President Obama rips "meanness" of GOP health repeal in blistering Facebook post

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And it would end the tax penalty Obama's statute imposes on people who don't buy insurance - in effect, ending the so-called individual mandate.

Majority Leader Mitch McConnell insists he wants a vote before the Fourth of July recess, leaving GOP leaders one week to win over more votes. "Because Obamacare is a direct attack on the middle class, and American families deserve better than its failing status quo". While the Senate would cut off that expanded coverage more gradually than the House would, it still would go.

Democrats gathered on the Senate floor and defended Obama's 2010 overhaul.

Cruz lamented that the Senate bill "doesn't do almost enough", but remained hopeful they can broker a deal.

"We live in the wealthiest country on earth".

In his statement, Obama said the Senate bill is "not a health care bill".

Paul and Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin and Mike Lee of Utah are the four GOP holdouts who could block passage. Dean Heller and Susan Collins have also withheld support.

Georgia State University professor Bill Custer said it could mean more Georgians losing coverage.

The House's version of the bill, which passed that chamber in May, is a repeal and replacement of the Affordable Care Act.

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In his post on Thursday, Obama notably echoed Trump's alleged assertion behind closed doors that the healthcare legislation passed by House Republicans in May was "mean".

"What's happened in the House is probably what's happening now in the Senate - more of an effort to see what you can get to get the votes you need then what the policy is and trying to get a final plan later on", Keating said. The bill "rolls back the ACA's Medicaid expansion - making for deep spending cuts to that program, compared with current law". More than half a dozen GOP senators have expressed problems with the measure, and a defeat would be a humiliating setback for Trump and McConnell on one of their party's top priorities.

The program has since grown to cover 13.5 million Californians, which is more than 1 out of every 3 people in the state.

Those waivers would allow state to drop benefits required by Obamacare like maternity coverage, mental health care and prescription drug coverage.

Unlike the House bill, which bases its subsidies for private insurance on age, the Senate bill uses age and income.

For those who gained Medi-Cal coverage through the Affordable Care Act: Now anyone in California can sign up for Medi-Cal if their annual income is low enough: $16,395 or less for a single person or $22,108 or less for a couple. That language could be forced out of the bill for procedural reasons, which would threaten support from conservatives, but Republicans would seek other ways to retain the restriction.

Rep. Carol Shea-Porter said she was "appalled" by the bill and said it would derail the state's efforts to fight the opioid crisis, charge older Americans more and leave people with preexisting conditions without coverage. The Senate bill would repeal the tax in 2018 - a year later than the House bill.

The new legislation would eliminate federal funding for Planned Parenthood, a non-profit health organization that Trump's administration has targeted for cuts because it provides abortion services.

It's not clear yet whether Georgia's US senators support the bill. Sandoval also asked if it's "really realistic" for people earning $16,000 per year to buy insurance on the exchange if they lose Medicaid eligibility.

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