House passes Obamacare repeal
After dozens of attempts spanning five years, congressional Republicans succeeded in sending legislation to US President Barack Obama’s desk to repeal his landmark health care law.
After dozens of attempts spanning five years, congressional Republicans succeeded in sending legislation to US President Barack Obama’s desk to repeal his landmark health care law.
Republicans hailed it as a hard-fought victory, saying the bill — which also cuts funding to women’s health care provider Planned Parenthood — highlights sharp policy differences between their party and rival Democrats during the 2016 presidential election race.
Mr Obama is certain to veto the measure, which passed the Senate in December under special rules that prevented Democrats from blocking it. The bill passed the House of Representatives on Wednesday by a margin of 240 to 181, with one Democrat voting yes.
It was the first major congressional vote of 2016, coming just two months after Paul Ryan became the new Speaker of the House.
And yet it is the latest in a long line of symbolic votes that Republicans have held in recent years, frustrating millions of conservatives across the American heartland who have grown angry with ineffectual Republican leaders in Congress.
“For the first time in five years, we will finally put a bill on the President’s desk that defunds Obamacare,” Mr Ryan told reporters, noting that Democrats have been “blocking and filibustering these bills” for years. “We are confronting the President with the hard, honest truth: Obamacare doesn’t work,” he added.
Mr Obama was seeking to talk about “anything but his failures,” but Republicans were “not going to let him take a soft course,” he said. “We need to make this year about ideas, not about Obama’s distractions.”
Democrats dismissed the vote as the 62nd attempt by Republicans to repeal, defund or otherwise dismantle the Affordable Care Act that narrowly passed a Democrat-led Congress in 2010. “I don’t understand their obsession” with repealing the health law, House Democrat Jim McGovern said, noting that doing so would “throw 22 million people out of health insurance plans.”
