Well the repugnicans have finally done it. IN their rabid efforts to deprive millions of Americans in this country of Healthcare coverage, they have finally proven how much they hate America and Americans! Read about this worthless trash and weep. And this time fuck the polls and the elections; lets take to the streets and rock and brick every repugnican we see in the streets, in the restaurants, in their offices, at their schools anywhere we find these dogs. They don't care about us and so we shouldn't care about them. Lets give them nowhere to rest easy in this country for they are our enemies. worse than the taliban or others we need them gone out of our lives FOREVER! God curse these dogs and send them to hell where they belong! Lets make theirt lives unbearable in this country! they've taken us for granted too long; it's time to let them know they can't just walk all over us and there's nothing we can do about it!
Notice how the news media is trying to downplay what these repugnican dogs have done! This is why the very wealthy should not be permitted to own newspapers, television stations, or radio for all the do is use it to push their one sided satanic agendas. And newsmen aren't going to go against the onese paying them. Like I said, lets not make them living in this country comfortable nor safe! Forget the polls, lets track them down and get in their faceces with clubs and bats! You can't talk to these kind of people!
Notice how the news media is trying to downplay what these repugnican dogs have done! This is why the very wealthy should not be permitted to own newspapers, television stations, or radio for all the do is use it to push their one sided satanic agendas. And newsmen aren't going to go against the onese paying them. Like I said, lets not make them living in this country comfortable nor safe! Forget the polls, lets track them down and get in their faceces with clubs and bats! You can't talk to these kind of people!
House Republicans pass healthcare bill in first step toward replacing Obamacare
Partisan
approval with one vote to spare sends American Health Care Act to
uncertain fate in Senate, after negotiations reveal cracks in Republican
party
House
Republicans narrowly approved a controversial plan to dismantle the
Affordable Care Act on Thursday, taking a significant first step toward
fulfilling a seven-year promise to repeal and replace the 2010 law that
served as a landmark overhaul of the US healthcare system.
Republicans
passed the American Health Care Act with one vote to spare, following a
dramatic series of negotiations that exposed deep fissures between the
party’s moderate and conservative wings over how to replace Barack
Obama’s signature legislative accomplishment.
The
bill passed 217 to 213, with 20 Republicans voting against and no
Democrats voting in favor. Republicans burst into applause when the bill
passed the 216-vote threshold, a feat that had seemed insurmountable
just days before.
Democrats
too saw a reason for celebrating. After it passed, they sang the 60s
hit Na Na Hey Hey (Kiss Him Goodbye) – appearing to suggest Republicans
would lose their seats if the repeal proved unpopular.
The bill now moves to the Senate, where it is expected to face serious difficulties.
Later
in the afternoon, an exultant Trump celebrated with dozens of
Republican congressmen at the White House. He punched the air in triumph
as he greeted them in the Rose Garden and was met with sustained
applause. Before a seated audience that included Ivanka Trump and Jared
Kushner, vice-president Mike Pence declared: “Thanks to the leadership
of President Donald Trump, welcome to the beginning of the end of
Obamacare.”
“What
a great group of people,” Trump said, referring to the Republican
congressmen, “and they’re not even doing it for the party, they’re doing
it for this country because we suffered with Obamacare.”
He
described Obamacare as a “catastrophe” and “essentially dead”, adding:
“If we don’t pay lots of ransom money over to insurance companies, it
would die immediately.”
Despite
reservations expressed by senators, the president predicted the new
bill would survive the upper chamber. “We’re gonna get this passed
through the Senate,” he said, adding, “I actually think it will get even
better. And make no mistake, this is a repeal and a replace of
Obamacare. Make no mistake about it.”
He
added: “As much as we’ve come up with a really incredible healthcare
plan, this has brought the Republican party together.” Next, he
promised, would be the biggest tax cut in US history.
House speaker Paul Ryan was smiling as he faced the media. “It really was a collaborative, consensus-driven effort,” he said.
Member
after member took care to lavish praise on Trump. Majority leader Kevin
McCarthy told the gathering: “I’ve only been through a few presidents
but I’ve never seen someone so hands on. I walk into my office yesterday
morning and they say the president’s calling again ... The president
gives me a list of who he thinks I would be best to talk to on the list.
And he was right.”
It was a very different spectacle from the first attempt to pass the healthcare bill
in March, which ended with a crestfallen Ryan admitting to reporters on
Capitol Hill that moving from opposition to governing comes with
“growing pains”.
But
faced with mounting pressure from Trump and a White House eagerly
searching for a victory of its own, Republicans managed to coalesce
around a flagging plan that just six weeks ago was considered all but
dead.
As
the president approached his 100th day in office without a single
legislative victory to his name, the White House escalated its push on
Republicans to revive the effort to repeal Obamacare, a significant
campaign promise. Behind the scenes, New Jersey congressman Tom
MacArthur, a moderate, teamed up with North Carolina congressman Mark
Meadows, chairman of the arch-conservative Freedom Caucus, to hammer out
a compromise.
“It’s
real easy to be unified when your vote doesn’t matter and you’re in the
minority,” Meadows said before the vote on Thursday. “It’s much more
difficult to be unified when you’re in the majority, and that’s what
we’re seeing.”
Ahead of the vote, members took turns delivering impassioned speeches from the chamber floor, drawing rare applause and cheers.
“A
lot of us have been waiting seven years to cast this vote,” said Ryan,
imploring his party to make good on their promise to repeal the ACA.
As
Ryan finished, Republicans rose to their feet, chanting “Vote! Vote!
Vote!” Democrats countered: “Where’s the score?” a reference to Ryan’s
decision to vote on the bill before the independent Congressional Budget
Office (CBO) could provide an analysis on how it would impact voters.
“Most
Americans don’t know who their member of Congress is,” Democratic House
minority leader Nancy Pelosi said. “But they will now when they find
out that you voted to take away their healthcare.”
“You,”
Pelosi added, singling out moderate Republicans, “have every provision
of this bill tattooed on your forehead. You will glow in the dark on
this one.”
The
revised healthcare bill was immediately mired in controversy, as
Democrats vowed to wage the upcoming 2018 midterms over the legacy of
Obamacare and its expansion of coverage to millions of Americans.
The
Republican plan has drawn particular scrutiny for gutting coverage for
people with preexisting medical conditions. Prior to the passage of
Obama’s healthcare law, insurers were able to deny coverage to people
who were already sick and whose treatment was more expensive.
The
Republican bill would allow states to opt out of coverage for
preexisting conditions, a move conservatives argue would lower overall
premiums by removing sick people from the market. An estimated 27% of
Americans under 65 have preexisting conditions, include cancer, heart
disease and diabetes, that were not covered prior to the ACA.
To
attract support from moderate Republicans who balked at the plan, an
additional $8bn was included over five years to fund so-called high-risk
pools that would help subsidize people with preexisting conditions..
Health policy experts have argued the fix is insufficient. At least one analysis,
from the left-leaning Center for American Progress, found the
Republican plan would fall woefully short in providing coverage to
individuals with preexisting conditions.
The
Republican healthcare plan also includes an attempt to defund women’s
health organization Planned Parenthood, as well as drastic cuts to
Medicaid, totaling $370bn over a decade. A broader portrait of the
bill’s potential consequences was unclear, because Republicans rushed a
vote before the CBO could provide an analysis. The office had projected
that as many as 24 million Americans would lose their health insurance under the original version of the Republican plan.
While
Republican lawmakers acknowledged they would prefer to first see a CBO
score, most resigned themselves to instead favor the passage of a bill
they could tout as progress toward repealing and replacing the ACA.
It
was an almost stunning about-face for a party that for years railed
against Democrats for what they said was a rushed, backroom process to
pass the ACA in 2010. (The debate over the legislation was actually far more protracted
than characterized.) The latest version of the Republican bill, the
text of which was still evolving overnight, was not posted until late
Wednesday night – less than 24 hours before the vote.
Meadows,
who long blasted the Democrats as rushing Obamacare through, pushed
back on accusations that Republicans were being hypocritical.
“I
have read the bill no less than six times,” he said. “If they haven’t
read the bill it’s because they haven’t the spent the time to do that.”
In the Senate’s hands
Whether Republicans’ seven-year mission to dismantle the ACA comes to fruition now lands squarely in the hands of the Senate.
Faced
with a far more narrow majority in the upper chamber, Republicans plan
to use a process known as budget reconciliation that would allow them to
avoid a Democratic-led filibuster and pass a bill with a simple
51-majority vote. But the rules of that process pose their own hurdles,
as they limit the scope of what can be passed through reconciliation to
spending, taxes or the deficit. The House-passed bill would thus need to
undergo substantial changes.
Republicans in the Senate signaled they were in no hurry to advance a healthcare bill.
“My guess is we’re going to spend at least a month looking at the issue,” Republican senator Bob Corker of Tennessee told MSNBC.
House
Republicans said they expected the Senate to make changes to the
legislation, with the goal of ultimately improving it. But that would
tee up another vote in the House on its final passage and potentially
reopen the chasm between the GOP’s moderates and its right flank.
Democratic
Joe Manchin, a senator from West Virginia facing a tough re-election
battle next year, made clear Republicans were on their own as they eyed
next steps.
“I can’t say [the Republican bill] is dead on arrival,” he told Politico in an interview.
“But they don’t have 60 votes, so it’s dead on arrival.”
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