Search

House to vote on bills to lower drug prices but Republicans balk at Obamacare protections

Democratic leaders have packaged the drug price legislation with a several bills aimed at strengthening Obamacare, which have Republican representatives crying foul.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi defended the grouping Wednesday, saying that Democrats are delivering on their promises from the midterm election to protect those with pre-existing conditions and tackle health care costs.
"We are passing these bills because we have responsibility to families fighting diseases and Americans struggling to afford their prescriptions," Pelosi said in a news conference, calling on Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to take up the legislation.
While the two parties have been working together on measures to address drug costs, House Democrats are also seeking to reverse many of Trump administration's moves to undermine the Affordable Care Act.
The goal of the drug price bills is to make it easier for generic medication to come to market by ending some of the roadblocks that brand name manufacturers erect. For instance, it would ban brand name drug makers from paying generic rivals to delay bringing their lower-cost products to market and would make it easier for generic drug makers to get the samples they need to make their versions.
House Democrats pass bill to roll back Trump guidance related to Obamacare
But the legislation would also reverse President Donald Trump's extension of short-term insurance plans, which don't have to adhere to all of Obamacare's rules, so they can reject people with preexisting conditions or charge them higher premiums. The administration last year made these policies more attractive by extending their terms to just under a year, instead of three months. Also included is a measure to restore funding for outreach and assistance during Obamacare's open enrollment period that the President has slashed since taking office.
The packaging of the bills led Republicans to slam the majority party.
"It shows they're not serious about governing," said Republican Rep. Richard Hudson of North Carolina, who sits on the Energy & Commerce Committee, where the legislation originated. "You know, we've spent a long time coming to agreement on the drug pricing legislation. We can easily pass that out of the House on a voice vote. But by packaging it with poison pill legislation, they know we can't support. It just shows they're not serious about legislating."
The drug reform bills passed the committee with unanimous bipartisan votes, but the Obamacare provisions were approved on strict party-line votes, according to a senior Republican House aide.
Trump bucks his own party again. This time, it's on importing drugs from Canada
Combining the measures will make it "dead on arrival" in the Senate, Hudson said.
The White House also took issue with the combined bills, noting in a statement of administration policy that it contains "positive steps called for by the President to lower drug prices" but also measures that would limit Americans' health insurance choices and coverage. White House advisors would recommend the President veto the bill if it remains in its current form.
Thursday's vote comes a week after House lawmakers approved three bills that also addressed drug costs and the Affordable Care Act. The drug price legislation, which also aimed to bolster the availability of generic medicines, were passed with broad Republican support. But the Obamacare measure, which nullified a Trump administration guidance that would allow states to ask for waivers to make major changes to their Obamacare markets, was approved mostly along party lines with only four Republican members joining Democrats.
Republicans blasted their rivals across the aisle for naming the latter bill Protecting Americans with Preexisting Conditions Act of 2019, saying that states would not be allowed to waive the health reform law's comprehensive protections for those with spotty medical histories.
Last week's bills are not expected to be picked up in the Senate.

Let's block ads! (Why?)

from CNN.com - RSS Channel https://cnn.it/2Hs9OP7

Bagikan Berita Ini

Related Posts :

0 Response to "House to vote on bills to lower drug prices but Republicans balk at Obamacare protections"

Post a Comment

Powered by Blogger.