With McCain but no clear plan, Senate prepares for health fight

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Doug Mills / The New York Times

Sen. Dean Heller and other senators returned to Capitol Hill after meeting with President Donald Trump regarding health care legislation at the White House in Washington, July 19, 2017.

Tue, Jul 25, 2017 (2 a.m.)

WASHINGTON — Senate Republican leaders, keeping alive their push to dismantle the Affordable Care Act, are barreling toward a showdown vote today to begin debating a repeal of the health law. And Sen. John McCain announced Monday night that he will be on hand to cast his vote, despite a diagnosis of brain cancer.

Before McCain, R-Ariz., announced that he was jetting in to cast what is expected to be a vote in favor of starting debate, President Donald Trump spent Monday ratcheting up pressure on Republican senators to get onboard. Trump criticized their inaction and warned that they risked betraying seven years’ worth of promises to raze and revamp the health law if they did not.

“Remember ‘repeal and replace,’ ‘repeal and replace’ — they kept saying it over and over again,” Trump said at the White House, flanked by people who he said suffered as "victims" of the “horrible disaster known as Obamacare.”

“Every Republican running for office promised immediate relief from this disastrous law," the president said. “But so far, Senate Republicans have not done their job in ending the Obamacare nightmare.”

Tom Perez, the Democratic National Committee chairman, countered, “No matter how many ways President Trump tries to twist or hide the truth, the facts won’t change: The Affordable Care Act has been a lifesaver for millions of Americans.”

The remarks from Trump, who has been largely absent from the policy debate, had the ring of a threat by a president who has grown frustrated watching Republicans repeatedly try, and fail, to reach consensus on his campaign promise to immediately roll back the health law and enact a better system.

He said their constituents would exact a price for inaction and hinted that any Republican who did not support the bid to open debate on an as-yet-determined health bill would be painted as complicit in preserving a health law passed on the basis of “a big, fat, ugly lie.”

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said he would move ahead with a procedural vote today to take up the health bill that narrowly passed the House in May.

If that vote succeeds, the Senate would then be able to consider numerous amendments.

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