The GOP Healthcare Bill Is Dead, but Mitch McConnell Is Pushing an Even Worse Option

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After two of his Republican senators effectively killed his chances of passing his healthcare bill, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell signaled on Tuesday night that he’s ready to take the nuclear option: a vote to repeal the Affordable Care Act without a replacement plan in place.

Utah Sen. Mike Lee and Kansas Sen. Jerry Moran said they wouldn’t back the bill, joining Sen. Rand Paul, of Kentucky, and Sen. Susan Collins, of Maine. McConnell only had room for two defectors from his party, so Lee and Moran’s dissent doomed the measure.

But what comes next could be much, much worse. McConnell said in a statement that he would push forward with a vote to fully repeal Obamacare, with a two-year delay. It’s a move designed to put maximum pressure on the holdouts: the 2015 bill to repeal the Affordable Care act passed the Republican-controlled Senate 52-47, with Collins and then-Sen. Mark Kirk (R-IL) being the only votes against. Of course, Obama vetoed the repeal of his signature policy achievement.

So now Senate Republicans risk looking like massive hypocrites for throwing their support behind a meaningless, symbolic repeal vote two years ago but hesitating when they’re playing for keeps this time around. President Trump made his position clear during a Monday evening dinner with GOP senators, reportedly telling them they’d look like “dopes” if they couldn’t pass a repeal vote after 2015.

This is, of course, even worse for moderate Republicans, who are now faced with an objectively inferior reality than the repeal-and-replace legislation they opposed from the beginning.

Will it pass? Probably not. But then McConnell and co. will be able to gesture to their base that they tried all they could to get a healthcare bill passed, but, uh, the obstructionist Democrats just wouldn’t let them, before moving along to tax reform, which is also shaping up to be a potentially doomed venture.

UPDATE: July 18, 2017, 12:03 PM: Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) and Collins have said they will not vote for McConnell’s plan to repeal the Affordable Care Act now, replace later. Losing one more Republican means the measure is dead on arrival.

Meanwhile, Moran jumped back on the GOP bandwagon, saying he would vote to repeal.

WHAT ELSE?