A common refrain among congressional Democrats is that Republicans have taken up repealing the Affordable Care Act as an odd hobby, but the GOP won’t go to the trouble of presenting a credible alternative. The whole “repeal and replace” line was a scam.
Au contraire, Republicans would respond if they didn’t dislike the French. It took several years, but the GOP does have a health care policy of its own.
Conservatives representing nearly three-quarters of the House Republican conference unveiled their proposed replacement for President Obama’s healthcare law Wednesday, delivering on a long-delayed GOP promise.
The bill from the Republican Study Committee would fully repeal the 2010 law and replace it with an expansion of health savings accounts, medical liability reform and the elimination of restrictions on purchasing insurance across state lines.
“I think we’ve done a very effective job at pointing out all the things that are wrong with the president’s healthcare law, but people want to know what we stand for,” Rep. Steve Scalise (La.), the chairman of the Republican Study Committee, said yesterday.
Sigh.
There’s hardly any point in getting too annoyed with this shell of a health care proposal — it’s more pathetic than infuriating. Indeed, Republicans invested years in crafting a plan that just slaps together the same bad ideas the GOP has been pushing all along.
Before Scalise even unveiled the policy, Ed Kilgore predicted that the Republican Study Committee’s “alternative to Obamacare” would feature high-risk pools, interstate sales, tax credits, tort reform, and entitlement reform. A couple of hours later, the RSC unveiled its proposal and it was … exactly what Kilgore predicted it would be.
In other words, post-policy Republicans aren’t even trying anymore. The RSC plan isn’t a plan at all; it’s a sad joke.
Indeed, whether the Republican Study Committee intended to or not, these GOP lawmakers have invited a challenge they’re wholly unprepared to meet.
For about four years, we’ve had a chance to scrutinize the Democrats’ approach to health care policy — it’s called the Affordable Care Act, or “Obamacare.” It extends coverage to millions; it brings new security to those who already have insurance; it lowers the deficit; and brings popular consumer protections. What it’s lacked is a rival.









