Senate heading for late night ahead of ObamaCare repeal showdown
Senators are gearing up to pull an all-nighter as they head
toward a showdown on Republicans’ years-long pledge to repeal and replace
ObamaCare.
Lawmakers are expected to spend hours on the Senate
floor Thursdaynight and into Friday morning as they sort through
hundreds of amendments ahead of a final vote on their healthcare effort. Senators are able to use the free-wheeling marathon session,
known as a vote-a-rama, to force a vote on any amendment they want. The
hours-long floor fights are frequently used to make members on the other side
of the aisle take politically tough votes, creating fodder for the upcoming
2018 midterm election and 2020 election.
Marathon sessions frequently stretch into the early morning
hours. A vote-a-rama in January that set up the GOP's ability to fast-track an
ObamaCare repeal ended after 1 a.m., while another vote-a-rama in
2015 wrapped up after 3 a.m.
“We all know this is likely to be a long night. ... One
phase of that process will end when the Senate concludes voting this week, but
it will not signal the end of our work — not yet,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell(R-Ky.)
said. Sen. Christopher Coons (D-Del.)
quipped to reporters around a pair of 8:30 p.m. votes: "Just
wait. Give it a couple hours. It's going to get wacky."
The GOP endgame — and whether there were enough votes to get
there — remained unclear even in the hours leading up to the chaotic floor
drama.
Republican senators appear to be coalescing around passing a
“skinny repeal” of ObamaCare, and GOP leadership filed its plan late Thursday night.
The measure — which would be attached to the
House-passed bill that is being used as a vehicle for any Senate action
— is expected to include a one-year defunding of Planned Parenthood, a
repeal of ObamaCare's individual insurance mandate and at least partial repeal
of the employer mandate.
But several GOP senators want an assurance that House
Republicans will agree to a conference between the two chambers before the
Senate has to take its final vote.
Republican Sens. John McCain (Ariz.), Lindsey Graham (S.C.), Ron Johnson(Wis.) and Bill
Cassidy (La.) held an elevnth-hour news conference Thursday threatening to vote
against the GOP healthcare legislation unless there was a guarantee that
the House wouldn’t pass the Senate bill.
"There's increasing concern on my part and others that
what the House will do is take whatever we pass" and pass it without
making changes, Graham said. "The 'skinny bill' as policy is a disaster.
The 'skinny bill' as a replacement is a fraud.”
If the four senators voted against the bare bones repeal
plan, they would be able to kill the legislation. GOP Sens. Susan Collins (Maine)
and Lisa Murkowski (Alaska)
also voted against starting debate on the healthcare bill. Murkowski told
reporters that she knows how she will vote, but isn't announcing it ahead of
time.
Speaker Paul
Ryan (R-Wis.) said Thursday evening that the House is
"willing" to go to conference, but the onus is on Senate Republicans
to first show they can pass something. He vowed that the House would not pass the Senate's
"skinny" repeal bill.
"Until the Senate can do that, we will never be able to
develop a conference report that becomes law. We expect the Senate to act
first on whatever the conference committee produces," he said.
Ryan also held a call late Thursday evening
with five GOP senators, including Johnson and Graham. The move appeared to
assuage the two key senators, who told reporters after leaving a meeting in
Sen. John Cornyn's
(R-Texas) office off the Senate floor that they would vote
"yes."
McCain appeared unconvinced ahead of the pair of 8:30
p.m. votes, telling reporters that he is "not satisfied."
Republican senators also said part of the legislative limbo
has been caused by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), which still needs to
release its analysis of key GOP proposals including from Sens. Ted Cruz(R-Texas) and Rob Portman (R-Ohio).
Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.) predicted that lawmakers could
be waiting until September to get the CBO’s analysis for all of their
proposals, hence why Republicans needed to go to conference and
buy themselves more time.
The GOP's repeal proposal will face a key test shortly after
midnight. Democrats will try to send it to a Senate committee, which would
effectively pigeonhole the amendment. If that move fails, as it's expected to,
Senate Republicans will vote on attaching it to the House-passed healthcare
bill, which is being used as a vehicle for the Senate legislation.
As of 7 p.m., fewer than 200 amendments had been
filed to the bill, with senators able to continue filing their proposals
throughout the night. Democrats have warned they are holding off on offering
amendments until Senate Republicans unveil their healthcare endgame. “Democrats will offer no further motions or amendments until
we see this 'skinny bill,' but make no mistake, once we do see the bill, we
will begin preparing amendments,” Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.)
said from the Senate floor.
The New York Democrat signaled that his caucus will wait
until after Republicans vote on the “skinny repeal” amendment to offer their
own suggestions.
“I want to put my colleagues on both sides of the aisle on
notice: My Democratic and Republican colleagues that they should prepare for
numerous Democratic amendments if the skinny bill passes. ... It won’t be the
last vote,” he said.
Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.)
said earlier this week that he wanted to offer 150 proposals, meanwhile
Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.)
announced that he would file more than 100 amendments.
Democrats also want to use the Senate's rulebook to try to
stymie GOP proposals, by forcing them to meet 60-vote thresholds and keep their
focus on trying on closed-door process to crafting the GOP healthcare bill. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.)
has also filed more than a dozen amendments that would require GOP senators to
vote on whether or not to keep provisions in the legislation that could
result in higher insurance costs for individuals over the age of 50, low-income
individuals or people with serious diseases.
Republicans returned some of that fire earlier Thursday,
when Sen. Steve Daines (R-Mont.) got a vote on his amendment — which he
did not vote for — that would have established a single-payer
healthcare system, an idea that has gained traction among the progressive wing
of the Democratic Party. Democrats, however, largely voted “present” Thursday on the
amendment, which they argued amounted to a political ploy.
Red-state Democratic Sens. Jon Tester (Mont.), Joe Manchin (W.Va.), Heidi Heitkamp (N.D.)
and Joe Donnelly (Ind.)
— who are each up for reelection in states carried by Trump last year — as well
as Independent Sen. Angus
King (Maine) voted against the single-payer amendment.
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