I’ve heard a lot of Republicans say all kinds of notable things about health care this year, but Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) took the conversation yesterday in a direction I hardly thought possible.
The Wisconsin Republican, one of the four principal co-sponsors of the repeal bill currently pending in the Senate, appeared on Fox News and was asked about Sen. John McCain’s (R-Ariz.) call for a bipartisan process that follows regular order. Johnson responded:
“Well again, if we don’t pass it this week — and again, I want to pass it this week, that’s what I recommend, this is a real action-forcing piece of legislation — but if we can’t do it, well, I think we should hold hearings.
“We should have a very robust discussion, debate, about here is the problem, then we go through a problem-solving process. Lay out the information to find the problems — the problem or the problems — gather the information, and then set achievable goals. Then start designing legislation to achieve those goals to solve the problem.”
On the surface, it’s probably not a great sign for Graham-Cassidy that one of its top co-sponsors is already looking ahead to what should happen once the legislation fails.
But that’s not the interesting part. Rather, what amazed me was Johnson laying out a responsible blueprint, while simultaneously recommending that senators take an entirely different course of action.









