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August 18, 2015 01:00 AM

GOP hopeful Walker offers health plan with tax credits

Associated Press
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    Republican presidential candidate Scott Walker on Tuesday offered an alternative to President Barack Obama's healthcare law that would provide tax credits and restructure Medicaid, and took a swipe at GOP rivals in Congress for their inability to repeal the law.

    "I'm willing to stand up against anyone, including members of my own party," Walker said at Cass Screw Machine Products in suburban Minneapolis. "I'm willing to stand up against anyone to get the job done."

    Walker's proposal calls for repealing the law immediately and replacing it with a plan that gives states more power to operate Medicaid, ties refundable tax credits to age rather than income, and shifts to discretion of states the decision on whether to offer the popular Obama provision that currently allows people up to age 26 to remain on their parents' insurance plans.

    The biggest hurdle facing the Wisconsin governor, and other Republicans calling for repeal, is getting the 60 votes needed in the Senate. The Supreme Court in June also upheld a key component of the law, a major setback for critics fighting it in court.

    Walker detailed his plans with a slide presentation that mixed policy and politics, seeking both to distinguish himself from Republicans who have failed to eliminate Obama's law, such as Sens. Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, Rand Paul and Lindsey Graham, and to tie Democratic presidential contender Hillary Rodham Clinton to it.

    "We were told by Republican leaders during the campaign last year that we just needed a Republican Senate to repeal Obamacare," Walker said. "Well, here we sit."

    Walker's anti-Washington argument will appeal to conservatives frustrated that Republicans leaders in the House and Senate have not moved fast enough to undo Obama's policies. But the criticism misses the political and institutional reality: Republicans hold 54 Senate seats, short of the 60 needed to break a filibuster, and Obama can veto legislation.

    Of Clinton, he added:

    "As bad as things have been under Obamacare, they'd only get worse under Hillary Clinton," Walker said.

    Clinton took to Twitter to criticize Walker's healthcare plan.

    "16 million Americans have gained health insurance from the Affordable Care Act," Clinton tweeted. "We need to protect it — not repeal it."

    Other Democrats were dismissive of Walker's proposal.

    "If this vague grab-bag of conservative wish-list items is the best health plan the GOP can come up with for the largest economy on earth, it's the clearest signal yet that Republicans like Scott Walker are out of ideas and out of touch," said Democratic National Committee spokesman Eric Walker.

    Walker's plan does not include cost figures or an estimate of the number of people who would be covered, making it nearly impossible to compare with current law. For the period from April to June of this year, 11.4 percent of U.S. adults were uninsured, which translates to about 16 million people gaining coverage since the rollout of Obama's healthcare law in 2013.

    Walker said his plan would be paid for by eliminating $1 trillion in taxes that are levied under the current law and by making other changes to Medicaid and how health insurance is taxed.

    Robert Laszewski, a healthcare industry consultant and commentator who has been critical of Obama's law, called Walker's proposal naive.

    "We need to see the specifics," Laszewski said. "Every regulation that raises one person's insurance costs provides another with a valuable benefit. We need to see who will win and who will lose under Walker's plan."

    Walker isn't the first Republican to put forward a detailed plan for replacing Obama's law. Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal released his plan last year and Rubio outlined his approach in an opinion piece published Monday. And while alternatives have been introduced in Congress, none has gotten traction as Republicans have yet to coalesce around any particular idea.

    Rubio's plan involves a tax credit to purchase health insurance, reform insurance regulations, allow coverage to cross state lines and encourage health savings accounts. Rubio also has set his sight on Medicare and Medicaid, which he says he would reform to make more "fiscally sustainable."

    He suggests moving Medicaid into a per-capita block grant system and that Medicare consumers be transitioned into a premium support system to boost choices and market competition.

    Jindal criticized Walker's plan for the age-based tax credit for those who don't have insurance through their employer, calling it "Obamacare lite."

    "In a health\care plan that is light on specifics, Governor Walker endorsed the fundamental underpinning of Obamacare — the notion that America needs another entitlement program," Jindal said in a statement.

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