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Health Care Reform Repeal: House GOP Sending Message To Obama On Heated Issue

RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR   01/ 3/11 09:32 PM ET   AP

Health Care Reform Repeal House Gop

WASHINGTON — Eager to show who's now in charge, the House's new Republican majority plans to vote to repeal President Barack Obama's landmark health care overhaul before he even shows up in their chamber to give his State of the Union address.

Dramatic as that early showdown promises to be – the vote will be Jan. 12, Republicans said Monday – it will be just the first in a series of struggles expected to play out in the next few months. Obama returns Tuesday from his holiday vacation, fresh off lame-duck legislative victories late last year, and Republicans will be sworn in Wednesday, primed to challenge him after gaining House control in last fall's elections.

Full repeal of the health care law is still a long shot. The House vote would be just the first, easiest step. But House Republicans vow they will follow up with dozens of attempts to hack away at what they derisively call "Obamacare."

The strategy is not risk-free for the Republicans, who won't have a replacement plan of their own ready by the time of the repeal vote. But they say there's no time to lose.

Senate Democratic leaders are sending their own "you-don't-scare-me" message. In a letter Monday to House Speaker-to-be John Boehner, they served notice that they'll block any repeal, arguing it would kill popular provisions such as improved prescription coverage for Medicare.

Beyond the early health care vote, emboldened Republicans are straining to challenge the president's spending priorities, setting up likely conflicts over the budget and the country's debt ceiling. Those votes will be early tests of how the president will maneuver with a divided Congress, as both he and Republicans look ahead to the next elections.

Most likely, both parties will carry the main issues of the health care debate into the 2012 campaign, when Obama is expected to seek a second term against a Republican challenger, and House and Senate control will be up for grabs again.

"It's not going to be easy; it's going to be a long, hard slog," said Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, an early leader in the health care repeal drive. The quick thumbs-down vote by the House will have "tremendous utility and value," King said, but it may take electing a Republican president in Obama's place to accomplish the overall goal.

All the while, the Obama administration intends to keep putting into place the law's framework for covering more than 30 million uninsured people. Ultimately, Obama still has his veto pen, and Republicans aren't anywhere close to the two-thirds majorities they would need to override

"Repeal and replace" worked as a campaign slogan to motivate voters concerned about the growing reach of government under Obama. But a single-minded focus on repeal could backfire as a Republican governing strategy. Polls show that some parts of the law are popular, and many Americans would have wanted even bigger changes.

Look for Republicans to try to deny money for the government to carry out the law. They'll also attempt to strip out sections of it, such as a new long-term care program. And they'll move to strengthen restrictions on funding for abortions.

It's far from clear that they'll be able to prevail in those efforts either. There's talk that an effort to deny funding could escalate to the point of a possible government shutdown, and no one seems eager for that.

"I don't think the health issues will cause anything dire in the way of a government shutdown," said economist Robert Reischauer, president of the Urban Institute think tank. "There are other things on the agenda besides health care, namely broader budget issues that have to be dealt with."

The two parties may be able to get a deal on some limited fixes, like repealing an income tax reporting requirement that small business is calling a paperwork nightmare.

At the White House, spokesman Reid Cherlin said Obama would have no qualms about delivering his State of the Union speech to lawmakers who've just repudiated his signature accomplishment, one that Democrats compare with the establishment of Social Security and Medicare. The president "feels pretty confident about defending the health care law," Cherlin said.

Senate Democrats agree. In Monday's letter to Boehner, Majority Leader Reid and top lieutenants said repeal would undermine improvements already on the books, such as deep discounts on brand-name drugs for Medicare recipients who have fallen into a coverage gap called the "doughnut hole."

"This proposal deserves a chance to work," the Democratic leaders said. "It is too important to be treated as collateral damage in a partisan mission to repeal health care." The law would gradually close the coverage gap.

Democrats are preparing other counterattacks.

Rep. Peter Welch, D-Vt., said Monday he will try to force the House to vote separately on the Medicare drug benefits and other popular provisions, including one that allows adult children to stay on their parents' coverage until they turn 26. That could put Republicans in an awkward bind.

Other supporters of the health care law have launched a "drop it or stop it" campaign, challenging Republicans who vote to repeal the overhaul to also give up the government-funded health insurance provided to members of Congress.

"It's hypocrisy, their willingness to take health care from the U.S. Congress, while they're denying it to their constituents," said Ethan Rome, executive director of Health Care for America NOW, a coalition of the law's backers.

Republicans say that's nonsense: Lawmakers are only accepting the same employer-sponsored health care coverage available to other federal workers.

They may be more vulnerable on another score. The House vote will be to simply repeal the health care law. The "replace" part of the GOP slogan will be delegated to several committees, charged with developing an alternative as the year goes on. That can be a laborious process, one that produced plenty of disagreements and embarrassments for Democrats when they were in control.

It's a risk worth taking, says Rep. King. "I do not believe that you can leave any of Obamacare in the law," he said. "To pick and choose would start endless squabbles. If there are components of Obamacare that have merit, they can be reintroduced as part of a replacement process."

Finally, there's a wild card: the courts. Challenges to the constitutionality of the health care law are working their way toward the Supreme Court. Opponents say Congress overstepped its authority by requiring most Americans to carry health insurance, effective in 2014. The case may take a couple of years, and it could change everything.

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WASHINGTON — Eager to show who's now in charge, the House's new Republican majority plans to vote to repeal President Barack Obama's landmark health care overhaul before he even shows up in thei...
WASHINGTON — Eager to show who's now in charge, the House's new Republican majority plans to vote to repeal President Barack Obama's landmark health care overhaul before he even shows up in thei...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JISantiago
09:39 PM on 01/15/2011
First things first. If the Teabaggers-led Republicans truly mean what they preach, then together as a group, they must renounce and give up the government healthcare coverage they and their families enjoy. Set an example. Prove that you mean what you preach. Otherwise you are a bunch of hypocrites.
09:04 PM on 01/06/2011
Where will this go ? President Obama should not of tried to sneak part of the so called Death Care Bill through the back door. You lost the trust of even more people.It does not mater what I state, but when the People Unite their voice in a No, then just maybe you should listen to the People and not those in Office.
my little Obama vs. Massingale it just a way to say, hey you take a look of who we are, and try and respect use in all the different ways we are. We do not like the cost of Health Care or the $1000.00 to $10,000 deductibles as if we are a car, this shows further failures of Insurance Companies to force default on a Persons life in order to duct the cost of Health Care.
This issue covers so many failures and this Bill to Law is just like the Matrix of the net, some laws can be bent, some can be broken, but there is no reform here, just a way to get more dollars for this Government system. I do have this Little Health Care Bug In My Hands, and this Health Care Dollar belongs to the People.
by Henry Massingale founder and Director of FASC Concepts
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dlo2
MS RN
09:49 AM on 01/06/2011
The Repubs could legislate a public option and there might be other changes that could have been in place had the Repubs overcome their bipartisan inertia and been part of the health care legislation genesis. Crying over spilled water makes them look puerile and impotent. Still understand that health care has been on the brink of bankruptcy and before the legislation, it was already at the precipice of complete moral bankruptcy with so many Americans without access to health care coverage. This includes friends and family that we all know: unemployed or underinsured cancer patients unable to find the funds for treatment that might allow insured people to survive and live out their precious lives, heart disease, hypertension that is exacerbated by the stress of poverty and unemployment, uninsured burn patients needing long-term care, ALS patients, accident victims with serious trauma, patient's needing organ transplants, thalassemia patients in need of stem cell transplants, the epidemic of eating disordered men and women who find that their eating disorder exempted them from coverage for life...We need health care legislation and President Obama created that opportunity to serve the American people with the sine qua non of life: care of precious human life.
11:10 AM on 01/05/2011
Guess the American people couldn't get enough of that PBS show "The 1900 House," so they elected one.
11:07 AM on 01/05/2011
Theater for their ravenous base. "Oh well, we tried! We just gotta get rid of that commie president! Palin in '12!" What a tragedy. I'd be laughing except comedy equals tragedy plus time and we haven't any time left.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Eldamon
I believe the Emperor is naked!
02:30 AM on 01/05/2011
Dear GOP we don't have the time or patience for political theatre to appease your arcane myopic base. You couldn't repeal HCR with an armed militia. Wasting valuable time and funds in the pointless process is a galactic masturbatory effort with no happy ending.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Shrank
We are sorry, your micro-bio is not PC
12:53 AM on 01/05/2011
The greatest achievements of Health Care Reform are the strokes and coronaries that it gives to Repuglicans and Teabaggers.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hotbarb2614
proud military mother
11:21 PM on 01/04/2011
Just remember this, if the republicans are dead set against it, then it's a great bill.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dlo2
MS RN
09:58 PM on 01/04/2011
"Much ado about nothing"...instead of finding solutions for: unemployment, a crumbling infrastructure, increasing economic inequality and social disequilibrium ... the Republican fiddlers on the Hill sit inebriated with their fatuous thinking.
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RUKidding0
Freedom is Fundamental
05:45 PM on 01/05/2011
"Much ado about nothing"..­.instead of finding solutions for: unemployme­nt, a crumbling infrastruc­ture, increasing economic inequality and social disequilib­rium ... the Obama/Reid/Pelosi Troika spent two years passing the crowning achievement of the social democratic state - a 2000 pg. deeply flawed to the point of fatal government takeover of health care in America.
hopeisalive
Old enough to know better, but young enough to try
08:14 PM on 01/04/2011
No plan, no specifics, no nothing.....the Party of No.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mjtaylor22
06:26 PM on 01/04/2011
what is really laughable is that the healthcare bill is really the republican plan formthe early 90's..mandates and all if i remember correctly....and allthese trolls are rallying against it.......while the progressives were forced to swallow it whole....and told to buck up...no we gotta defend a mostly republican bill because it was passed byt the Democrats while they say they have a better way...
i do to...scrap it all and instate single payer right now...that is a progressive liberal left leaning initiative..........
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mjtaylor22
05:51 PM on 01/04/2011
i so glad the conservatives are focusing on jobs and lowering our debt...
oh wait....their part of the tax deal cost an easy 20-300 billion..
and they have not mentioned jobs once...........
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mjtaylor22
05:47 PM on 01/04/2011
so if the healthcare for tax payers is repealed....will the elected officials loose theirs, esp those who called ofr the repeal.. or do I have to keep subsidizing their insurance.even though they are millionares themselves..........just asking.............
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mjtaylor22
05:42 PM on 01/04/2011
Did ya know...that inthe healthcare bill----?
A temporary insurance program was created to help provide coverage to "high risk" patients with pre-existing conditions¬

Conservatives want to repeal this too...huh...is that good for american citizens to get rid of this much needed program until the creation of the high risk pools can be funded and completed......?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hotbarb2614
proud military mother
11:24 PM on 01/04/2011
What about all those children that have pre-existing conditions that can't get coverage ,Have they thought about that. They only care about themselves. So all there health care plans should go to.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mjtaylor22
05:40 PM on 01/04/2011
In Iraq their people have single payer health care..
funded by American Tax dollars.........
Darn i whsh the GOp hers thought as mush of American Tax payers to spen d our tax money on us........