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3 Years to Replace Obamacare? Republicans Are Wading Into a Quagmire

As President-elect Donald Trump and congressional Republicans begin a perilous drive to overhaul the nation’s health care system, the gravity of dismantling the Affordable Care Act and devising a politically acceptable replacement is beginning to sink in with GOP lawmakers and many of those who voted for Trump.

Trump blithely asserted recently on CBS’s 60 Minutes that he and his allies on Capitol Hill will be able to simultaneously repeal and replace Obamacare early next year without wreaking havoc on the 20 million or more Americans who currently get their health care insurance through the program. However, senior House and Senate Republicans said this week that it could take as long as two to three years to hammer out a bipartisan replacement plan that could muster the necessary majorities in the House and Senate.

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Prominent GOP lawmakers including House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy of California, Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn of Texas and Sen. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, the chair of the Senate Health, Education and Labor Committee, told reporters that reaching consensus on a replacement plan without stripping millions of Americans of the security of health care insurance will take a number of years to achieve.

“We’re talking about a three-year transition now that we actually have a president who is likely to sign the repeal into law,” Cornyn told reporters Wednesday, according to Politico. “People are being, understandably cautious, to make sure nobody’s dropped through the cracks.”

McCarthy told reporters on Tuesday that once Obamacare is repealed and the consequences begin to sink in, that “you will have hopefully fewer people playing politics” and more policymakers in both parties willing to come together to write replacement legislation. He added that when there is a “date certain” that Obamacare will disappear, “you know you have to have something done.”

Joseph Antos, a health care expert with the conservative-leaning American Enterprise Institute, said on Thursday that Republican leaders may be kidding themselves if they think they can get by with an open-ended deadline or replacing the Affordable Care Act.

Related: GOP Cuts in Medicare May Be Next After Dismantling Obamacare

“In the end, a two or three-year timeline is the same as saying nothing will ever happen,” he said in an interview. “In my view, they have a year. If they don’t pass a replace plan by let’s say December of 2017, then I think the reasonable view of Democrats in the Senate will be, well, they couldn’t get their act together, so why should we think we should help them?”