WASHINGTON — If Mitt Romney wins the White House and his Republican allies retake the Senate, he could shred most of President Barack Obama’s health care law without having to overpower a Democratic filibuster.
But it won’t be as easy as some Republicans portend, and it certainly won’t be quick.
Why?
Because any realistic effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act — as opposed to last week’s quixotic vote in the GOP-controlled House — is sure to get jumbled together with lots of other issues, including Medicare, taxes, food stamps and defense spending.
And that’s because Republicans have to first pass a budget. It’s the only way than can invoke special Senate rules that allow legislation to pass with just a simple majority vote — instead of the 60 votes needed in the 100-member Senate to beat a filibuster.
Passing a budget requires answering a raft of questions unrelated to the relatively simple idea of repealing “Obamacare.” How much to cut the deficit? Should Medicare be overhauled and Medicaid bear sharp cuts? Is it realistic to sharply boost defense programs, as Romney would like, in such an atmosphere?
The first step is to pass a budget resolution — a nonbinding, broad-brush outline of budget goals like cutting or increasing taxes, or slowing increases in Medicare. A budget resolution sets the terms for follow-up legislation that’s called a reconciliation bill in Washington argot.
Two years ago, Democrats used a reconciliation bill to enact the health care law with a 56-43, party-line vote in the Senate.
Republicans have a problem in that there’s a lot more on their agenda than just repealing the health care law, and it’s all going to have to be crammed into a budget resolution and follow-up reconciliation bill, too.
“They’re going to want to use that budget resolution to set up a tax bill, they’re going to want to do other deficit reduction,” said Hazen Marshall, a GOP lobbyist and the Senate Budget Committee’s top aide in 2001 and 2003 when reconciliation bills were used to push former President George W. Bush’s tax cuts through Congress.
“So I would think it’s just going to take some time to get everybody on the same page as to what the budget resolution’s going to look like,” Marshall said.
In 2001, when Republicans set about the relatively simple task of cutting taxes in an era of unprecedented budget surpluses, it took them until Memorial Day to pass the legislation.
What Republicans would confront next year is far more difficult — wrenching cuts to programs popular with voters. A more apt comparison might be the GOP’s budget efforts of 1995, when it took the party until November to complete action on its budget plan.
“It’s not that it’s not doable. It absolutely is doable,” said a senior House GOP budget aide . “It’s just going to take a lot longer than everybody wants it to. And people aren’t anticipating the pain of each step to get to that point.” The aide spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to speak on the record.
Republicans currently hold 47 Senate seats. If they take control of the Senate, it’s not likely to be by more than 1 to 4 votes, well short of 60. That would put lots of leverage in the hands of Senate GOP moderates like Susan Collins of Maine and Scott Brown of Massachusetts, should he win his difficult re-election bid.
Both Collins and Brown cast votes earlier this year against the House GOP budget plan, authored by Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis. At the center of Ryan’s plan was controversial overhaul of Medicare that would transform it into a voucher-like program for those who retire in 10 years. Also voting against Ryan’s plan was Rep. Denny Rehberg, R-Mont., who Republicans are counting on to win a Senate seat this fall as a building block to a GOP majority.
Keith Hennessey, a former GOP Senate and White House official, says that if Republicans follow past practice, they’ll try to forge a center-right agreement that includes spending cuts but no tax increases. But he noted that the willingness of some Republicans to embrace tax increases could complicate matters.
“You look at the Republicans and you see that there’s going to be a spectrum on how deep they’re going to be willing to cut various things,” said Hennessey, currently a research fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. “The question is just how far toward the Ryan plan can you get the moderate Republicans.”
On the other hand, combining the repeal of Obama’s health care law with other GOP priorities like curbing the deficit gives lawmakers who are not part of the leadership plenty of incentive to vote for the package.
“When elections are about certain policies and are defined on that, you’ve got momentum to do those things,” said House GOP Whip Kevin McCarthy of California.
A simple-majority reconciliation bill could certainly cover the health care law’s tax increases — including the penalties used to enforce the individual mandate to buy insurance — and subsidies for insurance premiums.
Republicans, however, could not use the filibuster-proof budget process to repeal provisions in the health care that don’t have a direct impact on the government’s balance sheet. For example, it still would likely take 60 Senate votes to repeal the law’s requirement that insurance companies cover people with pre-existing conditions.
Experts say leaving the insurance reforms intact on their own is economically unsustainable because the ratio of sick to healthy people in the plans would be out of balance.
“If you were to remove everything else in reconciliation and be left with the insurance provisions, you have something that everybody recognizes is unworkable,” said former Congressional Budget Office Director Douglas Holtz-Eakin. “I think if you take enough out, the rest probably has to go.”



Now that it’s been passed and we ‘know what’s in it’, I’ll let someone else pick the corn out of it.
Mitt is the GOP’s corn this time around.
“Passing” on Mitt and his conservative buddies who are also running for office in November is looking more and more like the best alternative every day. We need to vote for people who represent us here not corporations who left us to go abuse others for less money and increase their bottom line on profits. Profits which they stash away in Swiss and Cayman bank accounts to avoid paying taxes here. I can see how such practice has helped you Mr. Romney, but how has it helped America?
I always find it amazing when people criticize (rightly or wrongly) Romney’s business experience when our current president has ZERO business experience and honestly, it is clear to see he is in over his head.
President Obama = In Sourcing = Jobs for AMERICANS
Romney + Republicans = Out Sourcing = Jobs for China
Vulture capitalism is not business experience, it’s predatory legal theft. Saddling companies with debt, cannibalizing everything, and throwing the bones to the stock holders while real people suffer.
Irrelevant!
This isn’t a CEO Postion that he is running for it’s a Government Office!What about Mitts Government experiance? He runs away from the ONLY Governing success that he ever had!
Romneycare.
Want to repeal Obamacare? Put a universal healthcare plan in place for ALL Americans.
Amen to that.
People have had it with subsidizing uninsured freeloaders who use the ER as a doctors office.
Cover everyone now!
Yeah, no subsidizing would happen then……right.
It would be a fairer subsidy. Right now people with coverage are subsidizing people without coverage.
I still do not see how it would be more fair. My wife and I pay taxes (fair amount) and have healthcare paid for by our employers. Right now there are countless people on Mainecare. That coverage is paid for by taxpayers. IF we had some magical universal healthcare, the people who make more money would certainly be subsidizing (to a huge extent) healthcare for others.
Couple that with Americans now being mandated to buy something (which I still find ridiculous, regardless of what the supreme court ruled), and I just don’t see a positive result.
If you have health via your employer, this doesn’t affect you.
There’s nothing magical about universal single payor coverage.
It will however, take the insurers out of the equation. A good thing since the insurers currently rake roughly 20% off the top of each premium dollar.
But, that would destroy those jobs, at the health insurance company. If people still had an option to go private, having a government plan would add competition to private insurers and leave the private insurance companies options.
If people opt for the government plan, then private insurers are not offering what the people want or can afford.
Then, power would be inherent in the people.
Allows the people freedom of choice, and we can better respond to the demands of people in this country, rather than usurp people into despotism.
What are you getting for your 20 cents on the dollar that you give to the insurance company?
So many things are wonderful subjects for insurance.
Healthcare is not one of them.
No do it the American way. Give EVERY American the CHOICE of participating or not. That is the ONLY way to do it.
Why? I don’t have the choice of paying or not paying that portion of *my* bill that is for an uninsured person’s healthcare.
That is what I am saying..
Does the Governor of Maine preserve his constitutional pledge,
or does he not ?
CONSTITUTION OF THE STATE OF MAINE
Article I. Declaration of Rights.
Section 2. Power inherent in people. All power is
inherent in the people; all free governments are founded in
their authority and instituted for their benefit; they have
therefore an unalienable and indefeasible right to institute
government, and to alter, reform, or totally change the same,
when their “safety” and “happiness” require it.
CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES
We the People of the United States, in Order to form a
more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility,
provide for the common defense, promote the general
Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and
our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the
United States of America.
AMENDMENT XIV
SECTION. 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United
States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the
United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State
shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges
or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall
any State deprive any person of life, “liberty“, or property, without
due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction
the equal protection of the laws.
Liberty, defined : basic right: a political, social, and economic
right that belongs to the citizens of a state or to all people.
Give the people their federal rights to health care.
He is more interested in his pledge to Grover Norquist!
You have the RIGHT to health care. You just do not have the right to STEAL from me to pay for it.
If you think someone is stealing something from you, call the local police dept.
Otherwise you don’t get to cut the federal pie, do you ?
Before they could repeal Obamacare, the Republicans would have to wrestle health insurance out of the hands of millions of Americans, convincing them that they’d somehow be better off without access to preventive care; that going into medical bankrptcy would be a jolly experience; that seniors should cheerfully go back to dealing with that “doughnut hole” of extra expenses again; that it’s our patriotic duty to let insurance companies deny us health insurance if we have a pre-existing condition, and so on.
I’m not saying they couldn’t carry that off, by the way. Their campaign of lies has been successful with many people, who believe all sorts of claptrap, from “death panels” to “massive penalty” (less than $100 for the scofflaws who hope to get a free ride by going without insurance).
Social Security had become one of the greatest success stories in American Political history, the Us Post Office had been recognized around the world for it’s excellence, yet they have convinced many in America that it’s the evil ( Boogeyman ) by the radical Right!
AKA—( Socialism)
The House (even today) could pass a resolution ‘deeming’ that the bill which ‘deemed’ the ACA to have passed the House did so in error. Without House passage, the whole law never happened.
Might not work, but it would certainly remind people that the ACA got enacted by some pretty tricky maneuvers.
Romney and the ex-Bush cronies that he has surrounded himself with will continue on the same path as Bush. I guess what is so stunning is the fact that they are so blindly willing to risk putting the country in the same position as Bush by pursuing the same bankrupt policies that created the mess we’re still digging out from. Romney represents the worst of capitalism and the practices that enable only those at the very top to profit at the expense of everyone else.
Even if somehow Romney manages to get into office, they’re not going to repeal it. It would be too difficult, too messy and very popular aspects of the healthcare reform have begun to kick in. This is just a talking point to get conservatives riled up. It was like how Bush used to talk about pushing a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage — something to excite people, but then once in office suddenly you don’t hear of it again.
does not matter who will be Pres. what matters is that in this health care plan there is a Large tax on real estate sales. what does that have to do with people’s health care/ that is just plain, sneaky.
What a lineup!!!
The Tin Man without a heart –Romney, The cowardly crying Lion, Bohener, and the Scarecrow with out a brain McConnel,
We can’t let this happen!
Romney would be the better choice. Another puppet led term and our country will taxing us out of our homes.
We are at a thirty year low in Taxation, look it up or look in the Mirror as you maybe the “puppet” come November!
I like my healthcare and insurance just the way it is.
Pay for your own. And thosw ho think you won’t be
paying for this, think again. These people make it sound
like everything is so complicated…Obama says it so often.
It isn’t. Congress does the funding and the TAXING. No
funds and no TAXES.
Look it up Obamacare “IS” about Paying for your own!
EVERYBODY!
I wonder how many of these people who are uninsured would be insured if Bain Capital had not outsourced their jobs? Could Romney answer that question, doubtful, he was to busy watching the olympic games.
Keep on bashing. it totally accomplishes zilch.