Senate laying groundwork for own health care replacement bill

The House passed its version of the bill on May 4.

— -- Senate Republicans left their last lunch meeting before a weeklong recess optimistic that they can at least start working on their own version of a health care bill, with something on paper to discuss when they return in June.

While many lawmakers said there had been enough intra-conference discussions to at least launch Senate leaders and the heads of relevant committees on writing a blueprint, they also made clear there would still be plenty of wrangling among the rank-and-file before anything final emerges.

The Republican-led Senate can only afford to lose two of its 52 members and still pass a health care bill. But there are diverse opinions and priorities among that group, and senators are well aware that the legislation must have almost universal appeal.

“We’ve had a lot of discussions and now the timing is serious about the drafting process and that’ll of course take some time,” Thune said.

The upper chamber is focused, as were their House counterparts, on lowering insurance premiums as the ultimate goal, even if fewer people end up being covered because the new bill will have removed the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate.

But some Republicans object to the House plan’s age-based tax credit structure, which some have argued places an undue burden on groups that can least afford it.

Some Republicans have also expressed concerns about the House’s waiver program that would allow them to opt out of certain regulations like providing what’s known as essential health benefits, required to be covered under Obamacare, and not charging people with pre-existing conditions higher premiums.

Others, especially senators who come from states that accepted the ACA’s expansion of Medicaid, object to the House bill’s phasing out of that expansion.

Senators have long made clear that their version will look much different from the House one, but besides getting all their members on board, they must also be mindful of what is passable in the House, which will likely have to vote on whatever final bill is hammered out between the two.

For now, the upper chamber is focused on an agreement that can satisfy 96 percent of its members (plus Vice President Mike Pence as a tiebreaker if needed).

“The Senate bill is going to be the Senate bill,” he said.