WASHINGTON
— Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., will travel to the Capitol Tuesday in time
to vote on the Senate health care measure, breathing some life back
into the Republicans’ bid to repeal and replace Obamacare.
“Senator
McCain looks forward to returning to the United States Senate tomorrow
to continue working on important legislation, including health care
reform, the National Defense Authorization Act and new sanctions on
Russia, Iran and North Korea,” McCain’s office announced in a statement
late Monday night.
Earlier
Monday, McCain’s colleagues lamented his absence, saying they hoped he
could get permission from his doctors to travel to Washington despite
his recent diagnosis of brain cancer.
“I
think we can get the motion to proceed done without him, but certainly
it would help if he was here,” Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, told
reporters. Cornyn said he would happily drive McCain if the senator
wasn’t medically able to get on an airplane.
With
McCain in attendance, Sen. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s last-ditch
bid to squeeze through a repeal-and-replace plan looks more likely than
it did earlier Monday, when the motion to proceed could only lose two
Republican votes. Now, McConnell can lose three members of his caucus in
Tuesday’s vote and still proceed to debate the House’s
repeal-and-replace bill.
The
House bill would quickly be replaced with an updated version of the
Senate’s replace measure that has not been announced publicly and that
most Republican members say they have not yet seen. Senators will also
likely get to vote on an amendment to repeal Obamacare with no
replacement.
Sen.
Susan Collins, R-Maine, has said she will vote against the motion to
proceed. Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., is leaning no. Sen. Lisa Murkowski,
R-Alaska, Sen. Dean Heller, R-Nev., Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio and others
remain undecided — making it possible other no votes could emerge before
Tuesday afternoon’s vote.
While
the path forward for McConnell is narrow, McCain’s surprise presence
could invigorate the GOP caucus to rally around their campaign promises
to repeal and replace Obamacare. McCain’s spokeswoman did not reply to
an emailed question about how the senator would vote Tuesday, but his
return alone suggests he’s supporting the motion to proceed. The
senators will meet Tuesday over lunch to whip last-minute votes and
discuss the amendment process.
McConnell
and President Trump spent much of Monday turning up the pressure on
members of their party. Trump said Republicans who vote against
proceeding to debate are essentially saying they support the “nightmare”
of Obamacare. McConnell, meanwhile, met with Republican senators in his
office to push them to vote for the measure, where he was joined by
Vice President Mike Pence.
Still,
it’s far from clear whether McConnell can get the 50 votes he needs to
start debate, or if he could pass any legislation even if he can get his
caucus to agree to debate. If he holds the vote and it fails, he will
force some of his members to take a political risk in voting on the
unpopular measure without even notching a legislative win to make up for
it. Some Republican moderates, such as Portman, representing states
that would see steep Medicaid cuts under the replace plan are in an
especially uncomfortable position.
“If
he holds the vote, he’s probably handing at least a few of them an
electoral death sentence,” said political strategist Liz Mair, who has
worked for Republican candidates. “Either they vote no and get
primaried, and if they have a non-terrible competitor, lose. Or they
vote yes and get hammered in their general elections.”
But
GOP senators said they believe it was time to put up or shut up on
Obamacare repeal — something they’ve been promising to deliver on the
campaign trail for seven years.
“My
personal feeling is with all the time and effort we spent on this, it’s
helpful for the members to be able to show exactly where they would
have been as opposed to trying to explain that some other way,” said
Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., a member of the GOP’s leadership team.
Sen.
Mike Rounds, R-S.D., said the vote will “get people on the record as to
whether they are prepared to take the next steps to repeal Obamacare.”
“Some
folks will continue to negotiate until the deadline, so at some point
you have to set a deadline to vote,” Rounds said. “Now’s the time to
fish or cut bait.”
Holding
a vote also frees up McConnell to move on to tax reform and other
priorities, as the president remains hungry for a significant
legislative victory after more than six months in office.
“Whatever
happens on health care post-Labor Day, they still absolutely have to
get a major tax reform package done,” said Tim Phillips, president of
the Americans for Prosperity conservative group. “If they fail on health
care, then it raises the stakes even higher on tax reform.”
But a failure to repeal and replace Obamacare could still haunt Republicans long after a vote.
“Republicans
need to show that we can lead, that we can govern,” said Rick Gorka, a
spokesman for the Republican National Committee. “There’s a Republican
in the White House, a Republican majority in the Senate and the House.
There’s no excuse not to get this done.”
Title : McCain’s return gives hope to Senate health care bill
Description : WASHINGTON — Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., will travel to the Capitol Tuesday in time to vote on the Senate health care measure, breathing...
Description : WASHINGTON — Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., will travel to the Capitol Tuesday in time to vote on the Senate health care measure, breathing...
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