Republicans Finally Have a Plan to Replace the Affordable Care Act. But They Won't Let Anyone See it.
The draft bill is reportedly hidden somewhere in the basement of Congress.
INAE OH
Congressional lawmakers are scrambling to get their hands on the latest draft legislation to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, after top Republicans moved to keep the new proposal out of sight and "under lock and key" in the basement of Congress.
Bloomberg reports the draft legislation will likely be reviewed by only members of the House Energy and Commerce panel Thursday, but physical copies of it will not be distributed for other lawmakers or the general public.
The extraordinary effort to conceal the contents of the latest replacement plan comes amid intense debate within the GOP over the extent to which the healthcare law should be changed: some favor a full repeal, while others in the party advocate keeping certain parts of the law intact. The current secrecy is also likely a response to last Friday's leak of a now outdated version of the proposal.
Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) joined several other lawmakers on Thursday for the frantic search to find the draft bill.
"I have been told that the House Affordable Care Act bill is under lock & key, in a secure location, & not available for me or the public to view.'
The spectacle on Thursday follows a wave of rowdy town halls across the country, where thousands of protesters packed into public meeting spaces to complain to Republican lawmakers about dismantling the Affordable Care Act. Several Republican lawmakers have since voiced serious concern over repeal efforts, and the potential fallout such a repeal could have on their political futures.
The secretive, hurried process to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act also has its ironies; Republicans were furious with Democrats for what they saw as a rushed effort starting in 2009 to pass the healthcare law without any GOP input.
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