House vote on health repeal the first step in GOP re-do strategy

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The politically charged Wednesday vote on repealing the health overhaul will mark the first step for Republicans in their effort to use a variety of legislative tools to undo the new federal health law. Meanwhile, almost immediately after the vote, House committees will begin considering targeted parts of health law. But some news outlets check the facts regarding a key part of the GOP argument against the measure — that it is a job killer.

Los Angeles Times: GOP Set To Assail Healthcare Law And Seek Alternatives
Preparing to re-engage with President Obama, House Republicans have set themselves a more ambitious goal than simply wiping out the sweeping health care overhaul signed into law last March. When they take up the much-anticipated repeal resolution Tuesday and Wednesday, GOP lawmakers also will begin crafting an alternative with the goal of reducing insurance premiums, expanding coverage, preserving Medicare and holding down taxes (Levey and Oliphant, 1/18).

The Wall Street Journal: House Launches Health Law Challenges
Republicans in the House will press efforts to overturn the health care overhaul this week in a vote that is largely symbolic but could kick-start substantive changes to provisions at the law's core (Adamy, 1/18).

Politico: Repeal Vote Just The First Step For Republicans On Health Care
The highly anticipated vote Wednesday to repeal the health care reform bill will make headlines and count as a promise kept by House Republicans. But in the end, it's really just for show. The real work begins immediately afterward, with Republicans using every legislative and political tool at their disposal to wage a two-year campaign against the overhaul. And there won't be anything subtle about this slow-drip strategy as Republicans aim to erode public confidence in the law and, they hope, make it so politically unpalatable that even some Democrats turn against it (Budoff Brown, 1/17).

Fox News: House Set To Launch Health Law Challenge
House Republicans, toning down their rhetoric slightly, plan to reset the debate over the health law repeal Tuesday on Capitol Hill, building a strictly economic case against "Obamacare" after pausing for a week out of respect for the victims of the Tucson shooting (1/18).

ABC News: Health Care Repeal Tops Agenda Of New Congress
GOP leaders say they will continue to frame the health care debate and the bill as one about a law that they believe costs U.S. jobs (Khan, 1/18).

Kaiser Health News: Text: Health Law Repeal Bill And House 'Resolution' On Replacing The New Law
This document contains the text of the bill to repeal the health law and a Republican resolution "instructing certain committees to report legislation replacing" the law (1/17).

CQ HealthBeat: Republicans To Target Medical Liability Legislation
The day after the House will be voting on legislation to repeal the health care law, Judiciary Committee Republicans will look beyond that to more targeted efforts to change health care policy by holding their first hearing of the year on medical liability laws (Adams, 1/14).

McClatchy: Is Health Care Law Really A 'Job Killer'? Experts Doubt It
Republicans have titled their effort to overturn the law the "Repealing the Job-Killing Health Care Law Act," and that's their favorite talking point against it. The House of Representatives will start debate on repeal Tuesday and probably vote Wednesday. Saying that the law is a job killer doesn't necessarily make it one, however, and independent experts say that such a conclusion is at least premature, if not unfounded (Lightman, 1/17).

The Associated Press: Shaky Health Care Job Loss Estimate
Republicans pushing to repeal President Barack Obama's health care overhaul warn that 650,000 jobs will be lost if the law is allowed to stand. But the widely cited estimate by House GOP leaders is shaky. It's the latest creative use of statistics in the health care debate, which has seen plenty of examples from both sides (Alonso-Zaldivar, 1/18).


http://www.kaiserhealthnews.orgThis article was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent news service, is a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health care policy research organization unaffiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

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