Trump on Thursday talked up the bill's prospects and said he saw "a good chance of getting it soon," either "next week or shortly thereafter." White House spokesman Sean Spicer on Friday played down setting next week as the goal for passage.

"We're going to get it done when it's appropriate in terms of getting to that 216," Spicer said, referring to the number of votes needed to win passage in the House before the bill goes to the Senate.

"If it gets done next week, great," Spicer told reporters, downplaying the desire for passing it before Trump reaches his 100th day in office next weekend.

Congress, returning from a recess next week, also will be working against the clock to pass legislation to keep the government funded past April 28 and avert a federal shutdown.

Trump's party cannot afford defections because Democrats remain unified against the Republican quest to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, Democratic former President Barack Obama's signature domestic policy achievement, dubbed Obamacare. Trump campaigned on a pledge to discard Obamacare.

In a stinging setback for Trump, Speaker Paul Ryan pulled the legislation from the House floor on March 24 before allowing it to come to a vote amid a revolt by conservatives in a faction called the House Freedom Caucus and moderates unhappy with concessions to the conservatives.

"The plan gets better and better and better. And it's gotten really, really good," Trump said, without identifying what he saw as the improvements from the previous plan he had embraced.

Republicans have called Obamacare a government overreach. The law enabled 20 million Americans to obtain insurance, many through an expansion of the Medicaid program for the poor.

A senior House Republican aide said it was not clear whether the latest Republican plan can attract 216 votes in the House, adding that without a legislative text it was not possible to do a vote count to assess its chances.

MACARTHUR PROPOSAL

Moderate Republican Representative Tom MacArthur is pushing a proposal to allow states to waive some Obamacare provisions, and his office said he has discussed it with other Republican lawmakers, the House leadership and the White House.

No text has emerged, but an outline of his proposal said states could seek to relax essential benefits that Obamacare requires insurance plans to cover such as emergency room trips, maternity and newborn care, and mental health services.

States also could request waivers to Obamacare's ban on insurers charging sick customers higher premiums than healthy customers. But states would have to set up "high-risk pools" that use government funds to help pay for insurance for people with costly medical conditions.

Representative Rodney Davis told CNN on Friday he did not know what was in the deal, but added, "I'm not going to be for a plan that is going to allow for pre-existing conditions to not be covered." MacArthur and Davis are members of the centrist House Republican Tuesday Group.

Freedom Caucus member Representative Dave Brat told CNN the new proposal gives states more say healthcare but was the "same fundamental bill" that collapsed last month.

The Republican plan, as written last month, would end the Medicaid expansion, let states impose work requirements on some Medicaid recipients, rescind a range of Obamacare taxes, get rid of a penalty on people who refuse to obtain insurance, and ditch Obamacare's income-based subsidies to help people buy insurance while creating less-generous age-based tax credits.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office forecast that the earlier version of the plan would increase by 24 million the number of Americans without medical insurance by 2026.

During a conference call on Thursday with House Democrats, their leader, Nancy Pelosi urged them to remain united against the Republican legislation, according to an aide who was on the telephone call.

According to the aide, Pelosi said the party's message will continue to be that the Republican plan would cause higher healthcare costs, provide less insurance coverage and eliminate important protections in Obamacare.

 

(This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)

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