First Take: What’s in the Senate Health Care Bill and How It Will Hurt You and Your Family
This Is an Attack on America
The U.S. Senate, controlled by Mitch McConnell, has released its draft version of the bill that will repeal and “replace” ObamaCare, and the initial reactions by those in the know echo everything we’ve heard thus far. The bill is a huge tax cut for the rich, while cutting access to health care for millions of Americans, and harming those who need help the most, people on programs like Medicaid.
MSNBCs Ali Velshi, whose background is in finance, just noted the title of the bill gives its objectives away:
“ELIMINATION OF LIMITATION ON RECAPTURE OF EXCESS ADVANCE PAYMENTS OF PREMIUM TAX CREDITS.”
The draft version is 142 pages long, and it is not the final version. Everyone should remember Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell just before the final vote, believed to be next week after the Congressional Budget Office releases its “scoring,” literally could substitute an entirely different – and even more dangerous – bill for the one he says he will put on the floor.
If you are a woman, if you or someone in your family is a senior, if you have a pre-existing condition including HIV/AIDS or cancer, or if you are lower-income or poor, you are in trouble if this bill becomes law.
All that said, here are some initial reactions from those who have seen and had a short time to study the Republicans’ “health care” bill:
It cuts taxes for the very rich:
It’s so few words…but here’s your massive tax cut for millionaires and billionaires. Slashing Medicaid all to pay for these two lines. pic.twitter.com/4s2ZvpJLwk
— Topher Spiro (@TopherSpiro) June 22, 2017
And it does so retroactively:
There is no reason to make a tax cut on capital gains/dividends *retroactive* unless your purpose is to shovel money to rich people. pic.twitter.com/gc1142AnB0
— Seth Hanlon (@SethHanlon) June 22, 2017
It literally singles out women who are pregnant:
There it is. People who can remain eligible to enroll for any remaining Medicaid expansion benefits.
Sorry, ladies. pic.twitter.com/m51OvzpTxr
— Nish Weiseth (@NishWeiseth) June 22, 2017
If you’re an older American, or some day plan to be, you’re in trouble:
Yup. 60 yr old earning $37K has to pay $6K for Bronze instead of $3,600 for Silver. 60 yr old earning $46K+ has to pay FULL PRICE. https://t.co/GYXIFAlUej
— â˜ªï¸ Charles Gaba âœ¡ï¸ (@charles_gaba) June 22, 2017
As Senator Bob Casey points out, one of the most important parts of ObamaCare, requiring coverage for “essential health benefits,” is gone. Those include (via Wikipedia):
- Ambulatory patient services. [outpatient care]
- Emergency services.
- Hospitalization. [inpatient care]
- Maternity and newborn care
- Mental health and substance use disorder services, including behavioral health treatment.
- Prescription drugs.
- Rehabilitative and habilitative services and devices.
- Laboratory services
- Preventive and wellness services and chronic disease management;
- Pediatric services, including oral and vision care.
Page 41. They revoke the essential health benefits requirement. pic.twitter.com/1fxrRRrwyg
— Senator Bob Casey (@SenBobCasey) June 22, 2017
Hurts the poorest Americans:
This is the part where they cut Medicaid even more than the House bill. pic.twitter.com/UMmFrOSgzA
— Brian Schatz (@brianschatz) June 22, 2017
And also targets them, possibly killing Medicaid altogether:
Looks like the Senate bill could effectively phase out Medicaid *entirely.* via @imillhiser https://t.co/o9uemxuB2b pic.twitter.com/gxEDIIaw1N
— Ned Resnikoff (@resnikoff) June 22, 2017
The Senate bill imposes extreme Medicaid cuts starting in 2025. This timing is a gimmick designed to hide massive coverage loss beyond 2026.
— Topher Spiro (@TopherSpiro) June 22, 2017
It even attacks states for spending more than the average:
This seems big. States will be penalized for spending more than average per Medicaid patient—not just for exceeding their own caps. pic.twitter.com/Hf7ECrJfwK
— Jordan Weissmann (@JHWeissmann) June 22, 2017
These are important:
The ACA income based tax credits stay– due to Senate rules. They just get bulldozed. More accurately, the people receiving the help do. 4
— Andy Slavitt (@ASlavitt) June 22, 2017
Millions of families lose coverage. Those with insurance will get a lot less. Maternity, mental health, cancer treatments, not required.7
— Andy Slavitt (@ASlavitt) June 22, 2017
POINT 2: The main event in the Senate bill is the destruction of Medicaid. Far, far worse than even the House bill.9
— Andy Slavitt (@ASlavitt) June 22, 2017
POINT 5: Bill violates every criticism from Rs over last 7 yrs:
-⬆ï¸deductibles
-â¬‡ï¸ coverage
-gifts to insurers
-cuts to middle class.. 20— Andy Slavitt (@ASlavitt) June 22, 2017
You can help stop this: Call your Senators, even if they are Democrats. Call, and don’t stop calling: (202) 224-3121
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