Thank you Senator McCain for killing Obamacare repeal.

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A months-long effort by Senate Republicans to pass health legislation collapsed early Friday after GOP Senator John McCain joined two of his colleagues to block a stripped-down Obamacare repeal bill.

“I regret that our efforts were simply not enough, this time,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said on the Senate floor after the vote. “This is clearly a disappointing moment.”

“It’s time to move on,” he added after pulling the bill from the floor.

The decision by McCain to vote no came after weeks of brinkmanship and after his dramatic return from cancer treatment to cast the 50th vote to start debate on the bill earlier this week. The GOP’s ‘skinny’ repeal bill was defeated 49-51, falling just short of the 50 votes needed to advance it. Republicans Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski also voted against it.

It wasn’t immediately clear what the next steps would be for the Republicans. The repeal effort had appeared to collapse several times before, only to be revived. And several Republicans pleaded for their colleagues not to give up, even as President Donald Trump blasted the vote.


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3 Republicans and 48 Democrats let the American people down. As I said from the beginning, let ObamaCare implode, then deal. Watch!

1:25 AM - Jul 28, 2017


‘Let ObamaCare Implode’
“3 Republicans and 48 Democrats let the American people down, As I said from the beginning, let ObamaCare implode, then deal. Watch!” he wrote on Twitter at 2:25 am Washington time.

Speaking on Fox News Friday morning, Republican National Committee Chairman Ronna Romney McDaniel said “it’s a tough day for Republicans,” while insisting party lawmakers will continue their drive to replace the Affordable Care Act.

“We campaigned on this for seven years,” McDaniel said. The vast majority of congressional Republicans supported replacement legislation in votes this year, she said, adding that “we’re not done.”

But McConnell has struggled to find a compromise that satisfies conservatives, who have demanded a wholesale repeal of Obamacare, and moderates, who have been unnerved by predictions the bill would significantly boost the ranks of uninsured Americans.

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Mitch McConnell on July 27.

Photographer: Zach Gibson/Bloomberg
Democrats immediately called for a bipartisan debate on how to fix Obamacare.

“We are not celebrating. We’re relieved,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said after the vote. “Let’s turn the page and work together to improve our health care system.” He also said Democrats would be willing to help expedite bipartisan legislation and to advance Trump administration nominations.

Republicans have been under intense pressure to deliver on their repeal promises. But repeated pleas -- and threats -- from the White House and conservative groups weren’t enough to push the bill through.

"I sadly feel a great many Americans will feel betrayed, that they were lied to, and that sentiment will not be unjustified. You cannot campaign against Obamacare and then vote for Obamacare," Republican Senator Ted Cruz said early Friday.

Loud Gasps
In a dramatic vote in the early morning hours on Friday, Collins voted no first, then Murkowski, followed by McCain, who came to the well of the Senate and gave a thumbs down, dooming the repeal bill to loud gasps, mostly from the Democratic side of the aisle. Republican leaders stood together looking grim as their back-up repeal plan appeared to collapse.

Of the three, Collins had been opposed to every GOP proposal on the table. Murkowski had also been critical of them, even after Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke called her and fellow Alaska Republican Senator Dan Sullivan and threatened them with retributionon major energy and public-lands decisions if they voted against repeal.

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John McCain on July 27.

Photographer: Zach Gibson/Bloomberg
McCain was a bigger surprise. He has long called for repeal, but grew frustrated over the secretive process that GOP leaders employed to draft various repeal measures. When he returned this week, he made an impassioned speech on the Senate floor for bipartisanship, making it clear he was prepared to vote against the legislation if it didn’t satisfy his concerns.

“We must now return to the correct way of legislating and send the bill back to committee, hold hearings, receive input from both sides of aisle, heed the recommendations of nation’s governors, and produce a bill that finally delivers affordable health care for the American people,” McCain said in a statement after the vote. “We must do the hard work our citizens expect of us and deserve.”

Promises from Ryan
On Thursday evening, several Republicans were making the unusual argument that they would only vote to advance the measure if they got guarantees it wouldn’t pass the House. House Speaker Paul Ryan assured several senators that his chamber would start a conference negotiation if the Senate passed the bill.

McConnell released the long-awaited text of his so-called skinny repeal bill late Thursday, only a few hours before the pivotal vote. It would end the requirement that individuals buy health insurance, and suspend through 2026 the requirement that companies provide it for their workers.

It would also extend a moratorium on the tax on medical-device makers through 2020 and increases the amount that individuals can contribute to health-savings accounts. The measure would also defund Planned Parenthood for one year.

The Congressional Budget Office said late Thursday that the bill would result in an additional 15 million Americans without health insurance next year. It also said the measure would reduce the federal deficit by $178.8 billion over a decade.

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The defeat of the “skinny” repeal bill came after several other measures put forward by GOP leaders were also blocked.

The Senate rejected a fuller repeal of Obamacare 45-55 Wednesday. Seven Republicans voted against it, including Senate Health Chairman Lamar Alexander of Tennessee and McCain. Late Tuesday, a 43-57 Senate vote swept aside a revised version of McConnell’s Obamacare replacement, a measure negotiated in secret during weeks of tense GOP talks.

Republicans had said late Thursday their plan was to get the “skinny” bill through the Senate and then negotiate with the House on a broader agreement to repeal and replace Obamacare.

“Passing this legislation will allow us to work with our colleagues in the House toward a final bill that can go to the president, repeal Obamacare, and undo its damage,” McConnell said Thursday night on the Senate floor. “I urge everyone to support it.”

By early Friday morning, McConnell admitted defeat, saying his “only regret” is that they failed.

Toomey ‘Disappointed’
Several Senate Republicans said they hoped this wasn’t the end of the debate.

“I am disappointed with this setback on efforts to fix our broken health care system,” Republican Senator Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania said in a statement. “Congress must not give up on repealing and replacing the failed health care law.”

A crestfallen Bill Cassidy said he hopes Democrats are now interested in working on a broader deal, like the one he developed with Susan Collins.

“I’ve tried in the past, as has Susan, to have a dialogue. It hasn’t worked. Maybe this had to happen to begin to have a conversation,” the Louisiana Republican said.
 
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The McCain-Soros connection: It started after senator got caught in ‘Keating Five’ scandal

An institute that launched with $9 million in unspent funds from Sen. John McCain’s failed 2008 presidential campaign has been likened to the Clinton Global Initiative and linked to billionaire leftist George Soros.

The McCain Institute for International Leadership, intended to serve as a “legacy” for McCain, says it is “dedicated to advancing human rights, dignity, democracy and freedom.”

[Broken External Image]
Sen. John McCain and George Soros reportedly became friends after the ‘Keating Five’ scandal.
Critics from the left and right believe the institute “constitutes a major conflict of interest for McCain,” chairman of the powerful Senate Armed Services Committee, according to a report by the Daily Caller News Foundation’s Investigative Group.

The organization’s exclusive “Sedona Forum” bears “an uncanny resemblance to the glitzy Clinton Global Initiative that annually co-mingled special interests and powerful political players in alleged pay-to-play schemes,” the Daily Caller report said.

The institute accepted a $100,000 contribution from Soros.

“McCain and Soros reportedly became friends after the senator was exposed as a member of the ‘Keating Five’ during the savings and loan (S&L) industry scandal during former President George H.W. Bush’s administration,” according to the report.” As the S&L bank chairman, Charles Keating paid $1.3 million to bribe five members of Congress to interfere with government regulators on behalf of the savings bank.”

The experience “so scarred McCain that he became a vigorous advocate of campaign finance reform” and in the process reportedly became friends with Soros, the report said.

The institute also accepted a $100,000 contribution from Teneo, a for-profit company co-founded by Doug Band, former President Bill Clinton’s “bag man.”

“Teneo has long helped enrich Clinton through lucrative speaking and business deals,” the Daily Caller report said.

Bloomberg reported in 2016 on a $1 million Saudi Arabian donation to the institute, a contribution the McCain group has refused to explain publicly.

In addition, the institute has taken at least $100,000 from a Moroccan state-run company tied to repeated charges of worker abuse and exploitation, the Daily Caller report said, adding that the group has also accepted at least $100,000 from the Pivotal Foundation, which was created by Francis Najafi who owns the Pivotal Group, a private equity and real estate firm.

The Pivotal Foundation has in the last three years given $205,000 to the National Iranian-American Council (NIAC), which has been a vocal advocate for the Iranian nuclear deal the Obama administration negotiated.

NIAC President Trita Parsi has long been an advocate for Iran, including demanding in May 2017 that President Donald Trump and officials in his administration “cease questioning the integrity of a (nuclear) deal.”

The NIAC is “Iran’s lobbyists in Washington,” said Aresh Salih, the Washington representative of the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan. “People inside of Iran know them as their lobbyists in Washington, D.C.,” Salih told the Daily Caller.


The NIAC does not file as a foreign agent under the Foreign Agents Registration Act, nor does it register as a lobbyist with Congress.

Yet in May 2013, the Daily Caller noted, Parsi “spoke to a packed Capitol Hill meeting sponsored by Minnesota Democratic Rep. Keith Ellison to argue in favor of the nuclear deal.”

“This is a very real conflict of interest,” Craig Holman, a government affairs lobbyist at Public Citizen, told the Daily Caller. “This is the similar type of pattern we received with the Clinton Foundation in which foreign governments and foreign interests were throwing a lot of money in the hopes of trying to buy influence.”

McCain recently claimed no involvement with the institute, saying “I’m proud that the institute is named after me, but I have nothing to do with it.”

Lawrence Noble, general counsel for the Campaign Legal Center, told the Daily Caller that accepting contributions in the name of a sitting senator like McCain raises troubling issues.

“In terms of the ethics of it, it does raise a broad question of people trying to get good will with the elected official,” he said. “From a personal standpoint, I’d rather not see these entities exist.”

Charles Ortel, a retired Wall Street investment banker and philanthropy law expert, told the Daily Caller that “high government officials such as John McCain, [former Secretary of State] Hillary Clinton and President Barack Obama should not get involved with vehicles like these where substantial sums can be funneled over time in ways that at best, reeks of impropriety and at worse are public corruption.”
 

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Hobbes

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For 7 years I have heard promises about opening up the market to allow consumers to purchase healthcare insurance across state lines as a way to increase competition.
And yet, NONE of the bills in either the house or senate contained that proposal.
WHY???

Years of promises of tort reform to lower insurance costs.
No tort reform found its way into any of these bills either.
WHY???
 

dlbleak

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For 7 years I have heard promises about opening up the market to allow consumers to purchase healthcare insurance across state lines as a way to increase competition.
And yet, NONE of the bills in either the house or senate contained that proposal.
WHY???

Years of promises of tort reform to lower insurance costs.
No tort reform found its way into any of these bills either.
WHY???
Good question. Usually tort reform gets shot down by the democrats, but you are correct, I haven't seen a thing.
Maybe they all just suck equally?
 
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George Soros, John McCain, and Immigration
https://capitalresearch.org/article/george-soros-john-mccain-and-immigration/

Senator John McCain’s Institute for International Leadership, formed from the remains of his failed 2008 presidential campaign, has accepted large donations from individuals and institutions infamously known for:

  • Supporting the Clinton Foundation;
  • Providing shady speaking deals for former President Bill Clinton; and
  • Having ties to radical open-borders advocacy groups.
The Daily Caller reports the veteran senator’s Institute has accepted more than $100,000 from OCP, S.A., a Moroccan state-owned phosphate company operating in the Western Sahara, a region that holds half of the world’s phosphate reserves (Morocco’s “white gold”). McCain has lavishly praised the King of Morocco, calling the country in 2011 a “positive example to governments across the Middle East and North Africa,” despite the fact that the monarchy seized Western Sahara in 1975. Since the occupation, Morocco has dominated the region by force in defiance of U.N. resolutions and declarations by other international bodies.

Charles Ortel, a retired Wall Street investment banker and philanthropy law expert, told the Daily Caller that “high government officials such as John McCain, Hillary Clinton, and Barack Obama should not get involved with vehicles like these where substantial sums can be funneled over time in ways that at best, reeks of impropriety” if not outright corruption.

Perhaps more troubling is the fact that McCain’s Institute has accepted contributions of as much as $100,000 from billionaire liberal activist-funder George Soros and from Teneo, a for-profit consulting firm whose corruption CRC covered during the 2016 election. Teneo has long helped enrich the Clintons through lucrative speaking events and business deals.

An improbable friendship developed between the Republican Senator and the liberal activist billionaire in the aftermath of a Savings & Loan industry scandal during the George H. W. Bush administration, when the two men bonded over campaign finance “reform.”

Immigration is another area where the senator and the liberal magnate agree to a certain extent. McCain famously crossed the aisle to work with Ted Kennedy on amnesty for illegal immigrants, while Soros has directed funds on a massive scale toward open border organizations that want to make it illegal for local police to cooperate with Immigration and Custom Enforcement. The latest success of these groups is a bill working its way through the California legislature that would make it a criminal offense for landlords to threaten to evict known undocumented tenants. The bill would also potentially punish business owners for cooperating with federal authorities.

These men’s ties should be troubling to Americans in general who support border security and safety, especially after the recent brutal murder of a seventeen-year-old Muslim girl in northern Virginia. The killing was not a hate crime, as many initially believed, but a road rage incident committed by Darwin Martinez Torres, an undocumented citizen of El Salvador.

McCain recently claimed no involvement with the institute bearing his name: “I am proud that the institute is named after me, but I have nothing to do with it.” Yet his campaign money launched the Institute, his wife continues to be involved in operations, and many of its staffers are his former campaign workers.
 

SMS

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It was weak a&$ legislation anyway. It was rushed, incomplete, incoherent and open ended. It was everything we criticized the Democrats for during their reign in Congress.

Congress has given up on meaningful action.

I actually applaud McCain for sticking it to McConnell.
 
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