THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

President Trump's New Healthcare Plan

President Trump's New Healthcare Plan

Story by Shandiin Ramsey Photo by Isaac Furtney

Author: Bodine, James/Wednesday, March 29, 2017/Categories: Home

Rate this article:
No rating

One of Trump’s biggest plans coming into the White House was that he was going to repeal the Affordable Care Act and replace it with something better.  

 

 

The plan looked like it would be approved according to PBS, but after, the vote was delayed. President Trump told House Speaker Paul Ryan that it was yes or no and that he would not delay the vote any longer.

 

Trump’s healthcare plan was not passed.

 

The president’s new healthcare plan was more focused on the free market.  It also supported rolling back the expansion of Medicaid and would not require everyone in the United States to have insurance, as the ACA currently does.  

 

Although citizens would not be punished for not having insurance, they could face a penalty for letting their insurance coverage lapse. This penalty could be insurance companies increasing the premium by 30 percent.  

 

The bill did plan to keep three aspects from the ACA.  These provisions include the prohibition on denying coverage to people with pre-existing conditions, the ban on lifetime coverage caps and the rule allowing young people to remain on their parents’ health plans until age 26.

 

The new healthcare plan wanted to dismantle Obamacare’s aspects that help Americans pay for health insurance with income-based tax credits, taxes on people with high incomes and the penalty for people who do not have health coverage.

 

The vote to repeal Obamacare and replace it with President Trump’s healthcare plan was supposed to happen on Thursday, March 23.  

 

According to PBS, members of the House Freedom Caucus went to the White House to discuss the plan with President Trump.  They were supposed to clear up any questions, but instead many left unfulfilled and had no plans to pass the bill.  

 

The House GOP members delayed the vote until Friday when it was apparent there was not enough support to pass the bill.

 

Friday morning, a few changes were made to the bill.  These included the elimination of some Obamacare coverage requirements and stronger Medicaid benefits.

 

“It’s up to members of Congress now to decide if they want to be part of the effort to repeal former President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act,” White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer said at a news briefing. “The president and his team have committed everything they can to make this thing happen.”

 

By Friday afternoon, President Trump wanted an answer even though Speaker Ryan encouraged him to cancel the vote because he didn’t think there would be enough votes to pass the bill.  Hours later, Ryan contacted Trump once again urging him to reconsider.  This time Trump decided to pull the bill.


The Republican Party wants to continue to work on the bill and will try to get it passed again in the future.  

 
Print

Number of views (2093)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

The Old Fort Report

Kiiyahno Edgewater (Diné), Scout Edmondson, AJ Repinski, Derek Tippeconnie (Lenape)

Recognizing the past and reaching for the future of Fort Lewis College

On Tuesday Oct. 3, a group of Fort Lewis College students and faculty came together for the FLC Opportunities for Healing through Reconciliation Efforts event, held in the Center for Indigenous Research of Culture and Language to discuss a very troubling yet important topic: the release of History Colorado and FLC’s “Federal Indian Boarding Schools in Colorado, 1880-1920”...

Winter Wellbeing

Lisia Lucero

Losing light and losing time but not losing yourself

What is your definition of self care? Alita Lynch Alita Lynch, 18, first-year student: Lynch defines self care as time with herself that is free of worries and free of figuring out if she needs to do work. Kaneesha Bitsinnie Kaneesha Bitsinnie, 19, first-year student: Bitsinnie said she sees self care as taking care of your well-being and doing more than you...

My Friend Zoe

Mia McCormick

Acquainting Myself with Death.

I’m sitting at the base of a gnarled pinion pine tree in the middle of the woods behind the Bader-Snyder complex. It’s dark and the rain has been pounding the saturated soil relentlessly, but I am dry, and looking up at my protector, the arching branches that stretch around me like arms.  The smell of earth, wet bark and seeping sap mingle in my nose as I close my eyes,...

Indy on the Street

Mia McCormick

What are some of our Fort Lewis students going to be for Halloween tonight?

What are you going to be for Halloween?    Mya Simon third-year Music Performance and English major Calla Carrigan, first-year undecided: We are going to be wizard cowboys and will probably try to make our costumes or thrift them.  Mya Simon on left, Calla Carrigan on right   Jordan Mayhew second-year Psychology major: I am going to Rapunzel and...

Zombies Beware!

Words: by Derek Tippeconnie Picture by: Jerry McBride of Durango Herald

Learning from past mistakes and what to expect this Halloween at the infamous Durango Zombie March.

For over a decade, hordes of zombies have descended on downtown Durango every Halloween, just as the clocks strikes midnight. But these zombies are different from the ones you may have seen in The Walking Dead or Zombieland.  The hordes of undead are actually a combination of students, Durango residents and whomever finds themselves swept up in their midst as they march down Main...

First34568101112Last