Lakhdar™ Posted April 2, 2019 Posted April 2, 2019 (edited) The move reverses Mr Trump's call last week to quickly scrap ex-President Obama's signature law, taking some Republicans in Congress by surprise. It comes as the justice department backed a lawsuit aiming to strike down the healthcare law as unconstitutional. At least 20 million people could lose health coverage if the law is scrapped. It is unclear with what Republicans would replace the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, if the courts rule to abolish the law before the 2020 presidential election. In a series of tweets on Monday evening, Mr Trump wrote that a "vote will be taken right after the Election when Republicans hold the Senate & win back the House". What happened last week? The president's decision comes a week after he called for an immediate replacement to the existing law, declaring the Republican Party would be "the party of healthcare". Mr Trump met Republican lawmakers on Capitol Hill, some of whom later said the White House did not offer any plan for a new law during their talks. "Do we have a plan? What's our plan?" Alaska Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski said after their meeting. "He didn't offer a plan," Senator Marco Rubio of Florida also said. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who is up for re-election in 2020, told reporters: "I look forward to seeing what the president is proposing and what he can work out with the speaker." The announcement followed the Department of Justice decision to back a federal judge's December ruling that found all of Obamacare unconstitutional. The move was a seen a dramatic reversal, as the White House had previously only called for stripping the law of some provisions. Pelosi gets healthcare gift from Trump Has Trump managed to kill off Obamacare? On Wednesday, former White House legislative affairs director Marc Short, who is currently working for Vice-President Mike Pence, told CNN that "the president will be putting forward plans this year" to replace Obamacare. Republicans had attempted to "repeal and replace" Obamacare on several occasions in 2017 when Mr Trump's party controlled both chambers of Congress, but failed after Republicans were unable to reach a consensus over what law should replace it. Only an election away Analysis by Anthony Zurcher, BBC Washington For six years Republicans promised their supporters that action on healthcare - full Obamacare repeal and a cheaper, better replacement - was just a winning election away. They needed to take the House, then the Senate, then the presidency. Then in 2016 they won - everything - and ran into a brick wall, as attempts at "repeal and replace" foundered. Now, much to the dismay of congressional Republicans, Donald Trump wants to try again. First he signed his administration on to a long-shot lawsuit to get the entire Obamacare system invalidated. Then he announced that healthcare reform would be a priority for his party. For Republicans, this is a bridge too far. Memories of their 2018 mid-term defeats, in which Democrats ran on protecting Obamacare, are still fresh. The last thing they want is to refight those battles - with the added possibility of a court decision throwing the whole system into chaos. Perhaps that's why the president on Tuesday backed away from his promises of a new plan soon, instead announcing that an excellent, but still undefined, healthcare reform would be passed as soon as Republicans won total control of the government in 2020. Edited April 3, 2019 by -Dark* Closed
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