US
Senate rejects repeal and replace plan of Obamacare
By ChiDubem Michael
The US Senate has
failed to pass a Republican proposal to repeal President Barack Obama's
signature healthcare policy without replacing it. The 45-55 vote marks the
second defeat for Republicans aiming to pass a bill this week to undo the
health policy.
The vote came a day
after the Senate rejected a plan to repeal and replace the health law with a
Republican plan. Senators will now consider a "skinny" repeal, which
would scale back some of the more controversial provisions.
The "skinny"
plan would eliminate unpopular parts of Obamacare - the Affordable Care Act -
including the individual mandate requiring all Americans to have health
insurance coverage as well as a tax on medical devices.
If that measure passes,
the Senate and House of Representatives would then be tasked with finalising a
bill that could still change during negotiations. If successful, the full House
and Senate would again have to approve the measure.
Seven Republicans
opposed the repeal-only plan on Wednesday, which included a two-year delay on a
replacement in the hope of finding agreement before that time elapses.
The defeat is the
latest blow for President Donald Trump, who put repealing Obamacare at the
centre of his election campaign, and underscores sharp divisions within the
Republican Party over a replacement plan.
A proposal to repeal
and replace Obamacare with the Better Care Reconciliation Act (BRCA), a
Republican plan that was crafted over last two months, collapsed on Tuesday
night after nine Republicans voted against it.
Republicans have long
railed against Obamacare as government overreach, criticising the system for
introducing government-run marketplaces, where premiums have risen sharply for
some people. The party's proposed alternative included steep cuts to Medicaid,
a healthcare programme for the poor and disabled.
And it removes
Obamacare's individual mandate requiring all Americans to have health insurance
or pay a tax penalty. About 20 million people gained health insurance under
former President Obama's Affordable Care Act.
The non-partisan
Congressional Budgetary Office (CBO) found the bill would strip 22 million
Americans of health insurance over the next decade.
Other attempts to
replace Obamacare have failed in recent weeks due to Republican divisions. In
an early morning tweet on Wednesday, Mr Trump lambasted Republican Senator Lisa
Murkowski of Alaska for opposing the party's plan, saying she “really let the
Republicans, and our country, down yesterday. Too bad!”
Mrs Murkowski was one
of two Republicans earlier on Tuesday to vote against allowing the debate on
healthcare legislation reform to go forward.
But her party eked out
a victory after Vice President Mike Pence cast the tie-breaking vote which
allowed discussion to take place.
Senator John McCain,
who was recently diagnosed with an aggressive brain tumour, received a standing
ovation as he returned to Congress to cast his "Yes" vote.
President Trump tweeted
his thanks to the Arizona senator for playing "such a vital role" in
the vote.
Why is Obamacare so
controversial?
Is Obamacare more
popular than ever?

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