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Broun, R-Ga., said, "We never did see a
repeal and replace bill last time," referring to the 2011-2012 two-year
term that followed the Republican landslide. "I hope we can this time,
and I'll keep fighting for it."Broun, running for the Senate from Georgia
in 2014 as a conservatives' conservative, has drafted legislation of his
own that relies on a series of tax breaks and regulatory changes
such as permitting insurance companies to sell coverage across state lines
to expand access to health care.Other Republicans are at work on different
bills, in the House Energy and Commerce Committee headed by Upton, and
elsewhere.Rep. Steven Scalise of Louisiana, who leads the conservative Republican
Study Conference, said the organization is working on legislation to reduce
health care costs "without the mandates and the taxes" in the current
law.Like others involved with the issue, he provided no timetable and few
specifics.At the same time, the other half of the 2010 pledge to
"repeal and replace" is getting a workout.The House voted last week to
delay two requirements, the 38th and 39th time they have gone on
record in favor of repealing, reducing or otherwise neutering the system
that bears Obama's name.In the case of one of the rules, a
requirement for businesses to provide insurance to their workers, the administration
announced a one-year delay earlier this month.Democrats and even some Republicans
say the intense focus on repealing the hea
lth law is wide of
the mark."Every voter knows what Republicans are against. They don't know
what they're for" on health care, said Rep. Steve Israel of New
York, who heads House Democrats' campaign committee. He said the strategy
would haunt Republicans next year among moderate and independent voters
who want changes, not outright repeal.The fate of legislation to put more
funds into high-risk pools demonstrated a belief among some Republicans
that they should advance alternatives. Polling presentations make the same
point but are not uniformly persuasive among the rank and file, according
to officials, and lawmakers' speeches sometimes make it sound as if the
health law is disintegrating on its own.Yet one prominent conservative,
Ramesh Ponnuru, warned recently that it was a "perverse complacency" to
do nothing while assuming the health law will implode."We can be sure
that the Left would respond to any such collapse by making the
case for a `single payer' program in which the federal government directly
provides everyone insurance," he wrote May 30 in National Review Online.Ponnuru
added that in some Republican circles, "the idea that an alternative is
necessary is seen as a mark of wimpiness, a weakness for big-government
programs that are just slightly" weaker than what Democrats possess.The
Associated Press contributed to this report.
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