House Vote to Send Health Law Repeal to Obama for First Time

WASHINGTON (AP) —

After dozens of failed attempts to undo President Barack Obama’s health care law, the GOP-led Congress will finally put a bill on the president’s desk Wednesday striking at the heart of his signature legislative achievement.

Obama will veto the bill, and so the ultimate outcome will be the same as the many previous GOP attempts to repeal Obamacare. But the vote in the House, in its first legislative act of this presidential election year, will mark the first time such a bill makes it all the way to the White House.

Unlike past efforts that were blocked by Senate Democrats, this time the legislation was written under special rules protecting it from a Democratic filibuster. It passed the Senate late last year, and so Wednesday’s House vote will send it straight to Obama.

House GOP leaders said the vote and Obama’s subsequent veto will lay bare a stark choice between the parties in a presidential election year. Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton has decried the legislation while leading GOP candidates applaud it.

“We are confronting the president with the hard, honest truth. Obamacare doesn’t work,” Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin told reporters Wednesday. But he acknowledged: “Ultimately, this is going to require a Republican president. That’s why our top priority in 2016 is going to be offering the country a clear choice with a bold pro-growth agenda.”

However Ryan hedged when asked whether the House will ever vote on a replacement for Obamacare. Ryan has pledged that the House will come up with its own plan this year – something the GOP has repeatedly promised but failed to do in the nearly six years since the law’s enactment. He said details such as whether it will actually come to a vote have not been determined.

“Nothing’s been decided yet,” Ryan said.

Democrats and administration allies denounced the vote as a waste of time, aimed at placating GOP base voters riled up by Donald Trump and the unruly Republican presidential race.

The bill being voted on Wednesday would dismantle Obamacare’s key pillars, including requirements that most people obtain coverage and larger employers offer it to workers.

It would eliminate the expansion of Medicaid coverage to additional lower-income people and the government’s subsidies for many who buy policies on newly created insurance marketplaces. And it would end taxes the law imposed to cover its costs.

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