Washington: The US House of Representatives yesterday joined the Senate in passing a critical measure that marks first major step toward repealing outgoing President Barack Obama’s landmark but controversial health care reforms.
The House’s party-line vote of 227 to 198 approved a budget blueprint which provides Republicans, who control both chambers of Congress, with a framework for dismantling the Affordable Care Act.
But just a week before President-elect Donald Trump is sworn into office, a sense of urgency has swept over Washington about what his party will put forward as a replacement for the health care law, with Democrats warning of disastrous consequences should Republicans act too hastily.
“This resolution essentially fires the starting pistol... for repealing Obamacare,” said Representative Bill Johnson, an Ohio Republican, shortly before the vote.
“This is a critical first step to deliver relief to Americans struggling under this law,” House Speaker Paul Ryan told fellow members, describing as a “rescue mission” the latest effort to unwind Obamacare.
“This experiment has failed,” and “we have to step in before things get worse.”
The Senate passed the budget resolution on Thursday. The measure received no Democratic support in either the Senate or the House, highlighting the intensely partisan fight that lies ahead.
The budget resolution provides Republicans with a powerful tool, called reconciliation, which allows repeal legislation to proceed through the 100-member Senate protected from filibuster blocking tactics and requiring just a simple majority for passage, instead of a higher 60-vote threshold.
Trump made repeal of the law, a key achievement of Obama’s Democratic administration, a central plank of his insurgent campaign.