Search

White House, Congress point fingers over nonexistent health care plan

The disconnect over who is primarily responsible for drafting a replacement plan underscores how unpopular the President's decision is and how difficult the path ahead could be for a party that failed to pass health care legislation when they controlled all three branches of government -- a monopoly Republicans no longer enjoy.
Marc Short, chief of staff to Vice President Mike Pence, said Wednesday on CNN that "the President will be putting plans forward this year" on a health care replacement plan.
White House has no 'fresh' health care proposal, but plans to send one to Congress this year
But a White House official said Thursday that Short "spoke too soon" because aides are still debating whether the administration will take the lead in crafting a proposal or ask Congress to step in. The official said White House aides are looking at Graham-Cassidy as their starting point, and could either make changes to it themselves or work with Congress on a proposal.
Whether the White House or Congress should take lead is "still being decided," the official said, among other issues officials are working out in senior staff meetings on Thursday.
It's not like any suggestions will get far, though, with a Democratically-controlled House.
Trump told the attendees of the Senate GOP lunch on Tuesday that Congress needs to come up with a better law than the Affordable Care Act, and he has repeatedly hyped the GOP as the "party of health care," despite that party's reluctance to engage the issue.
Here's what the GOP plans for health care look like
Meanwhile, some Republicans are looking to the White House to provide them with a plan.
"I'm anxious to see what the White House is going to recommend in terms of a health care delivery system that looks like somebody designed the damn thing on purpose," said Sen. John Kennedy, R-Louisiana.
Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Missouri, responded to questions about the health care plan: "All I'm going to say about that for a while is that I'm eager to see what the administration proposes."
"The President, obviously, has something in mind. We'll wait and see what it is," said Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tennessee, chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.
Sen. John Cornyn, a member of Republican leadership, said: "We are waiting with bated breath" for the White House's proposal on a new health care plan.
Many GOP lawmakers feel the White House should own the health care issue because the President is the one who dragged Republicans back into a battle they lost.
One Republican congressman told CNN on Thursday that after Trump received a political boost from the end of the special counsel probe this week, he spiked the football in the end zone and the "damn ball came up and hit us in the nose."

Let's block ads! (Why?)

from CNN.com - RSS Channel https://ift.tt/2JP69za

Bagikan Berita Ini

0 Response to "White House, Congress point fingers over nonexistent health care plan"

Post a Comment

Powered by Blogger.