With three new health care overhaul initiatives floating in the Senate — from the political right, left and center — the GOP version crafted by Sens. Lindsay Graham and William Cassidy, dubbed the Graham-Cassidy bill, currently has the most support as it comes up for a vote next week, according to political analyst Andy Friedman.
But Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona, all but doomed passage of the Graham-Cassidy bill by stating Friday: "I cannot in good conscience vote for the Graham-Cassidy proposal. I believe we could do better working together, Republicans and Democrats, and have not yet really tried. Nor could I support it without knowing how much it will cost, how it will affect insurance premiums, and how many people will be helped or hurt by it. Without a full CBO score, which won't be available by the end of the month, we won't have reliable answers to any of those questions."
In his most recent insights, Friedman of The Washington Update analyzes the three reform initiatives — Graham-Cassidy on the right, Sen. Bernie Sanders' left-leaning plan to create a single-payer system, as well as the bipartisan plan to "stabilize" the Affordable Care Act.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's office announced Wednesday that the Senate would hold a vote on the Graham-Cassidy bill next week.
The Senate "must consider the bill this month to use arcane procedural rules that allow passage with 51 votes," Friedman said. "After then, the Democrats could filibuster the bill to prevent its passage."
As Friedman explains in his recent analysis, the Graham-Cassidy bill would keep in place "virtually all of the taxes and fees imposed by the ACA and transfer those funds to the states proportionally. Each state then would use the funds to adopt its own health care program."
Those with pre-existing medical conditions would also still be allowed to purchase insurance "on the same terms as healthy people," but the bill "would do away with the individual mandate penalty that requires everyone to obtain health insurance," Friedman explained.
By allocating money proportionally among states, the bill would reduce funds received by states that expanded Medicaid and give those funds to states that didn't. "Thus, some low-income residents of the former states likely would lose insurance coverage," Freidman said.
Eliminating the individual mandate, Friedman continued, "could result in fewer healthy people purchasing insurance, leaving the insurance pool with a greater proportion of sick people."
This create a troublesome situation in that "fewer healthy people" would be available to spread the risks to, so "insurance companies likely would have to raise premiums to cover the greater proportional outlays."
Less coverage and higher premiums are what doomed the prior Republican attempts to reform the ACA, Friedman added.