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UpdateObamaCare survives as latest Republican repeal bid collapses in US Senate

The opposition of three Republican Party senators doomed the party’s replacement health care bill

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US Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, accompanied by (from left) fellow Republican senators Lindsey Graham, John Barrasso, John Thune, Bill Cassidy and John Cornyn, speaks on the withdrawal of the party’s latest bid to repeal ObamaCare. Photo: Reuters
Associated Press

“Obamacare” lives on.

Senate Republicans, short of votes, abandoned their latest and possibly final attempt to kill the health care law Tuesday, just ahead of a critical end-of-the-week deadline.

The repeal-and-replace bill’s authors promised to try again at a later date, while US President Donald Trump railed against “certain so-called Republicans” who opposed the Republican Party effort. But for now, Trump and fellow Republicans who vowed for seven years to abolish President Barack Obama’s law will leave it standing and turn their attention to overhauling the nation’s tax code instead.

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The GOP’s predicament was summed up bluntly by Senator Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, a lead author of the legislation: “Through events that are under our control and not under our control, we don’t have the votes.”
Senator Bill Cassidy, a Republican from Louisiana, left, speaks during a Senate Finance Committee hearing to consider the Graham-Cassidy-Heller-Johnson proposal in Washington to repeal ObamaCare. The law failed to get enough support and was abandoned by US Senate Republicans. Photo: Bloomberg
Senator Bill Cassidy, a Republican from Louisiana, left, speaks during a Senate Finance Committee hearing to consider the Graham-Cassidy-Heller-Johnson proposal in Washington to repeal ObamaCare. The law failed to get enough support and was abandoned by US Senate Republicans. Photo: Bloomberg
US Capitol Police remove a protester in a wheelchair from a Senate Finance Committee hearing about the proposed Graham-Cassidy health care bill, which has been withdrawn after failing to attract enough support among lawmakers. Photo: AFP
US Capitol Police remove a protester in a wheelchair from a Senate Finance Committee hearing about the proposed Graham-Cassidy health care bill, which has been withdrawn after failing to attract enough support among lawmakers. Photo: AFP
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“Am I disappointed? Absolutely,” he said after a Republican Party lunch attended by vice-president Mike Pence.

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