Showing posts with label bipartisan stabilization legislation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bipartisan stabilization legislation. Show all posts

Saturday, September 23, 2017

If bipartisan ACA legislation comes back to the House, remember the Problem Solvers

As hope goes stronger that the Senate will reject the ruinous Graham-Cassidy ACA repeal bill, the back-burnered Senate HELP Committee hearings in pursuit of bipartisan legislation to stabilize the individual insurance market may become relevant again. On Sept. 20, HELP chair Lamar Alexander pulled out of the talks to get on team Scorched Earth.  After John McCain came out against Graham-Cassidy yesterday, Patty Murray, ranking Democrat on the HELP Committee, put out this statement:
I  agree with Senator McCain that the right way to get things done in the Senate—especially on an issue as important to families as their health care—is through regular order and working together to find common ground. I’m still at the table ready to keep working, and I remain confident that we can reach a bipartisan agreement as soon as this latest partisan approach by Republican leaders is finally set aside.
That raises the possibility too that at some point the Problem Solvers, the House caucus formed to seek bipartisan solutions on multiple fronts, could also become relevant. On July 31, the Problem Solvers released a five-point outline for bipartisan market stabilization legislation. As in the HELP Committee, "state flexibility" -- i.e. some easing of the process for states seeking ACA Section 1332 innovation waivers -- was a plank.

On September 5, the day before the first HELP Committee hearing, I participated in a call between BlueWaveNJ and Rep. Josh Gottheimer, Democratic co-chair of the Problem Solvers. It seems another lifetime, as the Graham-Cassidy cancer was still in watchful waiting phase, but we were concerned as to what Democratic Problems Solvers might be prepared to yield on the waiver front. Here's what we learned, as reported on the BlueWaveNJ blog: