How much horse-trading is going on in the secret negotiations to kill Obamacare?<\/p>\n
The U.S. Senate is racing toward an artificial deadline for a vote on the magical, mystery thing known as Trumpcare. The whole sordid, secret affair is designed more as an opportunity to give Trump a win than to actually improve the American healthcare system. It\u2019s another ploy to erase everything Obama\u2014no matter the cost to the country\u2019s overall well-being. And it\u2019s also a way to deliver billions of dollars of \u201csavings\u201d that will form the economic justification for a huge tax cut for the top one percent.<\/p>\n
While virtually no one has seen evidence of an actual bill yet, no hearings have been scheduled or held, and no proposed provisions have been made public, every Republican Senator is under intense pressure to just say yes, sight unseen. Some\u2014having seen what passed for a healthcare bill in the House of Representatives\u2014are not totally on board.<\/p>\n
So, how are the Knights of the Secret Healthcare Society convincing reluctant Senators?<\/p>\n
We can only guess. Members of the gang of 14 all-male Senators hashing out the provisions of this so-called bill aren\u2019t talking publicly. [That closed-door mentality is, in itself, a problem, of course.] But political horse-trading is a time-honored tradition in US politics. and we can look to recent history to get some examples of how it works in the sausage-making world of US politics.<\/p>\n
Some of the wrangling can be legitimately related to the proposed workings of the law, making it either better or worse. But some horse-trades are about issues unrelated to the purpose of the bill.<\/p>\n
We know, for example, that when Trumpcare came up for a vote in the House of Representatives in March 2017, many Republicans balked. That\u2019s when the arm-twisting and horse trading began. Talking Points Memo reported on several Congressmen<\/a> who held out for inclusion of issues important to them:<\/p>\n Congressman Paul Gosar [R-AZ] is reported to have demanded a vote on his pet project\u2014an anti-trust provision for health care companies\u2014in exchange for his support of the House bill.<\/p>\n Rep. Lou Barletta (R-PA), who previously opposed<\/a> the American Health Care Act out of fear undocumented immigrants could somehow receive tax credits to purchase health care, said\u00a0that\u00a0his vote has been won over by promises from President Trump and GOP leaders that they will advance a separate bill this month that \u201cwill require that a person\u2019s Social Security number is verified before we give them a tax credit.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n [Barletta says he was won over by a promise given to him by Donald Trump, who said a separate bill addressing his concern would be brought up in the near future. Haven\u2019t we heard promises like that before?]<\/p>\n The Springfield News-Leader<\/a> reported in May that Missouri Republican Billy Long reversed his position on the House GOP bill to repeal and replace Obamacare, saying he was now on board with the measure after Republican leaders promised to plump it up with $8 billion to help those with pre-existing conditions. \u201cThe issue hits close to home for the congressman,\u201d said the News-Leaer, \u00a0\u201cbecause his daughter is a cancer survivor.\u201d<\/p>\n On the demands-unrelated-to-the-bill spectrum, the Miami Herald reported<\/a> that, when Trumpcare was up for a vote in the House, Florida Republican Mario Diaz-Balart\u2014a hard-liner on Cuba\u2014may have traded his Trumpcare vote for a Trump administration commitment to rescinding Obama-era easing of restrictions on travel and commerce with Cuba.<\/p>\n All the while, Diaz-Balart \u2014 enjoying the courtship of the White House and GOP leaders on account of his \u201clean no\u201d[on Trumpcare] stance <\/a>\u2014 was circulating a memo of his vision for a Trump policy toward Cuba that would eliminate the Obama guidance to federal agencies on normalizing relations with Cuba and set up terms for Cuba to comply with \u2014 or else\u2026Diaz-Balart cast the tie-breaking vote\u2026in the Budget Committee to approve the AHCA and bring it to a full House vote.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Diaz denies the quid pro quo. But then again, this happened. \u201cTrump Reverses Pieces of Obama Era Engagement With Cuba<\/a> [New York Times, June 17, 2017]. Just a coincidence, of course.<\/p>\n