 | "Repeal and replace" will not actually repeal, and probably will never replace, even if a bill passes the House, which it very well might. But the costs are unknown, and not just the fiscal costs, with the Congressional Budget Office sidestepped, or the human costs, which White House press secretary Sean Spicer stated are "literally impossible" to determine. It's been framed as politically dangerous for Republicans not to keep their promise on health care, as it was the last two times House Speaker Paul Ryan was on the verge of calling a vote on the bill. Yet it was political danger that kept House Republicans from voting then. With the American Medical Association and the AARP lobbying for no's, plus Jimmy Kimmel's breaking through with a searing personal story, nothing has changed about the basic politics, even as the bill itself has changed. (One thing that hasn't changed in recent drafts, despite promises to the contrary: special treatment for members of Congress and their staffs.) Call it walking the plank, or "doo-doo stuck to their shoe" (to quote House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi), but this is a vote and a move than can't be taken back. Seven years of GOP promises haven't changed the fact that Republicans have never really wanted to do what they said they wanted to do. They're now led by a president who has said plenty of other things, and is more than willing to change where he stands anyway. Republicans are placing trust in their teamwork, on a bill where the impact will be determined in individual states and with unpredictable consequences. |
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