Talking Points Memo reports:
Twenty two million fewer people would have insurance under the Senate GOP’s health care bill by 2026 when compared to current law, the Congressional Budget Office said Monday. The CBO’s analysis of the Senate’s Better Care Reconciliation Act, which would partially dismantle the Affordable Care Act, comes just days before the Senate is expected to vote on the bill.
The analysis find that the Senate Republicans did not much better than their House counterparts—whose Obamacare repeal bill the CBO found would result in 23 million losing insurance—in staving off devastating coverage losses under their plans. The CBO said of the Senate bill on Monday that the first round of coverage losses, some 15 million in 2018, would come from the elimination of the individual mandate.
New CBO score for Senate bill:
2018: 15 million more would be uninsured than under Obamacare
2020: 19 million more
2026: 22 million more pic.twitter.com/7cMnfDnZZr
— Bradd Jaffy (@BraddJaffy) June 26, 2017
Sen. @BillCassidy tells @CNN that CBO score finding 22,000,000 will lose coverage makes him “more concerned” about the Senate bill
— igorvolsky (@igorvolsky) June 26, 2017
Here is the link to the #CBOSCORE on the Senate’s #healthcare bill. An estimated 22 million more uninsured by 2026. https://t.co/M6uGkuEf7H pic.twitter.com/jYwIQNuFIc
— StanfordHealthPolicy (@StanfordHP) June 26, 2017