Congressman Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) joined Dana Loesch on Dana tonight to discuss health care reform: past, present, and what the future may bring.
Massie criticized the different elements in last weeks Republican health care bill:
This bill is three bills inside of one: it was a repeal bill, it was a replace bill, and it was a Medicaid reform bill, Massie said, suggesting that if they would split the bills apart and hold separate votes, that a repeal bill and a Medicaid reform bill could pass, leaving only a replacement bill to be ironed out.
They went on to discuss the dismal poll numbers for the health care bill, only reaching 17% approval at its height, which they juxtaposed with the repeal of Obamacare polling at higher than 50%.
That tells you that the American people have figured out this is not the repeal bill that we were campaigning on, Massie stated.
I especially like that the brave and wonderful Freedom Caucus isn't just going to let Ryan and McConnell and Trump walk away from all the promises that they made for years to repeal 0bamaCare.
"I especially like that the brave and wonderful Freedom Caucus isn't just going to let Ryan and McConnell and Trump walk away from all the promises that they made for years to repeal 0bamaCare."
Trump's bill kept pre-existing conditions and parental coverage of children under 26 -- two issues popular with the voters and their representatives.
Everything else is or will be gutted.
Are you saying the whole thing should be scrapped -- thereby perpetuating Obamacare -- because those two items were retained?
Trump wanted something passed, a "deal" that he can take credit for. He got involved to the extent that he stopped tweeting for a few hours to go down to the House and berate and threaten the brave and wonderful Freedom Caucus.
Trump's done very little if you compare it to 0bama kowtowing to the House and Senate for a year trying to pass 0care.
No, he wanted to pass The American Health Care Act, a very specific piece of legislation which met the requirements of reconciliation.
"Trump's done very little if you compare it to 0bama kowtowing to the House and Senate for a year trying to pass 0care."
You mean if we compare Trump's 60 days of work to Obama's 365 days of work? Gosh. You're right! Let's drag out Obamacare another 305 days so we can line up your numbers just for you.
To me, this just looks like a rehash of Price's bill but with a lot of liberal stuff thrown in.
And it was going to go to the Senate where it would become much worse. They've pretty much already promised that.
Then it would come back to the House for a vote to confirm the Senate version, much as 0bamaCare came back to the House for reconciliation after Scott Brown was elected, ruining the Dems' 60-vote majority in the Senate. So the House had to vote for it without any further changes. And they did. And it cost a lot of them (the Blue Dogs of course) their seats. It's always the conservative element in either party that is expected to take one for the team. Never the Lefties or the "moderate Republicans" (liberal Blue state Republicans).
"And it was going to go to the Senate where it would become much worse. They've pretty much already promised that."
Right now that seems like light-years away, but yea, that's How a Bill Becomes Law.
"It's always the conservative element in either party that is expected to take one for the team."
Trump's ACHA IS a conservative bill, chock-full of things that conservatives have been after for decades -- block-granting Medicaid to the states, expanded HSA's that are tax deductible, tort reform, insurance across state lines, cafeteria-style health insurance plans.
But it was not conservative enough for the Freedom Caucus. Everything Trump gave them they wanted more. And, Trump was losing moderates in the process.
By "moderates" you mean "liberal Republicans". Ever notice how the media loves to separate these out. Unlike you, they know the RINOs are never going to obstruct their agenda.
But, no, we must never upset the precious "moderates".