WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican efforts to scrap President Barack Obama's healthcare reform took a hit on Thursday when budget analysts said repeal would add billions of dollars to the federal budget deficit.
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated overturning the reform signed by Obama last year would add about $230 billion to the deficit by 2021 and result in 32 million fewer people having health insurance.
That was a blow to Republican campaign promises to slash the federal budget deficit.
The White House Office of Management and Budget said the administration "strongly opposes" passage of the repeal legislation, known as H.R. 2, saying it would explode the deficit and eliminate fiscal savings in the healthcare reform bill.
"If the president were presented with H.R. 2, he would veto it," OMB said in a statement.
Democrats, who control the Senate despite losses in last year's elections, promised to protect the healthcare law, Obama's signature legislative victory.
"The Republicans have to understand that the healthcare bill is not going to be repealed," Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid told reporters.
"We're willing to work in any way that's constructive in nature to improve the healthcare delivery system for our country," he said. "But repealing healthcare? They should get a new lease on life and talk about something else."
The law is designed to rein in medical costs, cover millions of uninsured people and reform insurance practices, including requiring coverage for patients with pre-existing conditions and other consumer protections.
The Republican-controlled House of Representatives will vote on repealing the law next week in what will largely be a symbolic gesture given the Senate's likely opposition.
In a preliminary estimate, the CBO said repealing the healthcare overhaul would increase the federal budget deficit by roughly $145 billion by 2019. That figure would rise to about $230 billion by 2021, it said.
New House Speaker John Boehner, who has promised to bring down the $1.3 trillion federal deficit, disputed the numbers.
"CBO is entitled to their opinion," Boehner told reporters. "When you look at it dollar by dollar, you can tell that the numbers just don't add up."
Debate on repeal of the healthcare law, another core Republican promise during the 2010 campaign, is scheduled to begin in the Republican-controlled House on Friday with a vote planned for next week.
Poster Comment:
The surprises just keep coming.