Vice President Mike Pence was needed in
the Senate Tuesday to cast the tie-breaking vote on a motion to move
forward with a bill to overhaul ObamaCare after two Republicans voted
"no."
The votes by Sens. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska,
eliminated the GOP's margin for error on the motion. Every other
Republican senator voted "aye," while every Democratic senator joined
Collins and Murkowski in voting "no."
Collins and Murkowski are among several moderate Senate Republicans
concerned about possible Medicaid cuts in any ObamaCare overhaul. In
separate statements last week, both women opposed an attempt by Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., to pass legislation repealing
ObamaCare without new legislation in place.
Murkowski — who backed a Senate bill repealing ObamaCare in 2015 that
was vetoed by then-President Barack Obama, the law's namesake — said the
Senate should "take a step back and engage in a bipartisan process to
address the failures of [ObamaCare] and stabilize the individual
markets."
Collins, who did not vote for the 2015 repeal, said that ObamaCare is
"so interwoven in our health care system that to repeal it completely
with no idea what it's going to be replaced with is not the right
approach."
As for potential political consequences of their votes, Murkowski is not
due to come up for re-election until 2022. Collins' turn will come in
2020, though she has not ruled out stepping down to run for governor of
Maine next year.
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