Senator Orrin Hatch, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, and
Senator Lamar Alexander, who heads the Senate Health, Education,
Labor and Pensions Committee, announced the three-paragraph bill
titled, the American Liberty Restoration Act, with backing from 20
other Republican co-sponsors.
It was the first time that legislation to eliminate the mandate, a
linchpin of President Barack Obama's Affordable Care Act, has been
introduced by a Senate majority party.
The mandate survived a 2012 U.S. Supreme Court challenge seeking to
overturn it on constitutional grounds. It has now become part of a
new Republican effort to chip away at the legislative underpinnings
of the law known as Obamacare.
Aides said the bill should eventually come to a vote. But it was
unclear whether the measure would overcome potential blocking
tactics by Democrats.
The White House had no immediate comment. But Obama, who vowed in
Tuesday's State of the Union address to oppose efforts to roll back
his policies, would be expected to veto the measure. “The individual
mandate is a line I can't cross," the president said at a news
conference in November.
Analysts, insurers and healthcare reform advocates have long
described the individual mandate as a vital lever for encouraging
young healthy consumers to sign up for health coverage under
Obamacare. Its loss, they say, could unsettle insurance markets and
cause coverage costs to rise sharply.
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Under the mandate, most Americans have been required to maintain
health coverage since last year, or face an escalating annual
penalty that is scheduled to top out in 2016 at 2.5 percent of
household income or $695 per person, whichever is higher.
For 2015, the penalty stands at 2 percent of income or $325 per
person.
The Republican-controlled House voted last March to delay the
individual mandate's penalties for one year.
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