Iowa pulls request to opt out of
Obamacare requirements
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[October 24, 2017]
By Susan Cornwell
(Reuters) - Iowa on Monday withdrew a
request to waive some Obamacare rules to help shore up its struggling
healthcare insurance market, marking a setback in efforts by
Republican-governed states to sidestep requirements of the Obama-era
law.
With open enrollment for the Affordable Care Act - better known as
Obamacare - set to start in just over a week, the state announced it
would no longer wait to hear if federal officials would approve its
request aimed at cutting individual healthcare insurance premiums and
widening coverage.
The withdrawal prompted a leading U.S. Senate Republican to urge
Congress to approve a bipartisan fix to Obamacare, which President
Donald Trump has vowed to scrap.
Iowa was viewed as a test case by some for other states that submitted
similar, if far less-reaching, waivers and of how the Trump
administration would respond to such requests.
Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds said the law had not been flexible enough to
accommodate the state's request.
"Ultimately, Obamacare is an inflexible law that Congress must repeal
and replace," the governor said in a statement, adding that premiums
under Obamacare had increased by 110 percent for Iowans since 2013.
Iowa sought the waiver after its individual healthcare marketplace
shrank to only one insurer for next year, Minnesota-based Medica.
Some of the state's requests were similar to provisions included in
Republican repeal and replace bills this year. For instance, the waiver
sought to replace Obamacare's income-based tax credits with flat
age-based credits and eliminate insurer payments that Trump cut off
earlier this month.
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A man looks over the Affordable Care Act (commonly known as
Obamacare) signup page on the HealthCare.gov website in New York in
this October 2, 2013 photo illustration. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File
Photo
Senator Lamar Alexander, Republican of Tennessee, said the move by
Iowa demonstrated the need for repairs to Obamacare that he and
Democratic Senator Patty Murray have proposed aimed at stabilizing
insurance markets. It would also provide states more flexibility in
reshaping some parts of Obamacare.
Trump has sent mixed signals over whether he would support the
bipartisan fix. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said on
Sunday that he was willing to bring up the proposal for a vote but
needed to know where Trump stood.
Alexander said the bipartisan repair proposal would allow the
federal government to approve Iowa's waiver.
Alexander told reporters that the Congressional Budget Office, a
nonpartisan scorekeeper, would soon announce its analysis of the
bipartisan repair legislation, possibly on Tuesday.
(Reporting by Susan Cornwell,; additional reporting by Yasmeen
Abutaleb and Amanda Becker in Washington; Editing by Andrew Hay)
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